You can dieat any stage. You can dye the fabric. You can even dye the fibre. But let's say that you create the fabric next, because that's the way my book is ortioned. So you're those yaso, you he ought to die for it, extertally. And when i lly experimented with dyng at home, i found this to be true. Compared to plant fibres, which are cellulos basedtee, theyare not as easy to die. They just suck up the dye. It depends on what you're trying to achieve - wool and silk protein fibres are much easier to die. If you have a big
Author and journalist Virginia Postrel talks about her book The Fabric of Civilization and How Textiles Made the World with EconTalk host Russ Roberts. Postrel tells the fascinating story behind the clothes we wear and everything that goes into producing them throughout history. The history of textiles, Postrel argues, is a good way of understanding the history of the world.