Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "English country dance" ¶ 31
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

weaving and figure
Figure of 8-a weaving figure in which dancers pass between two standing people and move around them in a figure 8 pattern.
The capture of Ned is shot from the viewpoint of the police, as Ned advances, an impressive figure weaving towards them under the weight of his armour and the shock of the bullets.
* String figure, design formed by weaving string around one's fingers
The Roman traces the powerful medieval dynasty of Lusignan from its founding in the city by the legendary Melusine, an enigmatic shape-shifting faery figure, through its glorious rise in Europe and in the Crusader kingdoms of the Eastern Mediterranean ( see Guy of Lusignan, King of Cyprus ), weaving together history and fiction, with elements of myth, folklore, and popular traditions fused with epic, Crusader narrative, knightly romance, and Christian doctrine, all to glorify and uphold the proprietary claims to Lusignan of the work's illustrious patron.
Waldron's playing style re-emerged more brooding, starker and percussive, combining bebop and avant-garde melodies, and at times weaving repetitive melodic motifs using just a few notes over a drone-like accompaniment figure.
The Fish Tail is a movement in which the buttocks form a variety of figure eights by weaving out, back, and up.
" Racking " refers to the figure eight weaving that binds the bight of the larger rope together.
The figuring weft is made of a number of coloured threads, weaving plain with warp threads and interlocked on either side with the grounds weft threads are invariably gold threads which interlock with the figure weft threads, thus forming the figure.

weaving and which
3D beading generally uses the techniques of bead weaving, which can be further divided into right angle weave and peyote stitch.
From about 1790 textiles became the most important industry in the west of Scotland, especially the spinning and weaving of cotton, which flourished until in 1861 the American Civil War cut off the supplies of raw cotton.
From the scientific discovery which has been a silent evidence, it has pointed out that the South East Asian civilizations are a of much older civilization compared to the widely researched and well documented east Asians ' ancient civilisations Dong Son culture spread to Indonesia bringing with it techniques of wet-field rice cultivation, ritual buffalo sacrifice, bronze casting, megalithic practises, and ikat weaving methods.
In the early 18th century, British textile manufacture was based on wool which was processed by individual artisans, doing the spinning and weaving on their own premises.
Other inventors increased the efficiency of the individual steps of spinning ( carding, twisting and spinning, and rolling ) so that the supply of yarn increased greatly, which fed a weaving industry that was advancing with improvements to shuttles and the loom or ' frame '.
Thread used in weaving is usually much finer than the yarn used in knitting, which can give the knitted fabric more bulk and less drape than a woven fabric.
The fiber is extremely delicate and soft, and highly valued for the purposes of weaving, but the quantity which each animal produces is minimal.
In 1940, they returned to Chongqing and established the Chinese Industrial Cooperatives, which opened job opportunities for people through weaving, sewing and other crafts.
I have had to learn the theory and to some extent the practice of weaving, dyeing and textile printing: all of which I must admit has given me and still gives me a great deal of enjoyment.
Morris long dreamed of weaving tapestries in the medieval manner, which he called " the noblest of the weaving arts.
The Huguenots introduced silk weaving into the city, which by 1676 had outstripped wool weaving.
The weaving shed in Morris & Co's factory at Merton ( historic parish ) | Merton, which opened in the 1880s
She has devised tricks to delay her suitors, one of which is to pretend to be weaving a burial shroud for Odysseus's elderly father Laertes and claiming that she will choose a suitor when she has finished.
Meanwhile the French mouaire had mutated into a verb, moirer, meaning ' to produce a watered textile by weaving or pressing ', which by 1823 had spawned the adjective moiré.
The wool export trade began to decline in the fifteenth century as the industry shifted to the value-adding business of weaving, which was conducted in other parts of the country, the Hansa merchants quit the town, and Boston's wealth declined.
This twill weaving produces the familiar diagonal ribbing of the fabric, which distinguishes denim from cotton duck.
The new logotype, which features a multi-coloured weaving pattern.
As jure uxoris Count of Flanders, he would keep in mind the economic interests of the Flemish cities, which made their money from weaving and spinning.
The house derives its name from a weaving school which was moved there in the last years of the 19th century, resurrecting the use to which it had been put between the 16th century and about 1830.
Tapestry is weft-faced weaving, in which all the warp threads are hidden in the completed work, unlike cloth weaving where both the warp and the weft threads may be visible.

weaving and two
The most common bead weaving technique requires two passes of the weft thread.
Martin Noth holds that two different groups experienced the Exodus and Sinai events, and each group transmitted its own stories independently of the other one, writing that " The biblical story tracing the Hebrews from Egypt to Canaan resulted from an editor's weaving separate themes and traditions around a main character Moses, actually an obscure person from Moab.
An attempt was made to bring two Māori men to teach the skills of dressing and weaving flax, but this failed when it was discovered that weaving was considered women's work and the two men had little knowledge of it.
The 39 categories of melakhah are: ploughing earth, sowing, reaping, binding sheaves, threshing, winnowing, selecting, grinding, sifting, kneading, baking, shearing wool, washing wool, beating wool, dyeing wool, spinning, weaving, making two loops, weaving two threads, separating two threads, tying, untying, sewing stitches, tearing, trapping, slaughtering, flaying, tanning, scraping hide, marking hides, cutting hide to shape, writing two or more letters, erasing two or more letters, building, demolishing, extinguishing a fire, kindling a fire, putting the finishing touch on an object and transporting an object between the private domain and the public domain, or for a distance of 4 cubits within the public domain.
There are two secondary motions, because with each weaving operation the newly constructed fabric must be wound on a cloth beam.
* Rope splicing, joining two pieces of rope or cable by weaving the strands of each into the other
Tentei was moved by his daughter ’ s tears and allowed the two to meet on the 7th day of the 7th month if she worked hard and finished her weaving.
:* Sinawali-" weaving "; rhythmic, flowing, striking patterns and tactics, utilizing two impact or edged weapons.
Plaiting and weaving ( raranga ) the flax fibres into baskets were but only two of the great variety of uses made of flax by Māori who recognised nearly 60 varieties, and who carefully propagated their own flax nurseries and plantations throughout the land.
Compared to the process of weaving a wide sheet of cloth from two separate, perpendicular groups of strands ( warp and weft ), a braid is usually long and narrow, with each component strand functionally equivalent in zigzagging forward through the overlapping mass of the others.
Zhinü must sit forever on one side of the river, sadly weaving on her loom, while Niulang watches her from afar while taking care of their two children ( his flanking stars β and γ Aquilae or by their Chinese names Hè Gu 1 and Hè Gu 3 ).

weaving and groups
* Woven bars: weaving the needle over and under four threads until they are completely covered, and wrapped bars ( overcast bars ) where the thread is wound around groups of four threads.
Secondly, large groups will swim in a line weaving across each other in the same direction.
A woven cloth may exhibit one of the seventeen kinds of plane symmetry groups ; see Crowe ( 1973 ) for an illustrated mathematical study of African weaving patterns.
These bōsōzoku groups also engage in dangerous or reckless driving, such as weaving in traffic, not wearing motorcycle helmets, and running red lights.
These groups engaged in farming, fishing and to some extent, in weaving and pottery, and learned to control their environment-for even then the land lacked the fertility of Central Luzon, and the narrow strip, hemmed in by the South China Sea to the west and the Cordillera mountain ranges to the east, was often visited by typhoons and droughts and, thus, bountiful harvests were exceptions rather than the rule.

0.290 seconds.