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  2. Mountmellick embroidery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mountmellick_embroidery

    She employed women to stitch Mountmellick embroidery for sale. Many of these items were sold from the port of Cobh , from where many people embarked on journeys to America. In the 1970s, Sister Teresa Margaret McCarthy of the Presentation Convent in Mountmellick learned of the embroidery, and collected together examples from around the area in ...

  3. William Morris textile designs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Morris_textile_designs

    His first design was jasmine trail or jasmine trellis (1868–70), based on a similar wallpaper design he had made in 1862. [4] In the 1870s, he expanded his activity in woven furnishing textiles. In 1877, he brought a skilled French silk weaver, Jacques Bazin, from Lyon to London, rented a studio at Great Esmond Yard, and established Bazin and ...

  4. Onopordum acanthium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Onopordum_acanthium

    Separate cypselae. Onopordum acanthium (cotton thistle, Scotch (or Scottish) thistle) is a flowering plant in the family Asteraceae.It is native to Europe and Western Asia from the Iberian Peninsula east to Kazakhstan, and north to central Scandinavia, and widely naturalised elsewhere, [1] [2] [3] with especially large populations present in the United States and Australia.

  5. Hodden - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hodden

    Hodden, with wadmal, represent two similar cultural fabrics in Scottish history. Hodden is an early-modern period name for a primarily Gaelic fabric, earlier named lachdann [1] in Gaelic, and even earlier lachtna [2] in Old Irish; while wadmal was a Scandinavian fabric, in the now-Scottish islands and Highlands. Both are usually woven in 2/2 ...

  6. Tartan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tartan

    A Scottish black-less design (now the Mar dress tartan) dates to the 18th century; [82] another is Ruthven (1842, above), and many of the Ross tartans (e.g. 1886, above), as well as several of the Victorian–Edwardian MacDougal[l] designs, [83] are further examples.

  7. Tweed - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tweed

    Tweed is a rough, woollen fabric, of a soft, open, flexible texture, resembling cheviot or homespun, but more closely woven. It is usually woven with a plain weave, twill or herringbone structure. Colour effects in the yarn may be obtained by mixing dyed wool before it is spun.

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