It later serviced the local textile industry, but then found a niche with the water industry, making valve keys for reservoirs and water mains. |
|
India's textile industry is in a tizzy as new duties on bed linens and other textile products will hurt textile majors with considerable clout. |
|
Interface is not the first textile company to develop products using the principles of biomimicry, Oakey says. |
|
They gave me one phone number which I had checked out, turned out to be a disconnected phone number of a textile mill that had gone bankrupt. |
|
Student sketches may then be incorporated into an illustration or a pictorial theme of their own choosing, or even a textile print. |
|
Fabric is woven in relatively narrow widths and long lengths, cut and assembled side-to-side for garments, blankets and other textile uses. |
|
One of the first industrial requisitions was that of the textile factory Bellavista Tome. |
|
On display will be a selection of paintings, ceramics and textile arts all of which will be on sale. |
|
They have been created by expert designers to attract fashion connoisseurs and the textile industry at large. |
|
The government therefore imposed restrictions on the import, and even wearing, of cotton cloth to protect the woollen textile industry. |
|
In textile industries daughters and sons of weavers inherited skills, and chose spouses in the same profession. |
|
When the textile mills were set up in Bombay the employers were required to provide housing in the form of chawls for their workers. |
|
This would require subtracting color which is iffy in the best of textile situations. |
|
They say they had no choice but to pack up by torchlight yesterday after the electricity to Woolston House, a former textile mill, was cut off. |
|
In his inaugural speech Malcolm Campbell urged textile producers to stop doing things in the tired old ways and adopt a fresh approach. |
|
They left the ship to tour Islay's Bowmore whisky distillery to enjoy a wee dram or two, while the Princess Royal went on her textile trek. |
|
Unlike machinery used in textile mills, steelmaking machinery had few spinning belts that could pull workers into drive shafts. |
|
The photomechanically reproduced image of warp and weft represents both the privileged canvas and common textile. |
|
He also said companies in the textile industry could provide kit for the team in return for having their corporate logo on the strip. |
|
The textile cover protects the car against dirt, dust and sunlight, among other things, until the cover is removed. |
|
|
This is the stark reality in a city where cutthroat competition between textile businesses is the order of the day. |
|
Sterile flowers soon fall off the plant without forming the bolls that are the source of cotton textile fibers. |
|
You may count the stitches in a needlework more easily than with the textile actually in your hands. |
|
Surpluses persisted, however, thanks to greater foreign production and the increased use of synthetics in textile manufacturing. |
|
Europe is also becoming increasingly concerned about the huge increase in Chinese textile exports to Europe. |
|
Dorothy started work at Silsden textile firm Knox's, left to bring up daughter June Gorthorpe, then became a dinner lady at Grange Middle School. |
|
In fact, the expression is modern, and it seems to refer to the unsorted output from a textile mill. |
|
Softer compared to the traditional Khadi textile, this new handspun fabric boasts of being eco-friendly and does not crease easily. |
|
Connoisseurs of the Indonesian textile arts know the spell these rich earthy colors and scintillating patterns can cast. |
|
Women in many families have become the breadwinners, taking low-paying jobs as maids or at the country's new textile factories. |
|
She knew him from her days working at the Metropolitan as a costume researcher and textile restorer. |
|
This problem was particularly acute in the textile sector where a large number of spindles were set up on the basis of suppliers' credits. |
|
The civilisational reach of India's great textile culture cuts through largely undocumented and unmapped pathways of history. |
|
In a bizarre spin-off, the Zambian textile industry has seen a glut of imported second-hand clothes which UK charities cannot sell. |
|
The rectangle bell shade is a reddish-brown textile with black edged trim and natural black slubbing. |
|
Paper pulp is dyed with textile dyes and cut images are pressed into the paper when wet. |
|
In Western India, Parsees such as the Tatas created a new cotton textile industry. |
|
After utterly destroying the once thriving Indian textile industry, Britain sparked its own industrial revolution. |
|
For instance the Irish linen industry arose because British textile barons successfully lobbied to kill the Irish cotton industry. |
|
After graduating, she apprenticed at various textile and design studios in New York. |
|
|
Glycerin is used as a lubricant in various operations in the textile industry, and can be mixed with sugar to make a nondrying oil. |
|
The textile workshop spins local wool and uses natural dyes to produce an array of knitted, crocheted, and woven items. |
|
The textile design graduate also specialises in producing scarves made from natural fibres such as silk and linen. |
|
There is considerable debate among textile historians as to where velvet was first woven. |
|
He invented a device for putting water vapor into the air to condition yarn produced in textile plants. |
|
I was intrigued by the piece as I had never before seen a textile that was woven to mimic quilting actually used as the base for a quilt. |
|
The Butterfield family was immensely wealthy, their fortune founded on the textile trade. |
|
Workers blame free-trade agreements for sending textile jobs overseas in recent years. |
|
The concept of folk art not only included fine art, but referred mainly to arts and crafts such as pottery or textile works. |
|
This trim boxwood slide rule bound tipped in German silver was designed for use by technicians in textile trades. |
|
The textile is placed awkwardly on top of the table, creating areas of strong, flat colour and signalling Matisse's future as a painter. |
|
The arrival of French bleachers who developed the town's textile industry in the late 1760s added to it. |
|
A slide fastener has a pair of longitudinally extending and parallel textile tapes. |
|
It continued in textile design, particularly in whitework embroidery and some printed calicoes, into the mid-nineteenth century. |
|
Christmas shopping may be over but offers of rebates and discounts at various textile showrooms continue till the New Year. |
|
In recent years industrial growth has occurred primarily in the garment and textile industries. |
|
Many different patterns are possible, producing different kinds of textile and styles of weave. |
|
A year ago, 20 contemporary Hungarian artists, mostly working with textile, decided to revive this art form as well as their national past. |
|
Just prior to the Southern textile boom, industrialization in South Carolina seemed concentrated along the coast, rather than inland. |
|
Alongside it sit the abandoned hulks of an oil-seed mill and textile factory. |
|
|
This in silico approach would be helpful in ranking textile dyes of the different classes based on their binding affinities. |
|
This is one of a few occasions that provide a good opportunity for both private and governmental textile houses to make hay. |
|
Gunny bags account for about 90 percent of the total production of Chinese juteand kenaf textile mills. |
|
The group has an option to buy a chicken farm where it wants to build a sophisticated textile factory. |
|
The building, a former textile mill, has been unoccupied for a number of years. |
|
Daylight is admitted by a lantern and bounced off a textile covered funnel-shaped reflector built off the column. |
|
One other area of textile work worthy of note is that of tapestry and embroidery. |
|
Later, the artist went through periods of making tapestry and large-scale textile works. |
|
He blamed the current situation on general economic trends within the textile industry. |
|
Members of this regular klatch include two retired textile mill workers, a warehouse supervisor, a bus driver and a house painter. |
|
Especially in the textile field, chitosan has been used to improve dyeability, soil release properties, and the handle of cotton. |
|
Today, this striking textile is made with a crochet hook, knitting needles, a tatting shuttle or a machine. |
|
The textile designer Ciaran Sweeney is a man of many fabrics, but he is best known for his flamboyant work with silk and silk velvet. |
|
There are potters, goldsmiths, textile artists, glass workers, painters, sculptors, woodturners and more. |
|
Growth in mass markets, combined with the development of textile machines, gave dominance to factory production of cloth, knitwear, and lace. |
|
In addition to building fertility, the sheep provide wool for Kimberton Hills' textile workshop. |
|
The textile industry, oft hailed as a saviour to poor countries with abundant cheap labour, hasn't boomed as expected. |
|
The courts did little to stop textile mills, machine shops, sawmills, chemical works, and similar businesses from polluting. |
|
It is the group's strategy to become one of the world leaders in the textile industry, he said. |
|
In the 14th and 15th centuries textile manufacture became the dominant industry, especially of cloths called worsteds after a local village. |
|
|
The exposed gold could then be stippled or grained to suggest the shimmer of the threads of the textile. |
|
Check labels on garments and other textile items and never dry with heat those items which warn against such drying lest a fire start. |
|
The Bush Administration has slapped unilateral quotas on imports of Chinese textile products, with the threat of more to come in other sectors. |
|
The development of lacemaking is based on the mastery of other textile handicrafts, primarily weaving and embroidery. |
|
He was forced to fly to Shanghai last month in a last-minute bid to head off a trade war about surging textile imports from China. |
|
His wife, a former textile worker, took care of him and his son when he was laid off from his factory. |
|
The textile art piece in the below picture is designed from lambswool fabric. |
|
A Whitefield textile artist is appealing for creative people to join her in her craft. |
|
She selects rich, evocative fabrics like rayon satin, silk and rayon blend velvet, Merino wool and the delicate veil-like textile bobbinet. |
|
The cross-ply tyre is made up of superimposed layers of textile cord running at alternate angles from bead to bead. |
|
During her teens, Samerjan was introduced to unusual fabrics from exotic lands by her father, a successful textile manufacturer. |
|
Large sectors of the textile industries operated on credit extended to domestic operatives. |
|
Sun and privacy shading is provided by textile screens which add to the general gaiety and variety of the composition. |
|
The textile, hotel and restaurant services union represents 22 of the 35 commercial laundries owned by that company. |
|
Yamabe Takeo set up a large-scale cotton textile factory in Osaka which used steam power for the first time. |
|
Sixty painters, sculptors, furniture makers, photographers and textile designers work in studios here. |
|
These include textile design, type design, page layout, interior design, fashion design and architecture. |
|
The textile sector presents good opportunity for us to spur growth and combat poverty because of its vertical linkage to agriculture. |
|
All around the station car park I found lots of teasel flowers and this species also has a textile connection. |
|
The scientists, led by a textile technologist, used various methods to condition samples taken from a bale of cotton. |
|
|
Until the 19th cent. wool fibres dominated knitting but other textile fibres came into use. |
|
Greener Grass is a recital of poetry by Lorraine Parker, a poet and textile artist with Mancunian connections. |
|
This local textile company has had success with its trial crop of cotton and will now be installing a gin to process the raw material as well. |
|
Sri Lanka has a vibrant textile industry, with a lot of textile production being done at home on hand looms by women. |
|
With major textile shops going all out to woo customers with sops, Loom World too is not far behind. |
|
They tried to supplement their income by hiring themselves out as day laborers, textile workers or manual laborers. |
|
Parts imported for the manufacture of textile machinery will also attract five per cent customs duty subject to end-use condition. |
|
In the American Civil War, textile shortages again hampered the Quartermaster Department's efforts to procure tentage. |
|
The already terrible condition of Barcelona's poor had been augmented by a fierce downturn for the textile industry. |
|
Edinburgh-based interiors expert Alistair Warner can help with everything from feng shui to colour theory and textile design. |
|
The 12 volunteers have worked in a variety of mediums including oil paint, watercolours, prints, sculpture, textile, ceramics and text. |
|
The 1856 discovery of the first synthetic aniline dye, mauve, marked a new era in textile dyeing. |
|
The Bolton-born barrow boy started out selling textile seconds from a box on the local market. |
|
These threads are woven into textile yarns to produce sacks, carpet base, mats, rope and twine and many other materials. |
|
Encouraged by the textile industry, a great amount of work using differential scanning calorimetry has been undertaken. |
|
A tiny cotton boll harvested from a field ends up in a 500-pound bale that is shipped to textile mills or traded on the world market. |
|
The obituaries have been written for Scotland's textile industry so many times that it would be easy to believe the sector no longer exists. |
|
The first two chapters retell the pre-World War II histories of rayon and nylon, the first man-made textile fibers. |
|
The firms are involved with a range of products including paint, pharmaceuticals, agrochemicals, paper and textile chemicals. |
|
Bradford's Industrial Museum has been giving a helping hand to a textile archive in Leeds. |
|
|
Since the 14th century, the cotton textile industry has boomed in the Yangtze delta area where there were many blue calico workshops. |
|
Produced in the Netherlands and Manchester, the brightly coloured and patterned fabrics are influenced by Indonesian textile design. |
|
After graduating from the art school, Mori became a textile designer and dyer of kimono fabrics. |
|
By the 1830s Australia was becoming a major supplier of wool to the British textile industry. |
|
His family had for generations been in the textile industry, first in wool and then cotton, and had built up a major business in East Lancashire. |
|
In his late textile designs, floral patterns of Art Nouveau fabrics sway in aqueous flotation. |
|
While raising her family Jennifer ran textile companies, designing, printing and wholesaling furnishing fabrics. |
|
Rising wages contrasted with declining textile prices, which fell remorselessly in every textile industry for which we have data. |
|
A number of textile manufacturers are marketing fabrics threaded or plated with silver, copper or stainless steel. |
|
Because of the newly discovered way of taking the thread diagonally, the textile fell pliantly. |
|
Pennine Weavers is one of only two commission weavers left in West Yorkshire, producing the highest-quality wool textile fabrics for customers. |
|
Almost all areas of the British Isles were home to local wool and textile industries, usually producing rough cloth for local consumption. |
|
The Spinning Mule marked a turning point for the textile industry as it massively increased the quantity and quality of yarn spun. |
|
In the textile industry much spinning was for long done by peasant-women at home with their spinning-wheels. |
|
Uzbekistan was the main producer of cotton for the Russian textile industry and its irrigation needs were considered to be the priority issue. |
|
Paisley's textile industry was hugely inventive and prosperous, but the town's pioneering reputation was not forged in business alone. |
|
The factory system in the United States emerged with the growth of the cotton textile industry in New England after the Revolutionary War. |
|
Breezes offers a nice 50-yard-long, soft-sand clothing-optional beach that directly adjoins the textile beach. |
|
In subsequent decades, a rainbow of other aniline dyestuffs were synthesized and made available to textile colorists. |
|
But can, paper and textile banks will remain at the site near the Buck Inn unless a new home can be found for all the recycling bins. |
|
|
By contrast, a rough scumble delineates the areas of textile left showing through them. |
|
The 1980s, in particular, marked the influx of knitters to California, as well as textile printers, dyers and finishers, Horowitz notes. |
|
Soon galleons were transporting wholesale quantities of the dried bugs to dyers in the great textile centers of Europe. |
|
As a textile dyer, he had worked with katazome, a similar technique used for creating designs on textiles. |
|
The beck breaks to the surface at the site of the former seat of the city's textile industry. |
|
The foggy tonality of the painting shifts the association to older and more chaste modern textile designs. |
|
Zhang created a steelworks at Wuhan, textile mills, and factories producing cement, glass, paper, cotton yarn and cloth, and leather goods. |
|
Born in Sunderland, she studied illustration and textile design at the Newcastle upon Tyne College of Art and Industrial Design. |
|
Just over the Yorkshire border, Stoodley Pike is a prominent landmark overlooking the textile towns of Calderdale. |
|
A professor from London University's textile project division visited the Cook Islands some time ago and acquired the tivaevae. |
|
Due to the sudden transverse motion of the local textile in the impact region, a longitudinal wave and a transverse wave are generated in the yams that directly contact the projectile. |
|
Typically, mouse pads come as simple plastics or textile underlays, available in any electronics store, sometimes in basic and often unattractive designs. |
|
Parts of the lavish costume drama are being filmed at a disused textile mill which has been converted into a Victorian boarding school for the film. |
|
The gypsy moth, was brought from France in 1869 by an entomologist who hoped to interbreed them with silkmoths to establish a new textile industry. |
|
Warp threads are those which run up and down the length of a piece of textile, weft threads are those that run across the weave at right angles to the warp. |
|
Another aspect of the IDZ linked to the provincial agricultural economy was beneficiating natural products in the textile sector like wool, mohair, sisal and hemp. |
|
The fountain, donated to the town in 1882 by textile giant George Courtauld, has been dismantled and taken away for renovation to be reinstated later in its former glory. |
|
The marianas needed Abramoff only because the U.S. placed restrictions on Chinese textile exports into the U.S. markets. |
|
Schools and community centres have joined together to produce a huge piece of textile art, inspired by the traditional Bengali patchwork cloth, the kantha. |
|
The most important boron compound commercially is sodium borate, used in the manufacture of borosilicate glass, glass fiber insulation, and textile glass fiber. |
|
|
Donegal's once vibrant textile industry has been decimated in the past decade with the closure of companies like Jockey, Donegal Shirts and Fingal Manufacturing. |
|
Next comes a corridor where a miscellany of drawings, a small but exquisite textile and two engraved gems, one of Lorenzo the Magnificent and one of Savonarola, are displayed. |
|
There was only one source of sustenance for this kind of visual appetite in the textile town of Bohain-en-Vermandois, where Matisse spent his first twenty years. |
|
Her works combine magnificent textile materials such as haute couture fabrics, lace and brocade with more modest elements such as thread, cord, wire, ribbon and cable. |
|
She began to make surrealist sculptures from textile materials. |
|
Hydrogen Peroxide is used for its oxidizing properties in many applications, including paper and textile bleaching, detergence, and effluent treatment. |
|
For example, rural areas are having to contend with the disappearance of industries such as assembly plants, textile mills, and food processing plants. |
|
After the sixteenth century, the tsar's court, the gentry, and wealthy merchants supported metalworking, jewelry, textile, and porcelain workshops. |
|
Feather finished hopsacks, calendered drill, sandblasted twill add to the fashion solutions offered by the ever-improving technical advancements of the textile industry. |
|
Minister of Trade and Industry informed that JTL would start operations this month with high quality production of grey baft for the local textile industry. |
|
A group of Sasanian objects in the exhibition, including two stucco reliefs, two silver vessels, and a textile band, strikingly demonstrated this point. |
|
The upholstered pieces have been re-covered in fabric Ruhlmann originally designed for the textile manufacturer Prelle et Compagnie, which still operates in Lyon, France. |
|
The government wanted to boost the growth of Indonesia's textile industry by developing rayon fibre production in order to reduce dependence on imported cotton. |
|
Natural fiber color variation, slubs and knots are an intricate part of each textile design and are used to enhance the beauty and texture of each pattern. |
|
Before the Civil War, leased and directly owned African-American slaves worked in southern textile factories, ironworks, tobacco-processing plants, and lumber and grain mills. |
|
Bio polymers can be manufactured into biodegradable clear or opaque plastic and textile fibres which create fabric with the handle of silk or linen. |
|
And if we allow for products from third countries to be used, then we're not just losing the apparel workers, we're also losing the textile workers. |
|
Japan had very rich tradition of clothing appreciation for wearing clothes and for textile. |
|
In the 19th century, most of the brothels of the East were staffed by Japanese girls, or they were sold to factories as indentured textile workers. |
|
Depending on the arrangement of the loom the warps run vertically or horizontally but in both cases the weaver works from the back of the textile. |
|
|
One artistic embrace of the textile comes with a specific political message. |
|
But new inventions in the 18th century speeded up textile production and led to the growth of factories, and many of the old corn mills were converted to woollen production. |
|
Copperas was closely linked with the woollen industry because it was mainly used as a textile dye fixative, a dye darkening agent and a black dye. |
|
At the time of the 1851 census in Britain, there were 268,000 milliners and dressmakers, as against 502,000 people working in cotton textile manufacture. |
|
Foreign-born women staffed canneries, textile mills, and garment factories and worked as cooks and child-care providers for middle-class Americans. |
|
Long-standing traditions of pottery, metalworking, rugmaking, woodcarving, and textile production have been carried forward by artisan and craft cooperatives. |
|
Much of the fortune of Dundee was founded on its jute mills and other textile industries, and its jute barons once competed with each other to build grand houses. |
|
Consequently, by 1815 the countryside was again as rural as it had been a century earlier, and a reconstructed textile industry was later centred in towns. |
|
Prints are the fun side of camp shirts, a shot in the arm of textile cheer that can be as wild as an afternoon at the palapa bar or subtle as an island sunset. |
|
He soon finds himself caught between the moguls of the textile industry and the trade unions, all equally determined that his invention never sees the light of day. |
|
Tensions have been increasing between a number of countries and China recently over its trade surplus, surging textile imports and problems with product piracy. |
|
I would take the time to make a good set of letter stencils out of transparency film and then use acrylic paint with textile medium to paint the shirts. |
|
While father and daughter disport themselves, textile unrest grows. |
|
Arnold, formerly a designer in the textile industry, now employs his artistic skills in pyrography, which effectively is pokerwork, in his case using electrical implements. |
|
Both textile and paper wallpapers should be installed by professionals. |
|
The same worker who is involved in making khadi can be utilised much more efficiently in the modern textile industry, which is a lot more profitable. |
|
Also, by using the khanga, Lalesso supports the threatened textile industry and helps to improve the quality of life for the textile workers in Kenya. |
|
Much of the vigor of the textile traditions of Mahdia comes through the embellishment of woven cloth with embroidery and the addition of fringes, tassels, and pompoms. |
|
The gold buckle does not feel like a real dress item, and may have been a reliquary, its hollow box once containing a sacred fragment of bone or textile. |
|
The award is conferred annually on eminent citizens of this textile city. |
|
|
With its qualities of strength and texture, and the ability to be dyed in vibrant colours, silk proved an unequalled fibre for textile production. |
|
After World War I, unions began their losing and lethal battle with textile owners across the South. |
|
Whereas the U.S. textile industry has shown noticeable recoveries from slumps in previous years, it is not showing signs of recovery in its most recent cycle. |
|
The book is illustrated with pictures of textiles from local textile artist Lee Fitton, who uses fleeces from local sheep and transforms them into pictures. |
|
Before the advent of synthetics, textile manufacturing depended almost exclusively on wool, silk and fiber plants such as cotton and flax. |
|
The Bank of Japan, founded in 1882, used taxes to fund model steel and textile factories. |
|
In the middle of the 19th century, half the world textile industry's bobbin supply came from the Lake District area. |
|
The Union blockade of southern ports stopped the supply of cotton to textile mills in France, and caused unemployment. |
|
Around the 14th century, Manchester received an influx of Flemish weavers, sometimes credited as the foundation of the region's textile industry. |
|
Manchester's history is concerned with textile manufacture during the Industrial Revolution. |
|
Until the First World War, Glossop had the headquarters of the largest textile printworks in the world. |
|
Central Bradford rose to prominence during the 19th century as an international centre of textile manufacture, particularly wool. |
|
Traditionally based on the wool and textile industries, manufacturing is still strong, accounting for around 1 in 5 jobs. |
|
The most rapid period of growth and development coincided with the industrialisation and expansion of textile manufacturing. |
|
These were especially suitable for driving textile mills, and many Watt engines were employed in these industries. |
|
There are archaeological signs of organized textile productions in Scandinavia, reaching as far back as the early Iron Ages. |
|
The textile industry has a pivotal position in the manufacturing sector of Pakistan. |
|
Some former mill towns have a symbol of the textile industry in their town badge. |
|
The town grew out of a textile factory founded in 1833 by the sons of Feliks Lubienski, who owned the land where it was built. |
|
Activities included coal mining, textile production, particularly cotton, and fishing. |
|
|
This pattern can be seen in textile production, mining and eventually steel, shipbuilding, rail working and other industries. |
|
Salts Mill closed as a textile mill in February 1986, and Jonathan Silver bought it the following year and began renovating it. |
|
The stones we are planning to use are mainly salvaged from the old textile mills and are made of the typical gritstone that we find on the moors. |
|
Coal mines, steelworks, and textile factories replaced homes as the place of work. |
|
The north west, a centre of the textile industries, was also hard hit, with places such as Manchester and Lancashire suffering a slump. |
|
Major exports include petroleum products, textile goods, jewellery, software, engineering goods, chemicals, and leather manufactures. |
|
The textile industry employed large numbers in many of the towns of the Scottish Borders in the 19th and 20th centuries. |
|
Traditionally, Aberdeen was home to fishing, textile mills, shipbuilding and paper making. |
|
Several areas on the periphery of the burgh saw industrial development with the building of textile mills from the end of the 18th century. |
|
Dundee's industrial history as a centre for textile production is apparent throughout the city. |
|
Here the landscape comprised textile mills and factory chimneys rather than trees. |
|
In Egypt, textile producers could run prosperous small businesses employing apprentices, free workers earning wages, and slaves. |
|
Centonarii were guild workers who specialized in textile production and the recycling of old clothes into pieced goods. |
|
The majority of textile factory workers during the Industrial Revolution were unmarried women and children, including many orphans. |
|
Other important industries include textile production, chemicals, distilling, agriculture, brewing and fishing. |
|
By the 18th century a transition was under way to textile production in workshops run by businessmen. |
|
They cleared the forests to establish pasture and to cultivate the land and developed new technologies such as ceramics and textile production. |
|
The report profiles the problem of water pollution resulting from the release of toxic chemicals associated with the country's textile industry. |
|
Scanian culture, as expressed through the medium of textile art, has received international attention during the last decade. |
|
The textile modal is a kind of rayon often made wholly from reconstituted cellulose of pulped beech wood. |
|
|
The northern textile mills in New York and New England processed Southern cotton and manufactured clothes to outfit slaves. |
|
The Industrial Revolution began in England, based on coal, steam, and textile mills. |
|
Artisan textile arts play an important role in Ukrainian culture, especially in Ukrainian wedding traditions. |
|
Crespi d'Adda is a company town founded in 1878 to accommodate workers of the local textile mill. |
|
These French Canadians arrived to work in the timber mills and textile plants that appeared throughout the region as it industrialized. |
|
The bureaus were in charge of weapons, silverwork, laundering, headgear, bronzework, textile manufacture, wineries, and gardens. |
|
Silk is produced by several insects, but generally only the silk of moth caterpillars has been used for textile manufacturing. |
|
They owned a large number of establishments, especially textile and sweet shops. |
|
The textile of plain weave is represented by a wide variety of stripes, and more rarely by geometrical patterns such as triangles and diamonds. |
|
Lisbonite industry has very large sectors in oil, as refineries are found just across the Tagus, textile mills, shipyards and fishing. |
|
After the opening in 1893, workers from Great Britain arrived in Bangu to work in the textile factory. |
|
And shortly after her arrival, in September 1894, the first football match in Brazil took place in the field beside the textile factory. |
|
In the 18th and 19th centuries, the textile industry flourished again in Ghent. |
|
Industrial outputs include textile goods, chemical products, paper products, machinery, automobiles, automotive products and tourism. |
|
The cotton textile industry was responsible for a large part of the empire's international trade. |
|
Parliament began to see a decline in domestic textile sales, and an increase in imported textiles from places like China and India. |
|
Britain eventually surpassed India as the world's leading cotton textile manufacturer in the 19th century. |
|
The term also may apply to the longer textile fiber staple lint as well as the shorter fuzzy fibers from some upland species. |
|
By the year 1300 Florence had become a centre of textile production in Europe. |
|
During his administration, the textile industry advanced and the University of San Gregorio Magno was founded. |
|
|
The latter fed both local textile manufacturing and a lucrative trade with the Netherlands. |
|
The Castilian cities of Burgos, Segovia, Cuenca and Toledo, flourished with the expansion of the textile and metellurgical industries. |
|
Petroglyphs, Tattooing, painting, wood carving, stone carving and textile work are other common art forms. |
|
A textile is any material made of interlacing fibres, including carpeting and geotextiles. |
|
Numerous inventors in the textile industry such as John Kay and Samuel Crompton, suffered harassment when developing their machines or devices. |
|
Silk is an animal textile made from the fibres of the cocoon of the Chinese silkworm which is spun into a smooth fabric prized for its softness. |
|
The textile industry is primarily concerned with the design and production of yarn, cloth, clothing, and their distribution. |
|
The geographical focus of textile manufacture in Britain was Manchester and the small towns of the Pennines and southern Lancashire. |
|
In the early 1800s Owen became wealthy as an investor and eventual manager of a large textile mill at New Lanark, Scotland. |
|
The eldest son of a successful German textile industrialist, Engels became involved in radical journalism in his youth. |
|
The spinning mule spins textile fibres into yarn by an intermittent process. |
|
Before the 1770s, textile production was a cottage industry using flax and wool. |
|
The spinning jenny would not have been such a success if the flying shuttle had not been invented and installed in textile factories. |
|
Operation of weaving in a textile mill is undertaken by a specially trained operator known as a weaver. |
|
However, even with such guidelines in place, injuries in textile production, due to the machines themselves, are still commonplace. |
|
Southern cotton found ready markets in Europe and in the burgeoning textile mills of New England. |
|
It was inspired by Manchester, in England, and its status as the international centre of the cotton and textile trade during the 19th century. |
|
More recently it has become a sobriquet applied solely to the city of Manchester because of its large number of textile factories. |
|
He was an innovative designer in many fields, including steam engines, machine tools and machinery for the textile industry. |
|
Although the firm still served the textile industry, Murray began to consider how the design of steam engines could be improved. |
|
|
The Luddites were a group of English textile workers and weavers in the 19th century who destroyed weaving machinery as a form of protest. |
|
The 1833 Act had few admirers in the textile districts when it came into force. |
|
This campaign was established during the 1830s and was responsible for voicing demands towards limiting the work week in textile mills. |
|
The textile industry, based on cotton and flax, employed about half of the industrial workforce for much of the industrial period. |
|
The first mention of a textile industry in this area dates from the 15th century. |
|
Verviers was home to a thriving wool and textile industry that was renowned for its quality and contributed greatly to the growth of the town. |
|
The Bank of Japan, founded in 1877, used taxes to fund model steel and textile factories. |
|
The rapid growth of textile manufacturing in New England between 1815 and 1860 caused a shortage of workers. |
|
He designed the first textile mills in the US and later went into business for himself, developing a family business with his sons. |
|
Slater also brought the Sunday School system from his native England to his textile factory at Pawtucket. |
|
While on a visit to Lancashire, England in 1810, Francis Cabot Lowell studied the workings of the successful British textile industry. |
|
In addition to producing cloth, it also produced textile machinery for other companies. |
|
The dams were used to power textile mills and other endeavors in the early years of the industrial activity. |
|
The city became known as the cradle of the American Industrial Revolution, due to a large series of textile mills and factories. |
|
By spacing the warp more closely, it can completely cover the weft that binds it, giving a warp faced textile such as repp weave. |
|
A large bobbin of the sort that might be used in an industrial textile loom. |
|
The sixth of eight children, Harriet Martineau was born in Norwich, England, where her father Thomas was a textile manufacturer. |
|
Some of these structures still exist as listed buildings, although the large scale production of yarn and textile has now ceased. |
|
The river has been heavily polluted by the textile industry, and, more recently, chemical works along its banks. |
|
The river was also used to power the many textile mills that were built along the Derwent between Matlock Bath and Derby. |
|