DyeAnotherWay is a Doctoral Networks action (DN) funded by the European Union´s Horizon Europe research and innovation programme under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie grant agreement No. 101225857. 
It aims to implement doctoral programmes through international and inter-sectoral partnerships of universities, research institutions, and businesses.

Map showing the countries involved in the project.

© FG Phytochemie

Coloured solutions in glasses photographed from above.

© Karin Fleck

A small bottle containing a dark-coloured solution.

© Karin Fleck

Orange coloured bacteria in a petri dish (detail).

© Karin Fleck

DyeAnotherWay aims at providing doctoral candidates with the skills necessary to lead the textile and food industries into a greener future by developing new sustainable dyeing methods exploiting bacterial genetic resources in an innovation-oriented way using cutting edge technology.

Cooperation at its best

  • Professional textile industry
  • Commercial suppliers of analytical and biotechnological services
  • 9 academic and 8 non-academic organisations from 11 countries across Europe and beyond

Urgent needs are addressed simultaneously

  • in the non-academic sector and scientific hotspots
  • in microbiology, bioeconomy and the textile and food industry

Our goal: New, sustainable biogenic dyes

Bacteria-based pigments, are the common research platform in combination with a broad spectrum of disciplines ranging from microbiology, chemistry, biotechnology, biochemistry, molecular biology, and bioinformatics to textile processing and market research. This will, in the near future, make a range of fully characterised biogenic dyes commercially available to the industry for use in dyeing both conventional and new textiles, allowing the industry to wean itself off petrochemical dyes in an economically viable way. The dyes will potentially find application beyond the textile and food industry, thus allowing many fields to benefit from their low carbon footprint production and their compatibility with human and environmental health.

Coloured fabric samples are laid out next to each other for comparison.

© Karin Fleck

Coloured fabric samples are laid out next to each other for comparison.

© Karin Fleck

Yellow coloured bacteria in a petri dish.

© Karin Fleck

Close-up of a blue-coloured fabric.

© Karin Fleck

Benefits for the doctoral candidates (DCs)

The 12 DCs will obtain multi-sectoral training in the relevant disciplines. In addition, training in research management, communication/presentation, creativity and entrepreneurship will provide key transferable skills for public and private sector employment, thereby maximizing the impact on the research and training on the fellows’ careers. The diversity of dissemination and communication activities guarantees the DCs' exposure to stakeholders in every sector and will help shape the future of education in this field.

Flow chart showing the project's work packages.

© FG Phytochemie

Project at a glance

Flow chart of work package number 3

© FG Phytochemie

Scientific work package 3

Flow chart of work package number 4

© FG Phytochemie

Scientific work package 4

Flow chart of work package number 5

© FG Phytochemie

Scientific work package 5