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VELVET , a silken textile fabric having a See also: short dense piled See also: surface
.
In all probability the See also: art of velvet-See also: weaving originated in the Far See also: East; and it is not till about the beginning of the 14th century that we find any mention of the textile
.
The See also: peculiar properties of velvet, the splendid yet softened See also: depth of dye-colour it exhibited, at once marked it out as a See also: fit material for ecclesiastical See also: vestments, royal and See also: state robes, and sumptuous hangings; and the most magnificent textures of See also: Medieval times were See also: Italian velvets
.
These were in many ways most effectively treated for ornamentation, such as by varying the colour of the See also: pile, by producing pile of different lengths (pile
upon pile, or See also: double pile), and by brocading with plain See also: silk, with uncut pile or with a ground of gold tissue, &c
.
The earliest See also: sources of See also: European See also: artistic velvets were Lucca, Genoa, Florence and Venice, and Genoa continues to send out See also: rich velvet textures
.
Somewhat later the art was taken up by Flemish weavers, and in the 16th century Bruges attained a reputation for velvets not inferior to that of the See also: great Italian cities
.
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