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Side-to-Side Shading in Fabric Dyeing: Causes and Fixes
Side-to-side shading occurs when one edge of a dyed fabric looks darker than the other, or when the center differs from both sides. The defect often appears after dyeing, drying, fixation or washing-off. By that stage, several small widthwise differences may have accumulated along the line.
From our dyehouse view, this is why a quick recipe change often fails. The real cause may sit in the padder, pretreatment range, dryer, steam box or fabric itself. First identify whether the shade follows the machine side or the original fabric edge. Then adjust the process.

What Causes Side-to-Side Shading in Fabric Dyeing?
Most cases come from one of three areas:
- Equipment: uneven nip pressure, blocked nozzles, unbalanced liquor circulation, unequal airflow or unstable steaming conditions.
- Pretreatment and greige fabric: uneven absorbency, residual alkali, pH differences, moisture variation, construction differences or inconsistent sanding.
- Dyes and process settings: poor dye compatibility, rapid heating, uneven dosing, migration, incomplete washing-off or unequal oxidation.
A general color mismatch can also come from a wrong recipe, a raw-material lot change or finishing conditions. Our factory notes on dyeing color difference and bulk shade control cover those broader causes. Side-to-side shading needs a widthwise investigation because the position of the defect gives us an important clue.
Equipment Causes of Side-to-Side Shading
Uneven padder pressure and wet pick-up
We normally check the padder first on a continuous dyeing range. If the left, center and right sections receive different nip pressure, they carry different amounts of dye liquor. That wet pick-up difference can change shade depth and may also change fixation later.
Roll wear, bearing condition, nip alignment, hydraulic response and roll deflection all affect the pressure profile. A roll can look level while the machine stands still but behave differently under production load. Therefore, visual inspection alone cannot confirm a level nip.
During a trial roll, our line team cuts equal-size specimens from the left, center and right immediately after padding. We weigh each specimen without delay and calculate wet pick-up under the same conditions. Fast, consistent handling matters because evaporation can distort the comparison.
Thick and thin constructions may need different center-pressure compensation. Roll crown, bowl deflection and fabric build also influence the correct setting. Once a product family runs with a stable pressure profile, operators should record that standard and avoid casual center-pressure changes.
Blocked nozzles and uneven circulation
Overflow and air-flow dyeing machines can produce widthwise or rope-position differences when a nozzle moves out of line, a filter starts to block or the liquor circulation loses balance. The fabric then meets different flow, mechanical impact and dye exchange along its path.
The defect shape helps us choose the first check. Random local patches often point toward a nozzle, filter or circulation problem. In contrast, a smooth edge-to-edge gradient more often points toward padding, temperature or pretreatment. The shape does not prove the cause, but it narrows the search.
Uneven airflow, temperature and dye migration
Drying can turn a small wet-pick-up difference into clear side-to-side shading. Stronger airflow or higher heat on one side removes water faster. As moisture moves, unfixed dye can move with it and concentrate in another area. Dyehouses usually call this effect migration.
The first drying chamber needs close control because the fabric still carries substantial moisture. For many continuous routes, about 90°C offers a useful starting reference. However, fiber content, fabric weight, machine speed, dye class, wet pick-up and dryer design must decide the final setting.
High initial heat or aggressive airflow increases migration risk. In production, our team compares actual conditions on the left, center and right instead of relying only on the control-panel average. We also scan the working width and compare the result with verified machine sensors. Distance, surface texture and fabric emissivity can influence an infrared reading, so we do not rely on one reading alone.
Steam box pressure and temperature
Fixation changes when steam distribution varies across the width. Poor insulation, condensate, unstable pressure or uneven steam flow can leave one section less fixed. Later, one-sided spraying or unequal water replenishment can add another shade difference during washing.
Our operators check the steam box from front to back, left to right and top to bottom. If the machine carries a U-tube manometer, the water-column movement gives a quick view of pressure fluctuation. When pressure moves, temperature and fixation conditions also move. At that point, a dye recipe adjustment only hides the mechanical fault.
Pretreatment and Fabric Causes
Uneven absorbency after desizing and scouring
Pretreatment variation may remain invisible until the fabric meets color. Incomplete desizing or scouring leaves different amounts of size, wax, oil or other impurities across the width. Those residues change wetting, liquor pick-up and dye absorption.
Before dyeing, we compare capillary rise or another agreed absorbency test at the left, center and right. One center reading cannot represent the full width. If the three positions behave differently, the dyeing machine cannot correct the substrate.
Incomplete scouring may also cause weak levelness and random patches across the roll. For that reason, the pretreatment team should release fabric against measurable absorbency, whiteness and pH standards, not appearance alone.
Residual alkali and pH after mercerizing
Reactive dyes respond quickly to widthwise pH differences. Uneven alkali carryover after mercerizing changes dye reaction and may shift both depth and hue. The left, center and right positions therefore need comparable residual alkali and final pH.
More water boxes do not automatically solve this problem on a fast line. Controlled acid neutralization can remove residual alkalinity efficiently, but the team must control acid concentration, distribution and final fabric pH. Excess acid or local acid contact creates a new risk and may damage cellulose under unsuitable conditions.
Uniformity matters as much as the absolute value. A small and even residual level causes fewer problems than one alkaline edge beside one nearly neutral edge. For shade-sensitive bulk, our team records pH across at least three width positions after the final wash and drying stage.
Moisture regain before dyeing
Storage conditions can change an otherwise level pretreatment result. Exposed edges may absorb or lose moisture faster than the center. Incomplete drying makes the difference larger, while long open storage gives room humidity more time to affect the roll.
Uneven moisture changes the initial liquor uptake and can imitate a padder problem. Therefore, we roll and wrap pretreated fabric when the next process cannot start promptly. The batch record should also show storage time and room conditions for sensitive shades.
Greige construction and sanding
The greige fabric may already carry widthwise differences in weight, density or tension. Edge construction can differ from the center, which changes both liquor pick-up and visual shade.
Sanding adds a second physical variable. Unequal pressure, worn abrasive cloth or inconsistent contact can create more pile on one side. A spectrophotometer may show a small color difference, yet the surface reflects light differently and looks clearly uneven. Before changing the recipe, inspect the fabric from both directions and check whether the apparent shade follows the pile direction.
For sanded orders, we compare pile height and surface density across the width and between batches. We also check whether auxiliaries in the sanding liquor affect later wetting or dye absorption.
Dye and Process Causes
Poor dye compatibility
A combination shade becomes sensitive when its component dyes have very different exhaustion, migration or fixation behavior. A small change in temperature, pH or dosing can then alter both depth and hue.
During development, we compare individual dye curves and combination behavior. We also check sensitivity to salt, alkali, temperature and holding time. The finished fabric must confirm the color because a solution or paper lab dip cannot show every effect of construction and finishing.
Fast heating through the rapid uptake range
Rapid heating can lock in an existing machine difference before the dye has enough time to level. With polyester disperse dyeing, many E-, SE- and S-type systems enter a faster uptake range somewhere between 85°C and 110°C. The exact range depends on the dyes, polyester type, auxiliaries and machine conditions.
Within this sensitive range, about 1 to 1.5°C per minute gives many processes a practical starting point. Still, a dense fabric, dark shade or less compatible dye combination may need another curve. The trial result should set the final ramp.
Holding time must work with the heating curve and circulation. A longer hold does not automatically improve levelness or fastness. Our guide to dyeing holding time and color fastness explains this relationship in more detail.
Uneven salt, alkali or fixing-liquor dosing
The dosing system should add salt, alkali and other chemicals slowly enough for the circulation to distribute them. A fast addition at one point creates a temporary concentration difference. Weak circulation can turn that short imbalance into a permanent shade fault.
Continuous ranges face a similar risk when the high-level tank feeds one part of the trough more strongly. Check the dosing line, overflow, trough level and circulation path before changing the recipe percentage.
Leveling agents, anti-migration agents and washing-off
A leveling agent controls the initial dyeing rate and gives the dye more time to distribute. An anti-migration agent reduces dye movement while padded fabric dries. Sodium alginate can suit some systems, but dye chemistry, liquor viscosity, construction and washing conditions should determine the product and dosage.
These auxiliaries solve different problems. Extra anti-migration agent cannot correct uneven padder pressure. Likewise, a leveling agent cannot correct residual alkali that varies across the width.
Washing-off can also create side-to-side shading after the fabric leaves fixation with a level appearance. Uneven soap dosing, poor bath exchange, disordered water flow, one-sided spraying or unequal oxidation can remove unfixed color differently. We retain samples before and after each key wash stage when the defect appears late. Those samples show exactly where the shade began to move.
How to Diagnose Side-to-Side Shading Quickly
First decide whether the roll shows a depth difference or a hue difference. A dark-to-light change often points toward wet pick-up, concentration, migration or fixation. A redder, yellower or bluer area points more strongly toward pH, dye compatibility, temperature response or washing-off.
| Observed pattern | Check first | Useful confirmation |
|---|---|---|
| Smooth change from one edge to the other | Padder pressure, wet pick-up, airflow or heat | Widthwise wet-pick-up and temperature map |
| Center differs from both edges | Roll deflection, center pressure, moisture or dryer profile | Five-point measurement across the width |
| Random local patches | Nozzle, filter, circulation or contamination | Nozzle and filter inspection plus fabric-path check |
| Similar depth but different hue | pH, dye compatibility, dosing or oxidation | Spectrophotometer data and widthwise pH record |
| Difference develops during drying | Migration or unequal drying rate | Samples before drying and after each chamber |
| Difference develops during washing | Soaping, water flow or oxidation | Samples before and after each wash stage |
1. Check the semi-processed fabric
Measure absorbency, residual alkali, pH and moisture across the width. Also confirm the greige lot and any lot change. If these values differ, repeated dye recipe changes will waste time.
2. Measure wet pick-up
Cut equal-size specimens and weigh them with the same method and timing. Three positions give a minimum practical check. For a center-to-edge problem, five or more points show the pressure profile more clearly.
3. Map dryer and steamer conditions
Compare actual left, center and right conditions with the display. Inspect airflow, condensate, insulation and nozzle condition. A stable average can still hide a serious widthwise difference.
4. Swap the fabric edges during a short trial
Mark both original edges, then run a short controlled length with the left and right edges swapped across the machine width. If the darker area follows the same machine side, investigate equipment and liquor distribution. If it follows the original fabric edge, investigate pretreatment, construction, moisture or sanding.
Keep this trial short. It should answer one diagnostic question without putting a full production roll at risk.
5. Confirm the difference with an instrument
Visual assessment remains important, especially on textured and sanded surfaces. However, we also measure consistent left, center and right positions with the same instrument settings, fabric orientation, backing and number of folds.
ISO 105-J03 gives a method for calculating color differences between specimens under the same measurement conditions. The AATCC textile standards list includes procedures for instrumental color measurement and visual color-difference assessment. Before bulk starts, the buyer and mill should agree on the method, illuminant, observer, formula and tolerance. One universal ΔE limit cannot suit every fabric and end use.
How We Reduce Repeat Shade Problems
Reliable bulk control connects pretreatment data, machine settings and finished shade results. For a shade-sensitive order, our batch record normally includes:
- greige lot, construction, weight and width;
- left-center-right absorbency, whiteness and pH;
- moisture condition and storage time;
- padder pressure and wet-pick-up profile;
- dye and chemical lot numbers;
- dosing sequence, heating curve and holding time;
- dryer airflow and temperature distribution;
- steam pressure and widthwise temperature checks;
- shade readings before and after washing-off;
- the approved standard, trial-roll sample and retained bulk cutting.
Where practical, one order should use the same greige and dye lots. If the factory must change a lot, the team should record the change and check a short transition sample. Mixing lots without a check makes later root-cause work much harder.
Color approval should reflect the actual substrate and finishing route. In our sample room, a paper lab dip does not close the approval when construction, heat setting or surface finishing can alter the visible shade. Our dyeing lab dip and bulk color approval guide connects the approved color with production conditions.
Common Troubleshooting Mistakes
- Changing the recipe before measuring the fabric: the change may compensate for one roll while the actual fault remains.
- Judging under only one light source: another agreed illuminant may reveal a small hue shift.
- Confusing migration with uneven wet pick-up: both can look similar, but one develops mainly in the dryer and the other starts at the padder.
- Trusting only the control-panel average: an average cannot prove that both machine sides run equally.
- Using one center cutting: one sample cannot show a widthwise defect.
- Changing several settings together: the team cannot identify the effective correction.
What Should Buyers and Mills Confirm Before Bulk?
Which color tolerance applies?
Agree on visual assessment, an instrumental formula such as ΔECMC, or both. The approval record should state the illuminant, observer, instrument geometry, specimen preparation and permitted tolerance.
Where will the team measure the fabric?
Define the number and location of widthwise measurement points. Avoid distorted selvedges unless the product specification specifically includes them.
Does the trial follow the bulk route?
A laboratory sample and a production range may dry, steam and wash differently. A trial roll gives stronger evidence when the order carries migration, pile-direction or widthwise-pressure risk.
Which records stay with the batch?
Keep the approved lab dip, finished trial sample, left-center-right readings, process curve, machine number, chemical lots and retained bulk cutting. Any test report or certificate should match the actual material, production lot and target market.
