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marked+yarn

  • 1 Immunised Cotton

    A chemically-treated cotton that resists ordinary cotton dyes, but has a marked affinity for basic dyes and some acid dyes. Fabrics in which this yam is used together with ordinary cotton yarns when dyed with direct or other cotton dye will give white effects on the immunised cotton, thereby yielding two-colour effects. The yarn can be used with wool, silk, linen, viscose, acetate and other fibres as effect threads. This chemical treatment produces a yarn differing greatly from ordinary cotton - the fibres shrink, lose lustre and become almost cylindrical.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Immunised Cotton

  • 2 pegote

    f. & m.
    1 sponger, dollop.
    2 gooey mess, gob.
    m.
    1 sticky mess (masa pegajosa).
    2 botch.
    * * *
    1 familiar (masa) sticky dollop, blob
    2 familiar (chapuza) botch-up, botched job
    3 familiar (fanfarronada) brag, boast
    \
    * * *
    a) ( de suciedad) sticky mess

    tirarse pegotes — (Esp fam) to brag (colloq)

    b) (Esp fam) ( mamarracho)
    * * *
    = blob.
    Ex. Reciprocal RT references work both ways and are marked with a kind of blob in the shape of a distorted inverted comma.
    * * *
    a) ( de suciedad) sticky mess

    tirarse pegotes — (Esp fam) to brag (colloq)

    b) (Esp fam) ( mamarracho)
    * * *
    = blob.

    Ex: Reciprocal RT references work both ways and are marked with a kind of blob in the shape of a distorted inverted comma.

    * * *
    1 (de suciedad) sticky mess
    tirarse pegotes ( Esp fam); to brag ( colloq)
    no te tires pegotes stop bragging o don't give me that! ( colloq)
    2
    ( Esp fam) (mamarracho): quedará mejor si no le pones el pegote ese en el medio it'll look better if you don't put that awful thing in the middle
    ese lazo es un pegote that bow just doesn't go
    estar de pegote ( Esp fam); to be/feel like a spare part ( colloq)
    3 ( fam) (persona pesada) nuisance, pain ( colloq)
    4
    ( RPl fam) (persona apegada a otra): es un pegote de la mamá he's tied to his mother's apron strings
    el novio es un pegote her boyfriend never leaves her for a minute o sticks to her like glue
    * * *

    pegote sustantivo masculino
    1 (de masa, etc) blob: tienes que sacar los pegotes de pintura, you'll have to get rid of those paint blobs
    2 fam (chapuza, cosa mal hecha) botch up
    3 Lit (añadido inútil) unfortunate addition
    fam (añadido que desentona) las nuevas papeleras son auténticos pegotes, those new bins stick out a mile
    4 fam (mentira, trola) fib: no entiendo por qué tiene que tirarse esos pegotes, I just can't understand why he has to lie like that
    ' pegote' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    parche
    English:
    dollop
    - gob
    * * *
    pegote nm
    Fam
    1. [masa pegajosa] sticky mess;
    este arroz está hecho un pegote this rice is a sticky mess;
    tenía la moto llena de pegotes de barro her motorbike was covered in mud splashes
    2. [chapucería] botch;
    el final de la película es un pegote the ending just doesn't go with the rest of the movie
    3. Esp [mentira]
    tirarse pegotes to tell tall stories, to boast;
    se tiró el pegote diciendo que era jugador de baloncesto he spun a yarn about being a basketball player
    4. RP [persona]
    es un pegote de la madre he's tied to his mother's apron strings, he's a mummy's boy;
    esos dos están siempre como un pegote those two are like Siamese twins, they're never apart
    * * *
    m fam ( cosa fea) eyesore
    * * *
    pegote nm
    1) : sticky mess
    2) Mex : sticker, adhesive label

    Spanish-English dictionary > pegote

  • 3 Crimp Fabrics

    The term includes such types as the "blister" and the "crepon." These fabrics are used for the making of dress goods, and can be produced in five different ways, namely: (a) by making suitable combinations of slack and tight weaves; (b) unequal warp tension in weaving, the crimp forming warp threads being allowed to weave very slack; (c) by combining two materials having a marked dissimilarity of shrinkage power during wet finishing, i.e., botany wool and mohair; (d) by modifying the weave structure in such a manner as to drop some picks from the main fabric and allow them to float on the back, the effectiveness of this method is enhanced by using a hard-twisted, single weft yarn to assist the contraction; (e) chemical means, such as is produced by printing the cloth in stripes with caustic soda of about 20 per cent strength, thickened with some substance such as starch. The cloth shrinks where printed and the unprinted parts in puckering gives the crimp effect. By dyeing the cloth two tones are obtained as a darker shade is shown where the caustic soda appears (see crepeing and crimps)

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Crimp Fabrics

  • 4 Skinner, Halcyon

    [br]
    b. 6 March 1824 Mantua, Ohio, USA
    d. 28 November 1900 USA
    [br]
    American inventor of a machine for making Royal Axminster and other carpets.
    [br]
    Halcyon was the son of Joseph and Susan Skinner. When he was 8 years old, his parents moved to Stockbridge in Massachusetts, where he obtained education locally and worked on farms. In 1838 his father moved to West Farms, New York, where Halcyon helped his father make violins and guitars for seven years. He then worked as a general carpenter for eight years until he was hired in 1849 by Alexander Smith, a carpet manufacturer. Skinner designed and constructed a hand loom that could weave figured instead of striped carpets, and by 1851 Smith had one hundred of these at work. Skinner was retained by Smith for forty years as a mechanical expert and adviser.
    Weaving carpets by power started in the 1850s on enormous and complex machines. Axminster carpets had traditionally been produced in a similar way to those made by hand in Persia, with the tufts of woollen yarn being knotted around vertical warp threads. To mechanize this process proved very difficult, but Skinner patented a loom in 1856 to weave Axminster carpets although, it was not working successfully until 1860. Then in 1864 he developed a loom for weaving ingrain carpets, and c. 1870 he altered some imported English looms for weaving tapestry carpets to double their output.
    His most important invention was conceived in 1876 and patented on 16 January 1877. This was the Moquette or Royal Axminster loom, which marked yet another important step forward and enabled the use of an unlimited number of colours in carpet designs. This type of loom became known as the Spool Axminster because of the endless chain of spools carrying lengths of coloured yarns, wound in a predetermined order, from which short pieces could be cut and inserted as the tufts. It put Smith's company, Alexander Smith \& Sons, Yonkers, New York, in the lead among American carpet manufacturers. This type of loom was introduced to Britain in 1878 by Tomkinson \& Adam and spread rapidly. Skinner virtually retired in 1889 but continued to live in Yonkers.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    Biography, American Machinist 23.
    Dictionary of American Biography, Vol. XVII.
    G.Robinson, 1966, Carpets, London (for the history and techniques of carpet weaving).
    A.Barlow, 1878, The History and Principles of Weaving by Hand and by Power, London (includes a section on pile weaving which covers some types of carpets).
    RLH

    Biographical history of technology > Skinner, Halcyon

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