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  2. Mountmellick embroidery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mountmellick_embroidery

    It used white cotton thread on white cotton fabric, and predominantly floral motifs. The plants featured were those that were found around the town of Mountmellick, and included blackberries , oak , fern , dog roses and shamrocks .

  3. Coronation gown of Elizabeth II - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coronation_gown_of...

    The final version featured a Tudor rose, embroidered in very pale pink silk, with pearls, gold and silver bullion, and rose diamante; the Welsh leek, embroidered in white silk with leaves of very pale green silk; the Scottish thistle, with pale mauve silk and amethysts and a calyx embroidered in reseda green silk, silver thread, and diamante ...

  4. 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.

  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. 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.

  7. Glen plaid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glen_plaid

    Glen plaid (short for Glen Urquhart plaid), also known as Glenurquhart check or Prince of Wales check, is a woollen fabric with a woven twill design of small and large checks. [1] It is usually made of black/grey and white, or with more muted colours, particularly with two dark and two light stripes alternating with four dark and four light ...

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