15/06/2026
π§Ά The colours of Harris Tweed are not chosen from a colour chart. They are extracted from the landscape itself β from the lichens scraped off the gneiss rocks, from the roots and stems and berries of the plants that grow on the machair and the hillside, from the peat and the seaweed and the bog myrtle that grow in the same soil the sheep graze. A Harris Tweed weaver did not represent the landscape. She reproduced it, thread by thread, in the fabric she wove.
The natural dye tradition of the Outer Hebrides is one of the oldest craft traditions in Scottish history, and the vocabulary of plant-based dyes used in Harris and Lewis is extraordinarily rich β crotal lichen for the russets and tawny browns, bog myrtle for yellows and greens, heather for khaki and olive, iris root for black and grey, bramble for purple-grey, tormentil root for red, kelp ash for blue-grey. Each plant yielded a slightly different colour depending on the season it was harvested, the mordant used to fix the dye, and the quality of the local water used in the dyebath. The weaver who knew these variables β who knew which crotal from which rock face at which time of year produced the deepest and most lasting russet β held a knowledge that was both practical chemistry and accumulated cultural inheritance.
The shift to synthetic aniline dyes in the late nineteenth century allowed for consistent, reproducible colours and dramatically reduced the labour of dyeing. Most Harris Tweed is now made with synthetic dyes. But the traditional colour palette β the muted, complex, landscape-derived palette that gives the fabric its distinctive character β was deliberately recreated in the synthetic versions because the market recognised that those colours, those specific combinations of brown and green and purple and gold, were inseparable from what Harris Tweed is.
The colour of the crotal lichen on the grey gneiss is in the fabric. The landscape is in the cloth.