Dark Blue.—Dye with 4 lb. Diamine black R O, 3 lb. soda and 20 lb. Glauber's salt, then diazotise and develop with blue developer A N.
Black.—Dye with 5 lb. Diamine black R O, 1 oz. Diamine bronze G, 3 lb. soda and 20 lb. Glauber's salt, then diazotise and develop with phenylene diamine.
The Diamine blacks are a range of very useful dye-stuffs, and by their means alone and in conjunction with the various developers as seen in the examples given above a range of useful shades of blue, navy blue, and blacks of every tone can be obtained. It may also be added that many of the direct dyes, although not diazotisable, are not altered by the process and so may be used along with diazotisable dyes for the purpose of shading them, and in that way a great range of shades can be produced, particularly by combining Primuline with other dyes.
(4) DIRECT DYEING FOLLOWED BY FIXATION WITH COUPLERS.
A further development in the application of the direct dyes has of late years been made. This is a two-bath method. The cotton is dyed with certain of the direct dyes: Primuline, Diamine jet blacks, Diazo blacks, Toluylene orange and brown, Diazo brown, Diamine nitrazol dyes, Benzo nitrol dyes, etc., in the usual way. Then a bath is prepared by diazotising paranitroaniline, benzidine, metanitraniline, dianisidine, etc., or by using the ready diazotised preparations which are now on the market, Nitrazol C, Azophor red P N, Azophor blue
P N, etc., and immersing the dyed cotton in this bath. Combination takes place between the dye on the fibre and the diazo compound in this bath, and a new product is produced direct on the fibre, which being insoluble is very resistant to washing and soaping. These "coupled" shades, as they will probably come to be called, differ from those produced on the fibre by the original dye-stuff, thus the Diamine jet blacks and some of the Diazo blacks give, with paranitroaniline, browns of various shades.
In this section also may be considered the method of dyeing cotton by using the direct colours in the ordinary way, and then "topping," as it is called, with a basic dye in a fresh bath.
Practically in the "coupling process" of dyeing only diazotised paranitroaniline is used as the coupler, although other amido bases of a similar nature are available.
When paranitroaniline is used as the source for the coupling bath it is well to prepare a stock bath of diazotised paranitroaniline, which may be done in the following manner:—
Preparation of diazotised paranitroaniline.—Take 1 lb. paranitroaniline, mix with 1 gallon boiling water and 1 quart hydrochloric acid, stir well, when the paranitroaniline will dissolve the solution may if necessary be assisted by a little heat. Now add 1½ gallons of cold water, and set aside to cool, when the hydrochloride of paranitroaniline will separate out in the form of fine crystals; when the mixture is quite cold (it cannot be too cold) there is added ½ lb. sodium nitrite dissolved in ½ gallon cold water, stir well for fifteen to twenty minutes, by the end of which time the paranitroaniline will have become fully diazotised, cold water is added to bring up the volume of the mixture to 10 gallons. This stock bath well prepared and kept in a cool, dark place will keep good for three to four weeks. This bath contains 1 lb. of paranitroaniline in 10 gallons, and it is a good rule