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Damasse Broche

  • 1 Damasse

    Originally an all-silk fabric with large designs developed in many colours. It was a heavy cloth with satin ground and weft figure. Imitations are now made with cotton warp and cotton or rayon weft. Used for dresses, and when very heavy for curtains, furnishings, dancing shoes, etc. The brocade effects are developed in colour or fancy weaves. Damasse Arabesque has arabesque designs. Damasse Brocat has gold and silver weft for figuring. Damasse Broche has flowered designs. Damasse Cachenir has palm leaf designs. Damasse Chine has printed silk warps. Damasse Egyptien has Egyptian designs. Damasse Jardinier is an expensive damask made with silk warp and fine mercerised cotton weft. The design is of detached flowers in colours. Many coloured wefts are used.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Damasse

  • 2 Damask

    A cotton cloth woven with jacquard designs and used for table covers, napkins, curtains, upholstery cloth, etc. They can be reversible or one-sided only. Designs may be floral or geometrical. Yams 8's to 40's warp and weft. The ground and figure are bound by uniform weaves, generally twill or satin. The figure is developed by interchanging the warp and weft and the pattern so made up that the reflection of light on the threads brings out the effect. Linen and silk damasks only differ in material, as cotton damasks are made in very fine yarns. ———————— A fabric of single structure formed by two satin weaves with figure developed in warp and ground in weft satin weaves resulting in a design that shows very clearly as a warp figure on a weft ground. The figure can be made more prominent by using coloured yam. For table damasks a cotton warp with linen weft is often used. Damasks are made in numerous qualities, but all are figured in the five- or eight-shaft satin weaves. As early as the reign of Henry VIII a damask was a rich figured satin or linen and a damask was known in England as early as the 13th century. The name is derived from Damascus and is presumed to refer to the design and not the material. The finest linen damask is woven about 126 ends and 188 picks per inch from superior flax yarns. The finished sizes vary up to 90-in. wide, 6 yards long, and as a rule damask napkins and table tops can be obtained to match. Standard cloths of single damask are made: - Five-end satin, 60-ends and 56 picks per inch, 50's T., 35's lea W., boiled; 8-end satin, 80 ends and 76 picks per inch, 50's T., 60's lea W., boiled (see Double Damask) ———————— Originally an all-silk fabric with large designs developed in many colours. It was a heavy cloth with satin ground and weft figure. Imitations are now made with cotton warp and cotton or rayon weft. Used for dresses, and when very heavy for curtains, furnishings, dancing shoes, etc. The brocade effects are developed in colour or fancy weaves. Damasse Arabesque has arabesque designs. Damasse Brocat has gold and silver weft for figuring. Damasse Broche has flowered designs. Damasse Cachenir has palm leaf designs. Damasse Chine has printed silk warps. Damasse Egyptien has Egyptian designs. Damasse Jardinier is an expensive damask made with silk warp and fine mercerised cotton weft. The design is of detached flowers in colours. Many coloured wefts are used.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Damask

См. также в других словарях:

  • DAMAS — (en arabe, Dimashq), la plus importante ville de Syrie, doit sa fortune au cours pérenne du Barad et à l’inlassable ingéniosité des hommes qui ont su très tôt irriguer un sol fertile pour en faire une riche oasis : la Gh レa. Cette cité plusieurs… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • rose — 1. rose [ roz ] n. f. • v. 1140; lat. rosa A ♦ 1 ♦ Fleur du rosier, d une odeur suave, ornementale, dont le type primitif est d un rouge très pâle. Roses rouges, blanches, jaunes; roses( )thé, d un jaune pâle rosé. Roses de Provins, de Bulgarie.… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • rosé — 1. rose [ roz ] n. f. • v. 1140; lat. rosa A ♦ 1 ♦ Fleur du rosier, d une odeur suave, ornementale, dont le type primitif est d un rouge très pâle. Roses rouges, blanches, jaunes; roses( )thé, d un jaune pâle rosé. Roses de Provins, de Bulgarie.… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • uni — uni, ie 1. (u ni, nie) part. passé de unir. 1°   Joint à. Deux tuyaux unis bout à bout. •   Le mystère de l Évangile, c est l infirmité et la force unies, la grandeur et la bassesse assemblées, BOSSUET Sermons, Église, Préambule.. •   L âme unie… …   Dictionnaire de la Langue Française d'Émile Littré

  • VELOURS — Les premiers hommes furent, dit on, vêtus de fourrures d’animaux variés et, par son aspect, le velours suggère une sorte de pelage, mais en est il dérivé? Ce n’est là qu’une simple hypothèse. Quoi qu’il en soit, il est certain que le velours est… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • façonné — façonné, ée [ fasɔne ] adj. • 1334; de façonner ♦ Travaillé, ouvré. Étoffe façonnée, tissée de manière à former des dessins. ⇒ broché, damassé. ● façonné nom masculin Tissu où le croisement de la chaîne et de la trame produit des dessins… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • tissu — [ tisy ] n. m. • XIIIe; p. p. subst. de l a. v. tistre → tisser 1 ♦ Surface souple et résistante constituée par un assemblage régulier de fils textiles entrelacés, soit tissés (⇒ tissage), soit maillés (⇒ 1. maille, tricot; 3. filet, réseau,… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

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