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  2. Bernat Klein - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bernat_Klein

    Bernat Klein CBE (6 November 1922 – 17 April 2014) was a Serbian textile designer and painter. Based in Scotland , Klein supplied textiles to haute couture designers in the 1960s and 1970s, and later sold his own clothing collections.

  3. Mosaic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mosaic

    A mosaic is a pattern or image made of small regular or irregular pieces of colored stone, glass or ceramic, held in place by plaster/mortar, and covering a surface. [1] Mosaics are often used as floor and wall decoration, and were particularly popular in the Ancient Roman world.

  4. Head covering for Jewish women - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Head_covering_for_Jewish_women

    Mitpaḥot can range from a plain scarf of any material worn over the hair to elaborate head coverings using multiple fabrics and tying techniques. According to Ibn Ezra , already in Biblical times, Israelite women wore a form of cloth head covering similar to that worn by Muslim women in his own time (12th century).

  5. Bernat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bernat

    Bernat Fenollar (1438–1516), Valencia poet, cleric and chess player; Bernat Francés y Caballero, Spanish Roman Catholic bishop; Bernat Guillem d'Entença (died 1237), Spanish noble; Bernat Joan i Marí (born 1960), Spanish politician; Bernat Klein (1922–2014), Serbian textile designer and painter; Bernat Manciet (1923–2005), French writer

  6. Two years after the death of Stephen “tWitch” Boss, his wife Allison Holker gives a barefaced look at her grief in new book, “This Far."

  7. Meander (art) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meander_(art)

    The meander is a fundamental design motif in regions far from a Hellenic orbit: labyrinthine meanders ("thunder" pattern [3]) appear in bands and as infill on Shang bronzes (c. 1600 BC – c. 1045 BC), and many traditional buildings in and around China still bear geometric designs almost identical to meanders.

  8. Zellij - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zellij

    Mosaic tiling from the Qal'at Bani Hammad (present-day Algeria), 11th century. Zellij fragments from al-Mansuriyya (Sabra) in Tunisia, possibly dating from either the mid-10th century Fatimid foundation or from the mid-11th Zirid occupation, suggest that the technique may have developed in the western Islamic world around this period. [5]

  9. Blaschko's lines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blaschko's_lines

    Alfred Blaschko, a private practice dermatologist from Berlin, first described and drew the patterns of the lines of Blaschko in 1901. He obtained his data by studying over 140 patients with various nevoid and acquired skin diseases and transposed the visible patterns the diseases followed onto dolls and statues, then compiled the patterns onto a composite schematic of the human body.

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