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Alkanet and Alkanna
* Alkanet ( Alkanna tinctoria )

Alkanet and is
Alkanet is grown in the south of France and on the shores of the Levant.
Alkanet is traditionally used in Indian food under the name " Ratan Jot ", and lends its red colour to some versions of the dish Rogan Josh.
Alkanet is a princess of the planet Freeze.

Alkanet and .
* Anchusa officinalis L.: True Alkanet, Bugloss, Common Bugloss, Corn Bugloss, Field Bugloss ( type species )

dyers and is
* UMIST is on land which used to be home to a large number of dyers ' factories by the River Medlock, which now runs through underground culverts beneath the site.
** Peter Paul Rubens begins work on his famous classical tapestries, when a contract is signed in Antwerp with cloth dyers Jan Raes and Frans Sweerts in Brussels, and the rich Genoese merchant Franco Cattaneo.
Fucus vesiculosus, known by the common name bladder wrack or bladderwrack, is a seaweed found on the coasts of the North Sea, the western Baltic Sea, and the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, also known by the common names black tang, rockweed, bladder fucus, sea oak, black tany, cut weed, dyers fucus, red fucus, and rock wrack.
Although fifteen to twenty weavers, dyers and fullers have been identified in Birmingham up to 1347, this is not a significantly greater number of cloth-workers than that found in surrounding villages and at least some of the cloth sold on the Birmingham market had rural origins.
He also notes that a monopoly is essentially the same as the dyers trade secret, and can thus lead to high profitability for a long time by keeping the supply below the effectual demand.
Bromham ( Bruneham in Domesday ) is probably the enclosed meadow on which the broom or the dyers weed grew.
The name Tejutla is of uncertain origin, being variously attributed to the local Mam language, derived from twui c ' ukal meaning " upon the hill of white sand ", or from the Nahuatl language of Tlaxcala in Mexico, meaning " walled land " or " land of the dyers ", or from the Chorti language in which it means " land of embers ".

dyers and family
The man known today as Hasegawa Tōhaku was born in 1539 in Nanao, a town in Noto Province ( located in the vicinity of present-day Ishikawa prefectures ) to a noted local family of cloth dyers, although evidence shows that Tōhaku's original family name was Okumura and that he was adopted into the Hasegawa family.
The Gobelins were a family of dyers who, in the middle of the 15th century, established themselves in the Faubourg Saint-Marcel, Paris, on the banks of the Bièvre.

dyers and with
Having invented the dye, Perkin was still faced with the problems of raising the capital for producing it, manufacturing it cheaply, adapting it for use in dyeing cotton, gaining acceptance for it among commercial dyers, and creating public demand for it.
Students enjoy a 42 inch flat screen television with cable, walk in closets, full-size kitchens, and washer and dyers at no cost.
They were for the most part men of humble origin — weavers, dyers, fullers, and so forth — they were closely connected with the city craft-guilds.
She was a perfectionist about her colours, working closely with fabric mills and dyers to achieve her ideal tones.

dyers and .
:" So, distinguishing the whole people by the several arts and trades, he formed the companies of musicians, goldsmiths, carpenters, dyers, shoemakers, skinners, braziers, and potters ; and all other handicraftsmen he composed and reduced into a single company, appointing every one their proper courts, councils, and observances.
Among the ancient ruins of the city, inscriptions have been found relating to the guild of dyers in the city.
Shortly after his arrival in Jerusalem he addressed a letter to his son Nahman, in which he described the desolation of the Holy City, where there were at that time only two Jewish inhabitants — two brothers, dyers by trade.
As early as the 14th century the city featured guilds of clothiers, dry-goods merchants, brewers, cobblers, and dyers.
Many towns had their own wool and cloth industries and Newton Abbot had woollen mills, fullers, dyers, spinners, weavers and tailors.
By the end of the 19th century there were woollen mills, silk manufacturers, bleachers and dyers but cotton spinning and weaving were the dominant industries in Rochdale.
They were weavers and dyers and were such an influence that Welsh was hardly ever heard in Laugharne.
Some traditional dyers use tansy to produce a golden-yellow colour.
Women were employed in a wide range of commercial activities and diverse occupations in the primary sector ( as farmers for example ), secondary sector ( as construction workers, dyers, spinners, etc.
This factory was followed by numerous weavers, spinners and dyers, which until the 19th Century provided a major source of income.
From the clothweavers ’ and dyers ’ guild grew a cloth factory ; from foundries grew machine factories.
The collegia opificum ascribed to Numa include guilds of weavers, fullers, dyers, shoemakers, doctors, teachers, painters, and other occupations, as listed by Ovid in the Fasti.
For example, fishermen, carpenters, raftsmen, tanners, dyers, brickmakers and limeburners were to be found along the Vltava, and around the horse market were located farriers, wagonmakers, coppersmiths and cabinetmakers.

bugloss and tinctoria
A. tinctoria is also known as orchanet, Spanish bugloss or Languedoc bugloss.

bugloss and is
Management of the site is aimed at preventing dominant grasses and scrub from crowding out grassland plants, such as common spotted orchids, perforate St John's wort, hare's-foot clover, meadow vetchling and viper's bugloss.

bugloss and plant
The Teide National Park has several endemic plant species including the Teide white broom ( Spartocytisus supranubius ) ( Fabaceae ), which has white flowers ; a shrubby crucifer Descurainia bourgaeana with yellow flowers, the Canary Island wallflower ( Erysimum scoparium ) ( Brassicaceae ), which has violet flowers ; and the Teide bugloss ( Echium wildpretii ) ( Boraginaceae ), whose red flowers form a pyramid up to in height.

bugloss and .
Amongst the plants noted here are sea spurry, forget-me-nots, scarlet pimpernel, field bugloss, bracken and nettles.

Alkanna and tinctoria
es: Alkanna tinctoria
it: Alkanna tinctoria
In addition, dried flowers or root of Alkanna tinctoria are used in some variants of the recipe to impart a crimson color.

Alkanna and .
The roots of Anchusa ( just like those of Alkanna and Lithospermum ) contain anchusin ( or alkanet-red ), a red-brown resinoid coloring matter.

tinctoria and is
Indigo is a color named after the blue dye derived from the plant Indigofera tinctoria and related species.
The same indigo dye is contained in the woad plant, Isatis tinctoria, for a long time the main source of blue dye in Europe.
The pH indicator litmus is a dye extracted from the lichen genus Rocella tinctoria by boiling
An obsolete name is Quercus tinctoria.
Isatis tinctoria, with Woad (; or glastum ) as the common name, is a flowering plant in the family Brassicaceae.
The largest species of broom is Mount Etna broom ( Genista aetnensis ), which can make a small tree to 10 m tall ; by contrast, some other species, e. g. dyer's broom Genista tinctoria, are low sub-shrubs, barely woody at all.
Where upright brome is less dominating, plants such as small scabiosa ( Scabiosa columbaria ), clustered bellflower ( Campanula glomerata ), dyer's greenweed ( Genista tinctoria ), kidney vetch ( Anthyllis vulneraria ), sainfoin ( Onobrychis viciifolia ) and horseshoe vetch ( Hippocrepis comosa ) are characteristic associates.
Devil's-bit scabious ( Succisa pratensis ), saw-wort ( Serratula tinctoria ) and betony ( Stachys officinalis ) are all abundant and exemplify the oceanic character of the chalk grassland on the Plain, a feature which is confined to south-west England.
Today, the dark blue dye known as indigo once produced from woad and Indigofera tinctoria is largely of synthetic origin.
Indigo is natural dye from a plant ( Indigofera tinctoria, suffructicosa, or arrecta ) that can be added to henna or layered on top of it to create brown to black colors in the hair.
Its meaning, " child who is superior to parents ", on Japanese proverb, ' Blue dye is made from tinctoria '.
Anthemis tinctoria, is a species of perennial flowering plant in the genus Anthemis of the family Asteraceae.
In horticulture this plant is still widely referred to by its synonym Anthemis tinctoria.
Cota tinctoria is grown in gardens for its bright attractive flowers and fine lacy foliage ; there is a white flowering form also but the most commonly grown form is the seed raised cultivar ' Kelwayi ' which has 5 cm wide, yellow flowers on 65 cm plants.
Serratula tinctoria, commonly known as Saw-wort, is a species in the genus Serratula.
Maclura tinctoria, commonly known as Old Fustic or Dyer's mulberry is a medium to large tree of the Neotropics, from Mexico to Argentina.
Dyer's Buckthorn ( R. tinctoria ) is used, together with the Asian Chinese Buckthorn ( R. utilis ), to produce the dye " china green ".
* The color of the khillazon dye is identical to that produced from the dye of the kela ilan plant ( Indigofera tinctoria ), which served as a counterfeit source of the dye ( Baba Metzia 61b )
Morinda tinctoria, commonly known as Aal or Indian Mulberry ( though these common names also refer to Morinda citrifolia ), is a species of flowering plant in the family Rubiaceae, native to southern Asia.
There is a high component of herb species throughout the meadows including Saw-wort ( Serratuta tinctoria ), Dyer ’ s Greenweed ( Genista tinctoria ), Common Knapweed, Pepper-saxifrage ( Silaum silaus ), Devil ’ s-bit Scabious ( Succisa pratensis ), Betony ( Stachys officinalis ) and Spiny Restharrow ( Ononis spinosa ).

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