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a commercial unit of length or area used to measure finished cloth. Generally speaking, one bolt represents a strip of cloth 100 yards (91.44 meters) long, but the width varies according to the fabric. Cotton bolts are traditionally 42 inches (1.067 meters) wide and wool bolts are usually 60 inches (1.524 meters) wide.
The process of manufacturing blackout was invented by Baltimore-based Rockland Industries, [2] and involves coating a fabric with layers of foam, or 'passes'. A '2-pass' blackout is produced by applying two passes of foam to a fabric – first, a black layer is applied to the fabric, then a white or light-colored layer is applied on top of the black.
A curtain is a piece of cloth or other material intended to block or obscure light, air drafts, or (in the case of a shower curtain) water. [1]
A Heckling comb is a bed of sharp, long-tapered, tempered, polished steel pins driven into wooden blocks at regular spacing. A good progression is from 4 pins per square inch, to 12, to 25 to 48 to 80. The first three will remove the straw, and the last two will split and polish the fibres.
92 cm × 73 cm (36 in × 29 in) Pushkin Museum, Moscow Mother and Children (French: La Promenade) 1876: 170.2 cm × 108.3 cm (67.0 in × 42.6 in) Frick Collection, New York City Woman in Black (French: Portrait de femme en noir) 1876: 65.5 cm × 55.5 cm (25.8 in × 21.9 in) Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg, Russia Jeanne Durand-Ruel: 1876
Full-length figures, almost half life-size. Signed on the left at foot, "Rembrandt f. 1645"; canvas, 46 1/2 inches by 36 inches. An old copy without the angels was in the possession of an English dealer in 1899, and afterwards in the possession of a New York dealer.