1867 Six Hundred Receipts by John Marquart

t\00 MISCELLANEOUS VALUABLE RECEIPTS.

101

^i%a rfnnoticr-liquor to the shade you want to dye; enter 3 pieces when boiling, give them 3 ends, take out; enter them into cold alum-water, give them 4 ciidsj take out, and finish. Renew your annotto- hoiler with a ^utlHcient quantity of annotto-liquor, and proceed as before; then renew your alum-tub, proceed as before in the second process. This finishes them. The -liquor that is Itil in the boiler at night will do to boil the annotto in the next da}^, so that nothing is lost. Take 3 pieces, enter them into a tub with hot redwood or peachwood liquor, give them 5 ends, then run them into your wince; Yitive another tub, called the spirit-tub, close by, half full of cold water, put into it about 3 tumblerfuls of spitits ; then run the pieces from the other wince over the wince of the spirit-tub, give them 5 ends in the spirit-tub, then wind'them on the wince of the spirit-tub, then back again to the red-tub ; give them 5 ends without having renewed the tub, they are finished. Throw away the red-tub liquor, put in fresh liquor, and proceed as before ; but the spirit-tub must be renewed always ; even at night it may be left in a tub, and renewed the next day. No. 1.^03. Hed en CoUon,

No. 204. Brown on Cotton.

Tlie first process is to give them 5 ends in hoi sumach-liquor, or let them lie all night in the large 9*

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