There are a number of agencies that the coloured item may encounter during its lifetime which can cause the colour either to fade or to bleed onto an adjacent uncoloured or light coloured item. These factors vary with the end use for which the product is intended. For instance carpets and upholstery are cleaned in a different way from bed linen and clothing and therefore come into contact with different materials. The agencies that affect coloured materials include light, washing, dry-cleaning, water, perspiration and ironing. There are a large number of colour fastness tests in existence which deal with these agencies and a full list will be found in the British Standard. A further group of tests is connected to processes in manufacturing that the coloured material may undergo after dyeing but before completion of the fabric, processes such as decatising or milling. Despite the fact that the list of colour fastness tests is very long, most of them are conducted along similar lines so that the main differences among the tests are in the agents to which the material is exposed.
Colour fastness is usually assessed separately with respect to:
1 changes in the colour of the specimen being tested, that is colour fading;
2 staining of undyed material which is in contact with the specimen during the test, that is bleeding of colour.
In order to give a more objective result a numerical assessment of each of these effects is made by comparing the changes with two sets of standard grey scales, one for colour change and the other for staining.
1. Colour Change Grey Scales
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