Colour & fastness

Fabric Dyeing Process

The fabric dyeing process is where colour — and a colour you can trust across every roll — is built into the cloth. Polyester is coloured with disperse dyes at high temperature, either dope-dyed in the fibre or piece-dyed in the roll, and the route a mill takes decides your colour-fastness, shade depth and how closely a re-order matches the sample you approved.

How it works

How polyester gets its colour.

Polyester is hydrophobic, so it will not take ordinary water-based dyes. It is coloured with disperse dyes — finely milled, low-solubility pigments held in an aqueous dispersion. Under high temperature and pressure (around 130°C in a jet or beam machine) the polyester fibre swells just enough for the dye to migrate in and lock inside the polymer. Heat, time and pressure are what drive even, deep, fast colour; rush them and you get patchy shade and weak fastness.

Dope-dyed (solution-dyed) vs piece-dyed. There are two points in the chain where colour can be added. Dope dyeing mixes pigment into the molten polymer before the fibre is even extruded, so colour runs all the way through the filament — this gives the highest light- and wash-fastness and the most consistent shade, but only in stock colours. Piece dyeing colours the woven greige cloth after the fact, which is flexible on shade and ideal for fashion colours and small lots, but fastness and lot-to-lot consistency then depend entirely on how well the dyehouse controls the bath.

Why it matters

What dyeing decides for you.

Colour-fastness

How well the shade survives washing, rubbing and sunlight is set by the dye chemistry and how thoroughly it was fixed. Dope-dyed cloth holds its colour hardest.

Shade depth

Deep, saturated blacks and jewel tones need the right dye loading and full high-temp penetration — under-dyed cloth looks washed-out and greys after a few washes.

Dye-lot consistency

Colour is mixed bath by bath. Tight control keeps every roll in an order — and the next re-order — matched to the approved sample instead of drifting off.

Wash, light & rub fastness

Tested as separate ratings, fastness tells you whether the colour will bleed onto skin, crock onto a seat or fade in Gulf sun — before it reaches your customer.
The reorder problem

Dye-lot consistency: why bulk can miss your sample.

This is the fear that keeps fabric buyers up at night. You approve a perfect swatch, place the order — and the bulk arrives a shade off. Or the first order is right, but next season’s re-cut lands lighter, and the difference shows the moment two batches of abayas hang side by side. The cause is almost always the dye lot: colour is mixed and applied bath by bath, and every bath drifts a little on dye concentration, temperature and water. Without control, every new lot is a new gamble.

How Sundust controls it. We pull lab dips against your target and get them signed off on real cloth before any bulk runs. We then lock and track the dye lot — recording the recipe, machine and batch — and confirm bulk is matched to the approved sample roll by roll, not spot-checked. For repeat business we hold the original standard so a re-order drops next to last season’s cloth. See how the gate works in our quality & inspection process, and why we always send samples before bulk.

Common questions

Fabric dyeing, answered.

What dyes are used to colour polyester fabric?

Polyester is coloured almost exclusively with disperse dyes, which are designed to penetrate hydrophobic synthetic fibre under high temperature and pressure. Natural and regenerated fibres in a blend may need a second dye class in the same or a separate bath. The dyeing step sits between weaving and finishing — see the full chain in how fabric is made.

What is the difference between dope-dyed and piece-dyed fabric?

Dope-dyed (solution-dyed) cloth has pigment mixed into the molten polymer before the fibre is spun, so colour runs through the filament and fastness is excellent — but only in stock colours. Piece-dyed cloth is coloured after weaving, which is flexible on shade and great for fashion colours and small lots, with fastness and consistency then down to dyehouse control. Yarn choice upstream matters too — see polyester yarn types.

Why does my bulk order not exactly match the sample?

Because colour is applied dye lot by dye lot, and each bath drifts slightly on recipe, temperature and water unless it is controlled. We prevent this with lab-dip approval, locked and tracked dye lots, and roll-by-roll matching of bulk to the approved sample — so what ships is what you signed off.

How do I make sure the colour holds and matches before I commit?

Approve a physical lab dip, ask for the fastness ratings, and lock the dye lot for the run. We do all three as standard, and the cloth is heat-set in finishing to hold its colour and hand. Contact us with your target shade and we’ll send a lab dip and pricing.

~130°C

High-temp disperse dyeing

Lab dip

Approved before any bulk

Matched

Dye lots across repeat orders

100%

Rolls checked for shade

Colour you can reorder

Lock your shade before you order.

Send us your target colour or a physical swatch. We’ll pull a lab dip, confirm the fastness ratings, lock the dye lot and match every roll to what you approve — so the bulk, and the re-order, land exactly on shade.

Sundust Textile — China Textile City, Keqiao, Shaoxing, Zhejiang, China · [email protected]