It took weeks to turn out a single batch of dyed fabric.
Judith Flanders Consuming Passions: Leisure and Pleasure in Victorian Britain (2006)
It can be found dyed orange and smoked.
Smith, Drew Food Watch (1994)
Is it simply an entirely innocent yellow custard that has been carefully dyed to resemble something more toxic?
Times, Sunday Times (2009)
It also lends itself well to being dyed wonderfully rich, bright colours.
Times, Sunday Times (2012)
And you will hardly see them in any public place without a shabby companion in a dyed silk, sitting somewhere in the shade close behind them.
William Thackeray Vanity Fair (1837)
All related terms of 'dyed'
bedye
to dye
dye
If you dye something such as hair or cloth , you change its colour by soaking it in a special liquid.
dyester
a staining or colouring substance, such as a natural or synthetic pigment
deep-dyed
thoroughgoing ; absolute ; complete
dyed hair
Your hair is the fine threads that grow in a mass on your head.
tie-dyed
(of textiles ) given a pattern by tie-dyeing
yarn-dyed
(of fabric ) dyed while still in yarn form, before being woven
double-dyed
confirmed ; inveterate
piece-dyed
(of fabric ) dyed after weaving
tie-dye
If a piece of cloth or a garment is tie-dyed , it is tied in knots and then put into dye, so that some parts become more deeply coloured than others.
dyed-in-the-wool
If you use dyed-in-the-wool to describe someone or their beliefs, you are saying that they have very strong opinions about something, which they refuse to change.
vat dye
a dye , such as indigo , that is applied by first reducing it to its leuco base, which is soluble in alkali , and then regenerating the insoluble dye by oxidation in the fibres of the material