A category of synthetic dyes made with a base material of coal-tar derivatives. Aniline is an organic compound derived from coal and oil, which was first isolated in the early 1820s. Its use as a base for dyes emerged in 1856, when William Henry Perkin identified mauveine, a substance that produces a purple colour, from coal-tar benzene. Following this discovery, several dyes using aniline as a base were synthesized, including indigo, reds, yellows and blacks.
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ChicagoImpart Encyclopedia of Art. "Aniline Dye." Last updated February 17, 2026. https://imp-art.org/definitions/aniline-dye/.
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MLA"Aniline Dye." Impart Encyclopedia of Art, Feb. 17, 2026, https://imp-art.org/definitions/aniline-dye/.
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HarvardImpart Encyclopedia of Art (2026) Aniline Dye. Available at: https://imp-art.org/definitions/aniline-dye/ (Accessed: 3 March 2026).
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