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1 moiré silk
muare ipek -
2 moiré
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3 Moire Lamb
BROADTAIL, or MOIRE LAMBFine quality lambskins originating principally in India and China, with natural markings varying from patterns similar to the Genuine Broadtail to patterns resembling that of moire silk - (R.T.S.A.) -
4 Silk Fabrics
The Silk Association of Great Britain and Ireland, Inc., has formulated the following definitions of " Silks ": - (1) Silk means the natural product of the silkworm, whether net, spun, or schappe silk. (2) Woven or knitted textiles and articles made therefrom. Silk goods may only be so called if they contain no other fibre than silk. They may be further qualified as pure silk goods if they contain no tin weighting and no added weight of any kind other than that which is an essential part of dyeing and finishing. (3) The word silk may be used for articles containing silk and other fibres provided it is clearly qualified, as for example, silk warp taffeta, silk warp poplin, silk pile velvet, silk mixture, silk union, etc. (4) Smallwares, certain smallwares containing silks in combination with other fibres (such as Paris bindings, gimps, eyeglass cords, etc.), have been by long established custom known as "silks." Only where there is a clear long established custom may they continue to be described as silk, otherwise the general principles set forth above will apply. The more generally known silk fabrics are as given below: - Armures - Barathea, Loisine, Natte, Ottoman, Roy ale. Repp. Figured Silks - Arras, Broche, Brocatelle, Brocades, Chevron, Chine warp prints. Cote-line, Damassin, Foulard, Lampas, Matelasse, Striped tabaret. Satins - Duchesse, Meteor, Mervelleux, Peau de Soie, Radyimar, Raadames, Radium, Satin mousseline. Satin messaline. Satin lus-mineaux. Satin charmeuse. Satin de Lyon, Satin chine. Satin lumiere, Soleil, Soie de Devil. Twills - Serge, Surah, Sarcenat. Velvet, or pile weaves - Terry velvet frese, Utrecht, Velours de nord. Velours de chiffon, Velours de sabre. Silk warp, wool weft - Bengaline, Cotele, Crepon, Irish poplin, Popeline, Poplinette, Sultane, Sicilienne, Velours Victoria, Veloa-tine. Silk warp, cotton weft - Moirette, Polonaise, Satins, Satinet, Striped linings. Taffetas, plain weaves - Bengaline de Soie, Epingle, Faille Francaise, Glace, Gros grain, Gros de Tours, Gros de Naples, Gros de Suez, Lustring, Pongee, Poult de Soie, Royale, Tabaret, Taffeta mousseline. Taffeta chiffon. Crepe de chine, Ninon, tulle, voile, Marquisette, Moire onde. Moire Faconne, Moire Francaise, Moire Antique. -
5 Moire Ineraillable
A moire effect produced in the loom, the term means "ineffaceable moire." It is an all-silk cloth in 10-shaft weave invented by a Tignat, a silk manufacturer of Lyons, in 1843. He used two warps, one with 6,400 two-fold ends and the other 1,600 single ends. In the repeat two sheds were filled with 10 picks and two following sheds with one pick only, and so on. The combination of wefts with the different sized warps produced a design with a fancied resemblance to moire.Dictionary of the English textile terms > Moire Ineraillable
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6 moire
moiré, e [mwaʀe]adjective[tissu, papier peint] moiré ; [papier] marbled* * *mwaʀnom féminin ( étoffe) moire* * *mwaʀ nf* * *moire nf1 ( étoffe) moire;[mwar] nom fémininmoire de soie watered ou shot silk -
7 Moire Velours
A cheap, loosely woven half-silk fabric (silk warp, cotton weft), used for hangings. -
8 Moire Antique
A dress silk fabric used for waiscoats, dress goods, etc. Figured by a jacquard, usually in stripes on a satin ground, with a moire repp stripe between each two figure stripes. The fabric is folded lengthways with face inside, the selvedges covering each other and stitched together. The fabric is then damped and passed between hot cylinders. -
9 Moire Soleil
A brilliant silk fabric with an indistinct moire effect. -
10 Moire Poplin
A silk warp and wool weft watered cloth, poplin weave. -
11 Moire Renaissance
A silk warp, cotton weft, coarse rib fabric. The cloth is folded, then calendered and pressed to produce striped watered patterns. -
12 Moire Supreme
An all-silk warp satin finished in watered effects. -
13 moire de soie
watered ou shot silk -
14 Serge Moire
A material with a plain or striped rib weave, made with spun silk warp and glazed cotton weft, moire finished. Sometimes mercerised cotton warp is used. -
15 watered silk
Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > watered silk
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16 watered silk
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17 muare ipek
moiré silk -
18 Linings
There are many fabrics used for linings for coats, dresses, gowns, mantles, etc. The most important are as below and each is described under its name: - Alpaca, Beatrice twill, botany, check, Italians, cotton, moire, glissades, lastings, Levantines, lustre, melange, moire silk, rainproof, serge, shot brocade, silk, rayon, taffeta, twills, union, Venetian. -
19 Broadtail
BROADTAIL, or MOIRE LAMBFine quality lambskins originating principally in India and China, with natural markings varying from patterns similar to the Genuine Broadtail to patterns resembling that of moire silk - (R.T.S.A.) ———————— This means a. dyed fine quality lambskin with artificial broadtail marking, obtained from shearing - (R.T.S.A.) -
20 муар
См. также в других словарях:
Moiré pattern — Moiré and Moire redirect here. For other uses, see Moire (disambiguation) … Wikipedia
Moire (fabric) — Moire ribbons In textiles, a moire (pronounced /ˈmwɑr/ or /ˈmɔr/) (less often, moiré) is a fabric with a wavy (watered) appearance produced mainly from silk, but also wool, cotton and rayon. The watered ap … Wikipedia
moire — (n.) watered silk, 1650s, from Fr. moire (17c.); see MOHAIR (Cf. mohair). As an adjective, moiré having the appearance of watered silk, it is attested from 1823 … Etymology dictionary
moire — (also moiré) ► NOUN ▪ silk fabric treated to give it an appearance like that of rippled water. ORIGIN from French moire mohair (the treatment originally being used on mohair fabric) … English terms dictionary
moire — [mwär, môr] n. [Fr, watered silk < MOHAIR] a fabric, esp. silk, rayon, or acetate, having a watered, or wavy, pattern … English World dictionary
moire antique — moire antique, silk watered in a large pattern. ╂[< French moire antique] … Useful english dictionary
moire — [mwa: US mwa:r, mwa:ˈreı] n [U] a type of silk with a pattern that looks like waves … Dictionary of contemporary English
moiré or moire or moir — a white moire fabricFabric, especially silk, rayon, linen, or another material with a wavy or rippled pattern or texture impressed into its surface by engraved rollers. a red moire fabricOriginally moiré was a mohair fabric with this lustrous… … Glossary of Art Terms
moire — [mwα:] (also moiré mwα:reɪ) noun silk subjected to heat and pressure after weaving to give a rippled appearance. adjective (of silk) having a rippled finish. ↘having a pattern of wavy lines like that of moire. Origin C17: from Fr. moire mohair… … English new terms dictionary
Silk — This article is about a natural fiber and the textile woven from it. For other uses, see Silk (disambiguation). Four of the most important domesticated silk worms, together with their adult moth forms, Meyers Konversations Lexikon (1885 1892)… … Wikipedia
moiré — /mwah ray , mawr ay, mohr ay/; Fr. /mwann rdday /, adj. 1. (of silks and other fabrics) presenting a watery or wavelike appearance. n. 2. a design pressed on silk, rayon, etc., by engraved rollers. 3. any silk, rayon, etc., fabric with a watery… … Universalium