Colour Fastness Testing in Textiles: What EU Buyers Require and How to Pass Every Time
What Is Colour Fastness and Why Does It Matter?
Colour fastness is the resistance of a dye or pigment in a textile to fading or running under specific conditions — washing, rubbing, perspiration, light, or water. It is one of the most frequently tested parameters in textile quality assurance, and colour fastness failures are among the top three reasons for buyer complaints globally. In Pakistan, colour fastness issues cost the export industry an estimated USD 180–220 million annually in product recalls, order rejections, and remediation — according to APTMA quality surveys.
The fundamental reason colour fastness matters is simple: if the dye migrates from your garment onto a consumer's skin, furniture, or other garments in the wash, the product fails its basic function. For EU buyers, poor rubbing fastness results in immediate product withdrawal under the General Product Safety Regulation 2024.
The Core Colour Fastness Tests — What Each Measures
Simulates domestic laundering. Uses a small steel ball and detergent solution in a container rotated at 40°C or 60°C. Rates colour change of the specimen and staining of adjacent multifibre fabric on the grey scale (1=poor to 5=excellent). EU buyers typically require minimum Grade 3–4 for colour change and Grade 3 for staining.
Tests dye transfer to a white cloth rubbed against the dyed fabric — both dry and wet. Wet rubbing fastness is almost always lower than dry. Minimum Grade 2–3 wet is typically required. Below Grade 2, the product will visibly stain consumer skin and furniture.
Critical for underwear, sports, and children's garments. Tests acid (pH 5.5) and alkaline (pH 8.0) perspiration separately using a perspirometer plate at body temperature (37°C) for 4 hours. Children's wear must meet Oeko-Tex Class I requirements: Grade 3–4 minimum.
Simulates sunlight exposure using a xenon arc lamp. Rated on a blue wool scale (1–8). Upholstery and curtain fabrics require minimum Grade 5–6. Garment fabrics typically require Grade 4 minimum. Critical for outdoor sportswear and UV-exposed applications.
Colour Fastness Grades: What Each Number Means
Visible fading
Noticeable
Minimum pass
Most buyers
No change
Interactive: Colour Fastness Requirements by Buyer
Further Reading
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