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  2. Joseph-Laurent Malaine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph-Laurent_Malaine

    The Kassel wallpaper museum has an "Overdoor with a red macaw, green parrot and oak jay" designed by Malaine for Hartmann Risler & Cie. [32] The Bibliothèque Forney , in Paris, owns a piece of wall paper showing a Vase with naturalistic bouquet and fruit basket, also designed for the Manufacture Hartmann Risler, ca 1800.

  3. Master of the Drapery Studies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Master_of_the_Drapery_Studies

    According to Franzen, the Master of the Drapery Studies is also the author of a second Passion cycle (eight panels) now kept in the Landesmuseum in Mainz. [11] The Musée de l’Œuvre Notre-Dame keeps at least two further paintings attributed to the Master (known in French as Maître des études de draperies or Maître des ronds de Cobourg). [12]

  4. Draped garment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Draped_garment

    Draping is a most ancient and widespread form of clothing. Many visual arts of the Romans and Indian sculptures, terracottas, cave paintings, and wood carvings (also shown in picture gallery) representing men and women show the same, unstitched clothes with various wrapping and draping styles.

  5. Drapery Study for the Virgin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drapery_Study_for_the_Virgin

    The Drapery Study for the Virgin is a drawing by Leonardo da Vinci in the Louvre. Executed in charcoal, Indian ink, and gray wash, with highlights of ceruse white on yellowed, black-tinted paper, it is a preparatory study for the drapery of the Virgin Mary 's cloak in Leonardo's painting The Virgin and Child with Saint Anne , also in the Louvre.

  6. Theater drapes and stage curtains - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theater_drapes_and_stage...

    The front curtain, also called house curtain, act curtain, grand drape, main drape, main curtain, proscenium curtain, main rag or, in the UK, tabs, hangs downstage, just behind the proscenium arch. It is typically opened and closed during performances to reveal or conceal the stage and scenery from the audience.

  7. Drapery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drapery

    Drapery is a general word referring to cloths or textiles (Old French draperie, from Late Latin drappus [1]). It may refer to cloth used for decorative purposes – such as around windows – or to the trade of retailing cloth, originally mostly for clothing, formerly conducted by drapers.