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solid-coloured cloth

  • 1 одноцветная ткань

    Русско-английский текстильный словарь > одноцветная ткань

  • 2 гладкая ткань

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > гладкая ткань

  • 3 одноцветная ткань

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > одноцветная ткань

  • 4 Aerophane

    Thin, solid coloured silk gauze, used as dress and millinery trimming. Made in all colours, and when used, is cut on the bias. Much finer cloth than ordinary crepe.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Aerophane

  • 5 Lacha

    A cotton fabric used as a loin cloth by Mohammedans in the Punjab. Made plain and in stripes and checks, with a solid coloured border at each side. Both ordinary and mercerised cotton yarns are used. There are many qualities.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Lacha

  • 6 Nagli Pashmina

    Solid coloured fabric woven by the natives of Kashmir and Ludhiana, India, on hand looms with a warp of Pashmina wool and weft of Rampore or Kirman wool, in imitation of the real Pashmina cloth, especially alwan.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Nagli Pashmina

  • 7 Ras

    RAS, RAZ
    General French term for solid coloured plain weave wool cloth without nap, or with a very short nap.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Ras

  • 8 Raz

    RAS, RAZ
    General French term for solid coloured plain weave wool cloth without nap, or with a very short nap.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Raz

  • 9 Si-Zambi

    A plain weave cloth generally 39/40-in. wide in short lengths made for native wear in Africa. The cloth is woven with coloured and white yarns, the centre being solid colour and borders are checked. Fast washing colours are used, and the cloth is "assisted finish." The qualities are numerous; one sample has 56 ends and 60 picks per inch, 32's warp, 28's weft.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Si-Zambi

  • 10 Madras Handkerchiefs

    MADRAS HANDKERCHIEFS (Imitation, Lancashire make)
    Plain weave cotton fabric woven in coloured stripes 36-in. 8 yards, 80 ends and 128 picks per inch, 60's T., 40's W. When indigo or green is used the count is 50's. Other colours most in favour are grey, turkey red, chocolate and yellow. The colours are not fast. The feature of the cloth is that some of the warp yarn bleeds during finishing and tints the grey weft which gives a solid colour effect. ———————— There is a certain class of dyed cotton goods hand-woven on native looms in Madras known as " Madras Handkerchiefs." Their principal use is as dress for the native women of several of our Colonies and elsewhere. The real Madras handkerchief has a peculiar smell which never entirely disappears. Lancashire can and does produce a handkerchief at a much lower price than the hand-made article, but Lancashire cannot reproduce the smell. Owing to the absence of this smell Lancashire cannot compete, and today the native will pay twice as much for the real handkerchief, recognised by its smell, as for the Lancashire article. The hand-loom weavers in the Madras Presidency produce a large quantity of these fabrics and the style was invented there. The European variety is an imitation. The native-made fabric is 36-in. wide and 8 yards long, woven ends and 128 picks per inch, warp usually 60's grey, turkey red, yellow, chocolate, and 50's indigo and green. The weft is 40's both grey and coloured, weight about 26-oz. The yarns are generally imported grey and dyed locally with the one exception of turkey red. The colours are loose in the warp so that the grey weft is tinted. These hand-made fabrics are still better in handle and style than the imitations and are preferred in the Indian markets.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Madras Handkerchiefs

  • 11 Alpaca (Extract Wool)

    Alpaca "wool" weft is obtained by disintegrating fabrics made of mixture materials, and may contain animal and vegetable fibres. The term is also applied to a lustre fabric woven with a cotton warp and alpaca wool weft, plain weave. When dyed in solid colours it is cross-dyed, the cotton warp being dyed before weaving, and the piece is piece-dyed after leaving the loom. The warp is usually 2/80's Egyptian. The cloth wears well and not liable to gather dust, so is used for linings and men's summer coats. A typical cloth is woven 56-in., 72 X 70, 2/80/ 28's alpaca. The true alpaca is a long, white or coloured smooth hair obtained from the Auchenia paco of South America (see Alpaca Wool)

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Alpaca (Extract Wool)

  • 12 Bedstout

    A twill weave cotton cloth woven in coloured stripes or solid colour. This is probably the bed tick of today. Also called " inlet." Woven in 2 X 2 twill weave.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Bedstout

  • 13 Bura-Skikira

    A coloured shawl or scarf made of all-cotton yams. It has a border of solid colour, woven matting, while the body of the cloth is simple plain weave. The border has twice as many ends per inch than the ground. Made in many qualities and from 46-in. to 52-in. One quality is 50-in. 52 X 60, 32's/40's. The colours are bold, of the usual style for Africa. Generally blues, gold, green, etc.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Bura-Skikira

  • 14 Burrah

    A heavy plain weave coloured cotton cloth used for garments in East Africa. Generally dark blue stripes, or blue and black stripes, in solid bars. There are border stripes in other colours, and headings at each end of the piece. One quality is made 52 X 44, 20's/16's, with 18's colour yams.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Burrah

  • 15 Chadur

    A plain weave coloured check cloth, with a solid colour border at one side only. The Indian natives buy this largely (see Chudder)

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Chadur

  • 16 Intarsia Fabric

    A form of knit goods fabric made on flat knitting machines and used for jumpers, bathing costumes, etc. So called because the pattern or design is knitted in solid colours, thus both sides of the cloth are alike. The patterns are mostly geometrical such as diamonds, squares, zig-zags and stripes. The general effect is a detached motif on a self-coloured ground.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Intarsia Fabric

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