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DAMASK , the technical See also: term applied to certain distinct types of fabric
.
The term owes its origin to the ornamental See also: silk fabrics of See also: Damascus, fabrics which were elaborately See also: woven in See also: colours, sometimes with the addition of gold and other metallic threads
.
At the See also: present See also: day it denotes a See also: linen texture richly figured in the See also: weaving with See also: flowers, fruit, forms of animal See also: life, and other types of See also: ornament
.
" See also: China, no doubt," says Dr See also: Rock (See also: Catalogue of Textile Fabrics, See also: Victoria and See also: Albert Museum), "was the first country to ornament its silken webs with a See also: pattern
.
See also: India, See also: Persia, and See also: Syria, then See also: Byzantine See also: Greece followed, but at long intervals between, in China's footsteps
.
Stuffs so figured brought with them to the West the name ` diaspron ' or diaper, bestowed upon them at Constantinople
.
But about the 12th century the city of Damascus, even then long celebrated for its looms, so far outstripped all other places for beauty of design, that her silken textiles were in demand everywhere; and thus, as often happens, traders fastened the name of damascen or damask upon every silken fabric richly wrought and curiously designed, no See also: matter whether it came or not from Damascus." The term is perhaps now best known in reference to damask table-cloths, a
See also: species of figured See also: cloth usually of See also: flax or See also: tow yarns, but sometimes made partly of See also: cotton
.
The finer qualities are made of the best linen See also: yarn, and, although the latter is of a brownish colour during the weaving processes, the ultimate fabric is pure See also: white
.
The high
See also: lights in these cloths are obtained by long floats of warp and weft, and, as these are set at right angles, they reflect the See also: light differently according to the angle of the rays of light; the effect changes also with the position of the observer
.
Subdued effects are produced by shorter floats of yarn, and sometimes by See also: special weaves
.
Any subject, however intricate, can be copied by this method of weaving, provided that expense is no See also: object
.
The finest results are obtained when the so-called See also: double damask weaves are used
.
These weaves are shown under DIE, and it will be seen that each weave gives a maximum float of seven threads . (In some special cases a weave is used which gives a float of nine.) The small figure here shown to illustrate a small section of a damask design is composed of the two single damask weaves; these give a maximum float of four threads or picks . No shading is shown in the design, and this for two reasons—(r) the single damask weaves do not permit of elaborate shading, although some verySee also: good effects are obtain-able; (2) the available space is not sufficiently large to show the method to See also: advantage
.
The different single damask weaves used
in the shading of these
cloths appear, however,
at the bottom of the
figure, while between
these and the design
proper there is an illus-
tration of the See also: thirty-first
pick interweaving with all
the See also: forty-eight threads
.
The See also: principal See also: British
centres for See also: fine damasks
are See also: Belfast and Dunferm-
See also: line, while the See also: medium
qualities are made in
several places in See also: Ireland,
in a few places in See also: England, and in the counties of
Fife, See also: Forfar and See also: Perth in Scotland
.
Cotton damasks, which are made
in Paisley, See also: Glasgow, and several places in See also: Lancashire, are used for See also: toilet covers, table-cloths, and similar purposes
.
They are often ornamented with colours and sent to the See also: Indian and West Indian markets
.
Silk damasks for curtains and upholstery decoration are made in the silk-weaving centres
.
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