
Wildflowers and herbs contain mostly yellow and chartreuse dyes. Stick with recommended dye plants for the most lightfast dyes, or experiment with any plants you find for more surprising results!
It is important to use dye-dedicated or disposable cookware and utensils when working with natural dyes. For this project, the size of your final prints will be determined by the size of your dye pot. My garage sale pot fits 6” square prints, but for larger prints you can use a disposable roasting pan. Beware of rust on old cookware you might appropriate for this project, it will stain your paper. -
Materials for 6” square prints:
-wildflowers, see instructions below
-scissors or secateurs
-hot press watercolor paper, cut to 12×6” pieces
-3/4 teaspoons alum (aluminum sulfate or potassium aluminum sulfate) wide paintbrush
-cardboard, 1 large sheet plus 2 pieces cut to 7” square newsprint
-painter’s or washi tape
-mallet or hammer
-string
-dye-dedicated pot and tongs


Steps:
On a beautiful summer day, gather your wildflowers! I found Queen Anne’s lace, goldenrod, yarrow, mint, and clover in a nearby field. You can also look for black-eyed Susan, purple loosestrife, St. John’s wort, berry brambles, herbs, and leaves from oak, walnut, or fruit trees. Be careful to forage responsibly. For every ten healthy plants you see of a particular species, you may take one. Place your flowers and leaves in a vase of water while you prepare your workspace.
Working outside if possible, cover your work surface with a sheet of cardboard. Place your tools and a stack of newsprint nearby.
Dissolve the 3/4 teaspoons alum in a pint of warm water. Brush this solution over the entire surface of each piece of watercolor paper, and stack them up. They do not need to dry.

Place one piece of paper alum-side up on the cardboard. Place a flower or leaf on one half of the paper; you will be folding it in half over the plant to create two mirror images. Arrange the plant, flattening its leaves or removing extra buds as you like. Fold the paper in half to sandwich the plant, and secure it to the cardboard with tabs of painter’s tape.