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1 Serge Cloth
Any wool fabric of smooth face and napped back in a 4-shaft twill weave. -
2 Serge Double Cloth
A heavy lining fabric woven in twill weaves. The fabric is a double cloth made with silk warp for face and back, and silk weft for face and cotton for back. It is very firm and the two cloths are strongly stitched together. Used for lining expensive winter coats.Dictionary of the English textile terms > Serge Double Cloth
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3 Cloth Serge
This term was formerly applied to a dress fabric made at Norwich, of worsted warp and wool weft. -
4 Serge D'aumale
The French term for a light twill woollen cloth, used for linings. -
5 Serge
SARGE, SERGEA coarse, woollen cloth known as early as the 12th century, a finer quality being called " say." It was much used during the Middle Ages for all portions of attire by the poorer classes, and in the piece for the decoration of houses. ————————SERGE (U.S.A.)The specification issued by the U.S.A. Government is as follows: - Cotton and worsted serge for overcoat lining shall be of single or 2-ply cotton warp and single or 2-ply worsted filling, the wool to be not below 46's grade; the width shall be full 36-in. exclusive of the selvedge and shall weigh from 6-oz. to 7-oz. per linear yard; it shall be woven in regular serge weave and constructed so as to give a fabric with good body and twill line on the face and containing approximately equal quantities of worsted and cotton yarns throughout; to be navy-blue, fast to the light, with both sets of threads and to be put up into bookfold. ———————— This term was formerly applied in Yorkshire to rough handling coarse wool fabrics woven in a twill design. An old 6-end serge was a simple diagonal 3 up, 1 down, 1 up, 1 down. The term serge is now almost universally understood to mean the 2 & 2 twill, and sometimes the 3 & 3 and the 4 & 4 twills. In wool fabrics it is the practice to add to the name serge, the definition of botany to distinguish fine wool serges from cross-bred qualities. A typical botany worsted serge, 2 & 2 twill weave, 21-02. per yard, 56/58-in. is made with 2/20's worsted 64/70's quality, S twist, 46 ends and 46 picks per inch, 72-in. wide in loom, woven white arid piece-dyed. The cloth is clear finished so as to obtain a well-defined twill effect. A usual weight for ladies' costume serge is 12/13-oz. per yard. Serges are made in many qualities ranging from 12-oz. to 26-oz. per yard. Crossbred worsted yarns are used in making the rougher and stronger types, while woollen yarns are also used. A serge which is extensively used in uniforms for transport workers is made with two-fold cross-bred worsted yarn for warp and single Cheviot woollen yarn for weft. The cloth is woven white or grey and piece-dyed. -
6 serge
[səːdʒ] noun, adjective(of) a type of strong, usually woollen, cloth:صِرج: نَسيج صوفي رقيقbrown serge tunics.
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7 Filoche Cloth
A French-made woollen serge dress cloth. A 8-shaft twill weave is used and the cloth dyed in all colours. -
8 Grain D'orge (Serge)
A French woollen dress cloth woven in small spot effects, up to 8-shaft weaves. Dyed in dark colours.Dictionary of the English textile terms > Grain D'orge (Serge)
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9 Shell Cloth
Cream coloured serge made for the British Army during the Great War of pure worsted in 2 & 2 twill weave, with 60 ends per inch of 2/36's and 70 picks per inch of 20's weft, and having a minimum tensile strength of 154-lb. warp way and 144-lb. weft way. This was used as a part of shells. -
10 шерстяная саржа
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11 Clays
A worsted cloth, diagonal twill weave, similar to a serge cloth but without gloss. The warp and weft yarns are slackly twisted, which gives a dull face to the cloth. The name was derived from a manufacturer (see Chain Twills). The weave is on six-shafts 3/3 and a typical make is 67 ends X 64 picks per inch, 2/30's worsted warp, 14's worsted and cotton mixed weft with about 60 per cent. worsted. The cloth has a firm feel and is very durable. -
12 шерстяная саржа
Textile: jersey cloth, serge cloth -
13 Enversin
A French term, formerly used for a serge cloth made of heavy wool yarns. The cloth was not fulled. -
14 རྔ་ཐེར་
[rnga ther]serge cloth made of camel's hair -
15 ཉིས་རྒྱུ་ཆིག་པ་
[nyis rgyu chig pa]serge cloth in which 2 threads cross one of which is stretched lengthwise -
16 ཐེར་མ་
[ther ma]kind of serge cloth resembling flannel -
17 སྣམ་དོར་
[snam dor]breeches made of thick serge cloth -
18 བལ་སླེ་
[bal sle]woollen serge-cloth of very small breadth -
19 བན་གཟན་
[ban gzan]shawl or serge-cloth wrapper used by lamas -
20 Double Jean
A name formerly applied to serge cloth.
См. также в других словарях:
Serge — is a type of twill fabric that has diagonal lines or ridges on both sides, made with a two up, two down weave. The worsted variety is used in making military uniforms, suits, great and trench coats. Its counterpart, silk serge, is used for… … Wikipedia
Serge Elisséeff — (1889 1972) was a Franco American academic, an early Sinologist and Japanologist, and member of the faculties of the Sorbonne and Harvard. He began studying Japanese at the University of Berlin, but he transferred to Tokyo Imperial University in… … Wikipedia
serge — (n.) late 14c., from O.Fr. serge, from V.L. *sarica, in M.L. cloth of wool mixed with silk or linen, from L. serica (vestis) silken (garment), from serica, from Gk. serike, fem. of serikos silken (see SILK (Cf. silk)). The French word is the… … Etymology dictionary
serge — [sə:dʒ US sə:rdʒ] n [U] [Date: 1300 1400; : Old French; Origin: Latin serica, from sericus silk ] strong woollen cloth used for making suits, trousers etc … Dictionary of contemporary English
serge — [ sɜrdʒ ] noun uncount a strong thick cloth made from wool … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
Cloth of gold — This article is about the fabric. For the snail, see Conus textile. For the 16th century event, see Field of Cloth of Gold. Cloth of gold is a fabric woven with a gold wrapped or spun weft referred to as a spirally spun gold strip . In most cases … Wikipedia
cloth — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) n. material, stuff, fabric, textile; fiber, synthetic; [dry, bolt, or piece] goods, remnant; napkin, dust cloth, etc. See materials. II (Roget s IV) n. Syn. fabric, material, stuff, goods, dry goods,… … English dictionary for students
serge — (Roget s IV) n. Syn. twill, wool serge, silk serge; see cloth … English dictionary for students
serge — [[t]sɜ͟ː(r)ʤ[/t]] N UNCOUNT Serge is a type of strong woollen cloth used to make clothes such as skirts, coats, and trousers. He wore a blue serge suit … English dictionary
serge — serge1 /serrj/, n. 1. a twilled worsted or woolen fabric used esp. for clothing. 2. cotton, rayon, or silk in a twill weave. [1350 1400; < F; r. ME sarge < MF < VL *sarica, for L serica (lana) Chinese (wool), i.e., silk; see SERIC ] serge2… … Universalium
Serge — /serrj/; Fr. /serddzh/, n. a male given name. * * * ▪ fabric (from Latin serica, “silk”), fabric much used for military uniforms, made in an even sided twill weave and usually clear finished that is, the fibre ends on the surface of the… … Universalium