Dataset supporting the identification of natural dyes in yellow, orange, brown and green fibres from Krakow liturgical vestments

This data article provides an extensive and complete description of the colorants and dyes identified in fibre samples taken from the historical textiles that were described in the article ''Universal analytical method for characterization of yellow and related natural dyes in liturgical v...

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Main Author: Katarzyna Lech
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-08-01
Series:Data in Brief
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352340920306296
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spelling doaj-a28cf16eadd045c283ddc97baf77983e2020-11-25T03:27:48ZengElsevierData in Brief2352-34092020-08-0131105735Dataset supporting the identification of natural dyes in yellow, orange, brown and green fibres from Krakow liturgical vestmentsKatarzyna Lech0Corresponding author.; Faculty of Chemistry, Warsaw University of Technology, Noakowskiego 3, 00-664 Warsaw, PolandThis data article provides an extensive and complete description of the colorants and dyes identified in fibre samples taken from the historical textiles that were described in the article ''Universal analytical method for characterization of yellow and related natural dyes in liturgical vestments from Krakow” by K. Lech [1]. Natural organic dyes, for centuries used to dye fibres, contain usually from a few to several dyeing compounds. The correct identification of the dye requires at first the identification of their colouring components using sensitive and selective analytical techniques. One of this technique is high-performance liquid chromatography combined with spectrophotometric detection and detection using tandem mass spectrometry with electrospray ionization (HPLC-UV-Vis-ESI MS/MS). The HPLC-UV-Vis-ESI MS/MS protocol was used to identify natural dyes present in 89 yellow, orange, brown and green fibres taken from 15th- to 17th-century silk textiles used in vestments belonging to the collections of seventeen churches in Krakow, Poland.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352340920306296Natural dyesColourantsTextilesHigh-performance liquid chromatographyTandem mass spectrometry
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Katarzyna Lech
spellingShingle Katarzyna Lech
Dataset supporting the identification of natural dyes in yellow, orange, brown and green fibres from Krakow liturgical vestments
Data in Brief
Natural dyes
Colourants
Textiles
High-performance liquid chromatography
Tandem mass spectrometry
author_facet Katarzyna Lech
author_sort Katarzyna Lech
title Dataset supporting the identification of natural dyes in yellow, orange, brown and green fibres from Krakow liturgical vestments
title_short Dataset supporting the identification of natural dyes in yellow, orange, brown and green fibres from Krakow liturgical vestments
title_full Dataset supporting the identification of natural dyes in yellow, orange, brown and green fibres from Krakow liturgical vestments
title_fullStr Dataset supporting the identification of natural dyes in yellow, orange, brown and green fibres from Krakow liturgical vestments
title_full_unstemmed Dataset supporting the identification of natural dyes in yellow, orange, brown and green fibres from Krakow liturgical vestments
title_sort dataset supporting the identification of natural dyes in yellow, orange, brown and green fibres from krakow liturgical vestments
publisher Elsevier
series Data in Brief
issn 2352-3409
publishDate 2020-08-01
description This data article provides an extensive and complete description of the colorants and dyes identified in fibre samples taken from the historical textiles that were described in the article ''Universal analytical method for characterization of yellow and related natural dyes in liturgical vestments from Krakow” by K. Lech [1]. Natural organic dyes, for centuries used to dye fibres, contain usually from a few to several dyeing compounds. The correct identification of the dye requires at first the identification of their colouring components using sensitive and selective analytical techniques. One of this technique is high-performance liquid chromatography combined with spectrophotometric detection and detection using tandem mass spectrometry with electrospray ionization (HPLC-UV-Vis-ESI MS/MS). The HPLC-UV-Vis-ESI MS/MS protocol was used to identify natural dyes present in 89 yellow, orange, brown and green fibres taken from 15th- to 17th-century silk textiles used in vestments belonging to the collections of seventeen churches in Krakow, Poland.
topic Natural dyes
Colourants
Textiles
High-performance liquid chromatography
Tandem mass spectrometry
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352340920306296
work_keys_str_mv AT katarzynalech datasetsupportingtheidentificationofnaturaldyesinyelloworangebrownandgreenfibresfromkrakowliturgicalvestments
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