Subject: Yellow dye on Chinese paper
David Tremain's interesting posting on 7 May about red lead and other pigments caused me to re-read an excellent article in Chemical and Engineering News, August 11, 1997 entitled "Ancient Colors, Modern Analyses". Subscribers to the list may be interested to note that the yellow dye used to dye the paper in the Diamond Sutra is huangbo, derived from the Amur cork tree Phellodendron amurense. The two chemists researching the Diamond Sutra explain that it was dyed yellow for two reasons--an edict by the Chinese government required that all theological and socially significantly papers must be dyed yellow (the Buddhist color of solemnity) and because the dye also protected the paper from the ravages of insects. The dye is water soluble and contains three yellow alkaloid chromophores: berberine, palmatine and jatorrhizine. *** Conservation DistList Instance 11:95 Distributed: Friday, May 22, 1998 Message Id: cdl-11-95-002 ***Received on Thursday, 21 May, 1998