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21 обработка
( стругом) blading, ( фотоматериалов) development, (птицы, рыбы) dressing, handling, manufacture, manufacturing, processing, work, working* * *обрабо́тка ж.
working, machining; ( придание нужных свойств) treatment; ( перерабатывание) processingбыть пода́тливым в обрабо́тке — work readily, be workable, be easily workedподдава́ться обрабо́тке легко́ или с трудо́м — lend itself to machining favourably or with difficultyано́дно-механи́ческая обрабо́тка — combination ED/ EC machiningано́дно-хими́ческая обрабо́тка — electrochemical machining, ECMобрабо́тка без сня́тия стру́жки — chipless material-removal process, chipless machiningобрабо́тка воды́ — water treatmentобрабо́тка воды́, внутрикотлова́я — internal (water) treatmentобрабо́тка воды́, известко́во-со́довая — sode-lime water treatmentобрабо́тка воды́, коррекцио́нная — coordinated phosphate (water) controlобрабо́тка воды́ ме́тодом ионообме́на — ion-exchange water treatmentобрабо́тка в патро́не — chucking workобрабо́тка в центра́х — machining of parts held between centresгазопла́менная обрабо́тка — flame machiningгруппова́я обрабо́тка — batch processingобрабо́тка да́нных — data processingобрабо́тка да́нных, автоно́мная — off-line data processingобрабо́тка да́нных в и́стинном масшта́бе вре́мени — real time data processingобрабо́тка да́нных, операти́вная — on-line data processingобрабо́тка докуме́нтов — document handlingдробестру́йная обрабо́тка — shot-blastingобрабо́тка кож — leather workingобрабо́тка кож в барка́се — paddlingобрабо́тка кож в га́шпеле — paddlingобрабо́тка кож в зо́льнике — limingобрабо́тка кож во фло́те — vattingобрабо́тка кож на кри́спель-маши́не — boardingобрабо́тка кож на отжи́мной маши́не — putting-outобрабо́тка кож на суши́льно-шири́льной маши́не — tenteringобрабо́тка кож, перви́чная — taking-up of hidesобрабо́тка кож, противогни́лостная — rot-resistant treatmentла́зерная обрабо́тка — laser treatmentобрабо́тка ли́нии электропереда́чи, высокочасто́тная — provision of carrier-frequency trapping and coupling equipment on a power lineобрабо́тка материа́лов, ультразвукова́я — ultrasonic machiningобрабо́тка мета́ллов, горя́чая — hot (metal) workingобрабо́тка мета́ллов давле́нием — plastic metal workingобрабо́тка мета́ллов ре́занием — machiningобрабо́тка мета́ллов, слеса́рная — benchworkобрабо́тка мета́ллов, хи́мико-терми́ческая — surface impregnationобрабо́тка мета́ллов, холо́дная — cold (metal) workingобрабо́тка мета́ллов, электроискрова́я — electro-spark [spark-discharge] machiningметаллостру́йная обрабо́тка — grit-blastingмо́края обрабо́тка — wet treatmentобрабо́тка наблюде́ний — reduction of observationsобрабо́тка на огнесто́йкость — fire-proofingобрабо́тка на станке́, то́чная — precision machiningотде́лочная обрабо́тка — finishing treatmentпескостру́йная обрабо́тка — sand-blastingпосле́дующая обрабо́тка — aftertreatmentпредвари́тельная обрабо́тка — pretreatmentобрабо́тка сто́чных вод — sewage [waste-water] treatmentтерми́ческая обрабо́тка1. ( металлов) heat treatment2. ( воды) hot processingтока́рная обрабо́тка — turningтока́рная обрабо́тка фасо́нных пове́рхностей обы́чным резцо́м — contour turningтока́рная обрабо́тка фасо́нных пове́рхностей фасо́нным резцо́м — contour formingупрочня́ющая обрабо́тка ( создающая упрочнение) — strengthening treatmentфи́нишная обрабо́тка — finishing treatmentхими́ческая обрабо́тка — ( придание свойств) chemical treatment; ( снятие материала) chemical millingчернова́я обрабо́тка — roughingподверга́ть дета́ль черново́й обрабо́тке — rough-machine a work (piece)чистова́я обрабо́тка — finishingподверга́ть дета́ль чистово́й обрабо́тке — finish-machine a work (piece)щелочна́я обрабо́тка — alkaline treatmentэлектрои́мпульсная обрабо́тка — electric pulse machiningэлектроконта́ктная обрабо́тка — electric resistance machiningобрабо́тка электро́нным лучо́м — electron-beam machiningэлектрохими́ческая обрабо́тка — electrochemical machiningэлектроэрозио́нная обрабо́тка — electric discharge [spark erosion] machining* * * -
22 виріб
ч( manufactured) article, product(ion)вироби мн. — goods, wares, manufacture, produce, production
кустарні вироби — handicrafts, hand-made goods
залізні вироби — ironmongery, hardware, ironware
срібні вироби — silver goods; silverware
ювелірний виріб — jewel; jewelry, gold and silver ware
панчішні вироби — hosiery, hose
порцелянові вироби — china, china-ware, porcelains
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23 arrêter
arrêter [aʀete]➭ TABLE 11. transitive verba. ( = immobiliser) to stopb. ( = entraver) to stop• on n'arrête pas le progrès ! the wonders of modern science!c. ( = abandonner) [+ études, compétition, sport] to give upd. ( = faire prisonnier) to arrest• je vous arrête ! you're under arrest!e. ( = fixer) [+ jour, lieu, plan] to decide onf. [+ malade] to give sick leave tog. [+ compte] ( = fermer) to settle ; ( = relever) to make up2. intransitive verb• arrête ! stop it!3. reflexive verba. ( = s'immobiliser) to stopb. ( = s'interrompre) to stop• s'arrêter pour se reposer/pour manger to stop for a rest/to eatc. ( = cesser) [développement, croissance] to stop• s'arrêter de manger/fumer to stop eating/smokingd. s'arrêter sur [choix, regard] to fall on* * *aʀete
1.
1) ( stopper) gén to stop; to switch off [machine, moteur, appareil]; to halt [production]; to give up [études, alcool]arrêter quelqu'un — ( dans une conversation) to stop somebody
rien ne les arrête — fig (pour faire un voyage, pour s'amuser) there's no stopping them; ( pour gagner de l'argent) they'd stop at nothing
arrêter de faire — to stop doing; ( renoncer) to give up doing
arrêter de travailler — ( définitivement) to stop work
arrête tes bêtises! — ( tais-toi) stop talking nonsense!; ( cesse de faire des bêtises) stop fooling around!
je n'arrête pas en ce moment! — I'm always on the go (colloq) these days!
‘tu n'as qu'à travailler!’ - ‘mais je n'arrête pas!’ — ‘you should work!’ - ‘but that's what I'm doing!’
2) ( appréhender) [police] to arrest3) ( déterminer) to fix [lieu, date]; to make [décision]; to decide on [plan, principe, mesure]
2.
arrête! — ( tu m'ennuies) stop it!; ( je ne te crois pas) I don't believe you!
3.
s'arrêter verbe pronominal1) ( faire un arrêt) [personne, train] to stops'arrêter à Grenoble — [personne] to stop off in Grenoble; [train, car] to stop in Grenoble
2) ( cesser de fonctionner) to stop3) ( cesser) [hémorragie, pluie, musique] to stopils ne vont pas s'arrêter là — fig they won't stop there
4) ( renoncer à) to give up ( de faire doing)5) ( se terminer) [enquête, histoire, chemin, jardin] to end6) ( fixer son attention sur)s'arrêter sur — to dwell on [point]
s'arrêter à — to focus on [détails, essentiel]
* * *aʀete vt1) [passage, flux, croissance] to stop2) [action, comportement, quelqu'un qui agit] to stop3)Arrête de te plaindre. — Stop complaining.
4) [personne] to stop5) [chauffage, électricité] to turn off, switch off, [moteur] to switch offIl a arrêté le moteur. — He switched the engine off.
6) [criminel, suspect] to arrestMon voisin a été arrêté. — My neighbour's been arrested.
7) (= fixer) [date, lieu de rendez-vous] to decide on9) COUTURE, [point] to fasten off* * *arrêter verb table: aimerA vtr1 ( empêcher d'avancer) lit, fig [personne, groupe] to stop [personne, véhicule, cheval]; to stop [chronomètre]; arrêter sa voiture le long du trottoir to pull up along the kerb GB ou curb US, to stop one's car by the kerb GB ou curb US; arrêtez-la! stop her!; rien ne les arrête fig (pour faire un voyage, pour s'amuser) there's no stopping them; péj ( pour obtenir de l'argent) they'd stop at nothing; fais-le, qu'est-ce qui t'arrête? just do it, what's stopping you?; c'est le prix du billet qui m'arrête I'd go if it weren't for the cost of the ticket; une plaine immense où rien n'arrête le regard a vast plain where there's nothing as far as the eye can see;2 ( éteindre) [personne, mécanisme] to stop, to switch off [machine, moteur]; to switch off [ventilateur, réveil, radio]; arrêtez votre moteur stop your engine;3 ( mettre fin à) to stop [fuite, hémorragie, circulation]; to stop [guerre, massacre, invasion]; to halt [processus, production, transaction, construction]; arrêter la marche or le cours du temps to halt the passage of time; les travaux ont été arrêtés work has been halted; arrêter qn ( dans une conversation) to stop sb; je vous arrête tout de suite I'll stop you straight away; arrêter de faire to stop doing; arrête de te plaindre/de mentir stop complaining/lying; il n'a pas arrêté de pleuvoir it didn't stop raining; le téléphone n'arrête pas de sonner the phone never stops ringing; elles n'arrêtent pas de bavarder they never stop talking; arrêter de travailler ( définitivement) to stop work; le trafic est arrêté sur la ligne B en raison d'un accident service has been suspended on the B line due to an accident; arrête! ( tu m'ennuies) stop it!; ( je ne te crois pas) I don't believe you!; arrête tes bêtises! ( tais-toi) stop talking nonsense!; ( cesse de faire des bêtises) stop fooling around!; ( je ne te crois pas) I don't believe you!; je n'arrête pas en ce moment! ( je suis très occupé) I'm always on the go○ these days!; ‘tu n'as qu'à travailler!’-‘mais je n'arrête pas!’ ‘you should work!’-‘but that's what I'm doing!’;4 ( renoncer à) to give up [études, compétition, activité, alcool]; arrêter la danse/le piano to give up dance/(playing) the piano; arrêter de faire to give up doing; arrêter de fumer/de boire/de se droguer to give up smoking/drinking/taking drugs;5 ( appréhender) [police] to arrest; 13 personnes ont été arrêtées lors de la manifestation 13 people were arrested at the demonstration;6 ( signer un arrêt de travail pour) [médecin] to give [sb] a sick note; être arrêté pour trois semaines to be given a sick note for three weeks;8 ( déterminer) to fix [lieu, date]; to make [décision]; to decide on [plan, principe, mesure]; to formulate [clause, décret].B vi ( faire arrêt) to stop (à at); ( cesser) [bruit, cri] to stop ; le téléphone n'arrête pas the phone hasn't stopped (ringing).C s'arrêter vpr1 ( faire un arrêt) [personne] to stop (pour faire to do); [voiture, bus, train] to stop; arrête-toi ici stop here; sans s'arrêter without stopping; s'arrêter pour se reposer to stop for a rest; s'arrêter dans un restaurant to stop at a restaurant; s'arrêter à Grenoble [personne] to stop off in Grenoble; [train, car] to stop in Grenoble; je me suis arrêté chez un ami I stopped off at a friend's house; il était arrêté au feu rouge he had stopped at the red light;2 ( cesser de fonctionner) [montre, pendule, machine] to stop; [radio, télévision] to go dead ou off; [cassette, disque] to be finished;3 ( cesser) [hémorragie, pluie, neige, musique] to stop; [émission] to end; s'arrêter de faire to stop doing; s'arrêter de bouger/de pleurer to stop moving/crying; s'arrêter de travailler to stop working; ils ne vont pas s'arrêter là fig they won't stop there;4 ( renoncer à) to give up (de faire doing); s'arrêter de boire/de fumer to give up drinking/smoking;5 ( se terminer) [enquête, recherche, histoire] to end; [voie ferrée, chemin, champ, jardin] to end; la ressemblance entre les deux s'arrête là any similarity between the two ends there; l'affaire aurait pu s'arrêter là that could have been the end of the matter;6 ( fixer son attention sur) s'arrêter sur to dwell on [texte, point, proposition]; s'arrêter à to focus on [détails, essentiel]; ce dernier point mérite qu'on s'y arrête this last point merits some attention.[arete] verbe transitif1. [empêcher d'avancer - passant, taxi] to stopla circulation est arrêtée sur la N7 traffic is held up ou has come to a standstill on the N7 (road)a. (familier & humoristique) [je ne te crois pas] come off it!b. [arrête de te vanter] stop showing off![interrompre] to interrupt3. [éteindre - radio, télévision] to turn off (separable) ; [ - moteur] to stop, to switch off (separable)4. [mettre fin à - élan] to stop, to check ; [ - écoulement, saignement] to stem, to stop ; [ - croissance, chute] to stop, to arrest, to bring to a halt5. [abandonner - construction, publication, traitement] to stop ; [ - sport, chant] to give up (separable)[cesser de fabriquer] to discontinue (the manufacture of)6. [suj: police] to arrestse faire arrêter to get ou be arrested7. [déterminer - date, lieu] to appoint, to decide on (inseparable), to fix ; [ - plan, procédure] to decide on (inseparable), to settle on (inseparable), to settle upon (inseparable)8. [suj: médecin]9. FINANCEa. [le fermer] to close ou to settle an accountb. [en faire un relevé] to draw up ou to make up a statement of account11. [gibier] to point12. INFORMATIQUE [ordinateur] to shut down————————[arete] verbe intransitifarrête, tu me fais mal! stop it, you're hurting me!quatre albums en un an! mais vous n'arrêtez pas! four albums in a year! you never stop ou you don't ever take a break, do you?j'ai arrêté de fumer I've given up ou stopped smokingarrêter de se droguer to give up ou to come off drugsil n'a pas arrêté de neiger it hasn't stopped snowing, it's been snowing non-stop————————s'arrêter verbe pronominal intransitif1. [cesser - bruit, pluie, saignement] to stopa. [cesser de] to stops'arrêter net to stop dead ou short3. [faire une halte, une pause] to stop4. [se fixer]notre choix s'est arrêté sur le canapé en cuir we decided ou settled on the leather couch————————s'arrêter à verbe pronominal plus préposition[faire attention à] to pay attention to -
24 ukpa
thin leather of homemade manufacture -
25 prerađevina
f manufacture, preparation | voćne (mliječne) -e fruit (dairy) products; mesne -e (processed-) meat products, processed meats; kožne -e leather goods/products* * *• derivative• products -
26 wyr|ób
m (G wyrobu) 1. zw. pl (produkt) product, ware(s)- wyroby cukiernicze/dziewiarskie/stolarskie confectionery/knitting/woodwork- wyroby przemysłowe industrial goods- wyroby ze skóry/drewna leather/wooden ware2. sgt (produkcja) production, manufacture- dżem domowego wyrobu home-made jam- □ wyroby gotowe finished articles, ready-made goodsThe New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > wyr|ób
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27 изделие
ср.1) (только ед.; изготовление) make2) ( предмет) (manufactured) article, product(ion); (мн. ч. изделия) goods, wares, manufacture, produce, productionглиняные изделия — earthenware ед.
жестяные изделия — tinware ед.
кустарные изделия — handicrafts, hand-made goods
серебряные изделия — silver goods; silverware ед.
скобяные изделия — ironmongery ед., hardware ед., ironware ед.
фарфоровые изделия — china, china-ware, porcelains
чулочные изделия — hosiery, hose
ювелирное изделие — jewel; мн. ч. jewelry, gold and silver ware
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28 Kay (of Bury), John
SUBJECT AREA: Textiles[br]b. 16 July 1704 Walmersley, near Bury, Lancashire, Englandd. 1779 France[br]English inventor of the flying shuttle.[br]John Kay was the youngest of five sons of a yeoman farmer of Walmersley, near Bury, Lancashire, who died before his birth. John was apprenticed to a reedmaker, and just before he was 21 he married a daughter of John Hall of Bury and carried on his trade in that town until 1733. It is possible that his first patent, taken out in 1730, was connected with this business because it was for an engine that made mohair thread for tailors and twisted and dressed thread; such thread could have been used to bind up the reeds used in looms. He also improved the reeds by making them from metal instead of cane strips so they lasted much longer and could be made to be much finer. His next patent in 1733, was a double one. One part of it was for a batting machine to remove dust from wool by beating it with sticks, but the patent is better known for its description of the flying shuttle. Kay placed boxes to receive the shuttle at either end of the reed or sley. Across the open top of these boxes was a metal rod along which a picking peg could slide and drive the shuttle out across the loom. The pegs at each end were connected by strings to a stick that was held in the right hand of the weaver and which jerked the shuttle out of the box. The shuttle had wheels to make it "fly" across the warp more easily, and ran on a shuttle race to support and guide it. Not only was weaving speeded up, but the weaver could produce broader cloth without any aid from a second person. This invention was later adapted for the power loom. Kay moved to Colchester and entered into partnership with a baymaker named Solomon Smith and a year later was joined by William Carter of Ballingdon, Essex. His shuttle was received with considerable hostility in both Lancashire and Essex, but it was probably more his charge of 15 shillings a year for its use that roused the antagonism. From 1737 he was much involved with lawsuits to try and protect his patent, particularly the part that specified the method of winding the thread onto a fixed bobbin in the shuttle. In 1738 Kay patented a windmill for working pumps and an improved chain pump, but neither of these seems to have been successful. In 1745, with Joseph Stell of Keighley, he patented a narrow fabric loom that could be worked by power; this type may have been employed by Gartside in Manchester soon afterwards. It was probably through failure to protect his patent rights that Kay moved to France, where he arrived penniless in 1747. He went to the Dutch firm of Daniel Scalongne, woollen manufacturers, in Abbeville. The company helped him to apply for a French patent for his shuttle, but Kay wanted the exorbitant sum of £10,000. There was much discussion and eventually Kay set up a workshop in Paris, where he received a pension of 2,500 livres. However, he was to face the same problems as in England with weavers copying his shuttle without permission. In 1754 he produced two machines for making card clothing: one pierced holes in the leather, while the other cut and sharpened the wires. These were later improved by his son, Robert Kay. Kay returned to England briefly, but was back in France in 1758. He was involved with machines to card both cotton and wool and tried again to obtain support from the French Government. He was still involved with developing textile machines in 1779, when he was 75, but he must have died soon afterwards. As an inventor Kay was a genius of the first rank, but he was vain, obstinate and suspicious and was destitute of business qualities.[br]Bibliography1730, British patent no. 515 (machine for making mohair thread). 1733, British patent no. 542 (batting machine and flying shuttle). 1738, British patent no. 561 (pump windmill and chain pump). 1745, with Joseph Stell, British patent no. 612 (power loom).Further ReadingB.Woodcroft, 1863, Brief Biographies of Inventors or Machines for the Manufacture of Textile Fabrics, London.J.Lord, 1903, Memoir of John Kay, (a more accurate account).Descriptions of his inventions may be found in A.Barlow, 1878, The History and Principles of Weaving by Hand and by Power, London; R.L. Hills, 1970, Power in theIndustrial Revolution, Manchester; and C.Singer (ed.), 1957, A History ofTechnology, Vol. III, Oxford: Clarendon Press. The most important record, however, is in A.P.Wadsworth and J. de L. Mann, 1931, The Cotton Trade and IndustrialLancashire, Manchester.RLH -
29 Koenig, Friedrich
SUBJECT AREA: Paper and printing[br]b. 17 April 1774 Eisleben, Thuringia, Germanyd. 17 January 1833 Oberzell, near Würzburg, Germany[br]German inventor of the machine printing press.[br]Koenig became a printer and bookseller. Around 1800 he was among those who conceived the idea of mechanizing the hand printing press, which apart from minor details had survived virtually unchanged through the first three and a half centuries of printing. In 1803, in Sühl, Saxony, he designed a press in which the flat forme, carrying the type, was mechanically inked and passed to and from the platen. Whether this ma-chine was ever constructed is not known, but Koenig found little support for his ideas because of lack of technical and financial resources. So, in 1806, he went to England and was introduced to Thomas Bensley, a book printer off Fleet Street in London. Bensley agreed to support Koenig and brought in two other printers to help finance Koenig's experiments. Another German, Andreas Bauer, an engineer, assisted Koenig and became largely responsible for the practical execution of Koenig's plans.In 1810 they patented a press which was steam-driven but still used a platen. It was set to work in Bensley's office the following year but did not prove to be satisfactory. Koenig redesigned it, and in October 1811 he obtained a patent for a steam-driven press on an entirely new principle. In place of the platen, the paper was fixed around a hollow rotating cylinder, which impressed the paper on to the inked forme. In Bensley's office it was used for book printing, but its increased speed over the hand press appealed to newspaper proprietors and John Walter II of The Times asked Koenig to make a double-cylinder machine, so that the return stroke of the forme would be productive. A further patent was taken out in 1813 and the new machine was made ready to print the 29 November 1814 issue—in secrecy, behind closed doors, to forestall opposition from the pressmen working the hand presses. An important feature of the machine was that the inking rollers were not of the traditional leather or skin but a composite material made from glue, molasses and some soda. The inking could not have been achieved satisfactorily with the old materials. The editorial of that historic issue proclaimed, 'Our Journal of this day presents to the public the practical result of the greatest improvement connected with printing, since the discovery of the art itself Koenig's machine press could make 1,200 impressions an hour compared to 200 with the hand press; further improvements raised this figure to 1,500–2,000. Koenig's last English patent was in 1814 for an improved cylinder machine and a perfecting machine, which printed both sides of the paper. The steam-driven perfecting press was printing books in Bensley's office in February 1816. Koenig and Bauer wanted by that time to manufacture machine presses for other customers, but Bensley, now the principal shareholder, insisted that they should make machines for his benefit only. Finding this restriction intolerable, Koenig and Bauer returned to Germany: they became partners in a factory at Oberzell, near Würzburg, in 1817 and the firm of Koenig and Bauer flourishes there to this day.[br]Further ReadingJ.Moran, 1973, Printing Presses, London: Faber \& Faber.T.Goebel, 1956, Friedrich Koenig und die Erfindung der Schnellpresse, Würzburg.LRD -
30 Stephenson, John
[br]b. 4 July 1809 County Armagh, Ireland,d. 31 July 1893 New Rochelle, New York, USA.[br]Irish/American pioneer of tramways for urban transport, builder and innovator of streetcars.[br]Stephenson's parents emigrated to the United States when he was 2 years old; he was educated in public schools in New York, where his parents had settled, and at a Wesleyan seminary. He became a clerk in a store at 16, but in 1828 he apprenticed himself to a coachbuilder, Andrew Wade, of Broome Street, New York. His apprenticeship lasted two years, during which time he learned mechanical drawing in the evenings and started to design vehicles. He was employed for a year on carriage repair work and in 1831 he opened his own coach repair business. Within a year he had built New York's first omnibus; this was bought by Abraham Brower, Stephenson's former employer, who started the city's first bus service. Brower immediately ordered a further three buses from Stephenson, and a further horse-drawn car was ordered by the New York \& Harlem Railroad. He built the car used at the opening of the railroad on 26 November 1832, the first street railway in the world. Orders followed for cars for many street railroads in other cities in the eastern States, and business prospered until the financial panic of 1837. Stephenson's factory was forced to close but he managed to pay off his creditors in the next six years and started in business again, building only omnibuses and coaches to become recognized as the world's foremost builder of streetcars. His first car had four flanged wheels, and a body of three compartments slung on leather straps from an unsprung chassis. He built horse-drawn cars, cable cars, electric and open cars; by 1891 his factory had 500 employees and was producing some twenty-five cars a week. His first patent had been dated 23 April 1833 and was followed by some ten others. During the Civil War, his factory was turned over to the manufacture of pontoons and gun carriages. He married Julia Tiemann in 1833; they had two sons and a daughter. He lived at New Rochelle, New York, from 1865 until his death.[br]Further Reading"The original car builder", 1891, New York Tribune, 10 September.D.Malone (ed.), Dictionary of American Biography, Vol. 9, New York: Charles Scribner.IMcN
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Leather — For other uses, see Leather (disambiguation). Modern leather working tools Leather is a durable and flexible material created via the tanning of putrescible animal rawhide and skin, primarily cattlehide. It can be produced through different… … Wikipedia
Poromeric imitation leather — Sometimes referred to as poromerics, poromeric imitation leathers are a group of synthetic breathable leather substitutes made from a plastic coating (usually a polyurethane) on a fibrous base layer (typically a polyester).The term poromeric was… … Wikipedia
Ostrich leather — is the result of tanning skins taken from African ostriches farmed for their feathers, skin and meat. The leather is distinctive for its pattern of bumps or vacant quill follicles, ranged across a smooth field in varying densities. It requires an … Wikipedia
Composition leather — is made from recycled leather off cuts, trimmings and shavings that would normally be sent by the leather industry to landfill. The type of leather specifically used in the manufacture of composition leather is called ‘wet blue’. This raw… … Wikipedia
Patent leather — is leather that has been given a high gloss, shiny finish. The original process was developed by Newark based inventor Mario Baker in 1818 with commercial manufacture beginning September 20, 1819. His process used a linseed oil–based lacquer… … Wikipedia
Connolly Leather — The Jaguar XJ S was a typical recipient of a Connolly Leather interior Connolly Leather was for over 125 years, a British company supplying highly finished leather primarily to car manufacturers. The term is also used to describe the particular… … Wikipedia
Patent leather — Patent Pat ent (p[a^]t ent or p[=a]t ent), a. [L. patens, entis, p. pr. of patere to be open: cf. F. patent. Cf. {Fathom}.] 1. Note: (Oftener pronounced p[=a]t ent in this sense) Open; expanded; evident; apparent; unconcealed; manifest; public;… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
chrome leather — noun : chrome tanned leather used largely in the manufacture of shoe uppers … Useful english dictionary
skirting leather — noun : a leather used in the manufacture of saddles and bridles … Useful english dictionary
Leder — Leder, jener Teil der tierischen Haut, welcher durch Aufnahme der verschiedenartigsten Dinge, wie pflanzliche Gerbstoffe, Fette, Salze, Seifen u. dergl., aus dem leicht verweslichen Zustand der Rohhaut in einen Zustand größerer… … Lexikon der gesamten Technik