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  2. Miriam C. Rice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miriam_C._Rice

    Rice wrote the first modern book on the subject, [1] Let's Try Mushrooms for Color, which came out in 1974 and was an international success. [1] [5] Rice's second book, Mushrooms for Color (1980), included a much-expanded range of pigments developed in the intervening years, a whole color wheel, including greens, reds, blues, and violets. Other ...

  3. Mushroom dye - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mushroom_dye

    The shingled hedgehog mushroom and related species contain blue-green pigments, which are used for dyeing wool in Norway. [2] The fruiting body of Hydnellum peckii can be used to produce a beige color when no mordant is used, and shades of blue or green depending on the mordant added. [3]

  4. Cortinarius cinnamomeus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cortinarius_cinnamomeus

    The spore deposit is a light rusty saffron color. The spores have an elongated ellipsoid shape with a finely punctate (studded with punctures) to almost smooth surface, and measure 8.5–10 by 4.4 μm. The basidia (the spore-bearing cells) are 20–30 by 5–8 μm. [5] Fruit bodies of C. cinnamomeus are used in mushroom dyeing to produce a ...

  5. Lactarius salmonicolor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lactarius_salmonicolor

    It is an edible mushroom native to most of Europe as well as in bogs and conifer forests of Canada, the Great Lakes region and the north-eastern United States. [1] The species derives its name from the term "salmonicolor," meaning salmon colored in Latin. [3] It is majorly exploited in Europe for its culinary uses. [3]

  6. Trametes versicolor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trametes_versicolor

    The mushroom is stalkless and the cap is rust-brown or darker brown, sometimes with black zones. The cap is flat, up to 8 × 5 × 0.5–1 cm in area. It is often triangular or round, with zones of fine hairs. The pore surface is whitish to light brown, with pores round and with age twisted and labyrinthine. 3–8 pores per millimeter.

  7. Suillus tomentosus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suillus_tomentosus

    The stipe is 4–11 cm (1 + 5 ⁄ 8 – 4 + 3 ⁄ 8 in) tall and 1–3 cm wide, [1] grandular dotted and the color is similar to the cap. [2] The cap is scaly and has fibrillose. The spores are brownish when they are young. [5] The spore print is dark olive brown to brown. [6] The species stains fingers blue. [7] It has no veil. [2]

  8. Pleurotus djamor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pleurotus_djamor

    The pink oyster mushroom grows in tropical and subtropical areas, growing as far north as Japan and as far south as New Zealand. [2] In Hawai'i, pink oyster mushrooms often grow on fallen coconuts, and on the stalks of palm fronds, though they can also be found on fallen ōhiʻa branches in the forests of the Hawaiian island Kaua'i.

  9. Agaricus xanthodermus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agaricus_xanthodermus

    The gills of this mushroom progress from pale-pink to a chocolate color. Its white stipe measures 5–12 cm (2.0–4.7 in) tall and 1–3 wide, [ 11 ] and is bulbous with a skirt-like ring. Microscopically, the cheilocystidia are club-shaped.

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