| Sir Edward Baines - 1835 - 656 pagine
...assume the form already described, and which is accurately delineated in the accompanying drawing. " This form and character the fibres retain ever after,...operations of washing, &c., till the stuff is worn to rags ; and then even the violent process of reducing those rags to pulp for the purpose of making paper,... | |
| George Long - 1836 - 466 pagine
...after, and in that respect undergo no change through the operation of spinning, weaving, hleaching, printing, and dyeing, nor in all the subsequent domestic...structure is only observable by the aid of an excellent instrument*.1' Mr. Thomson has some further remarks on mummycloth, that are interesting. A piece of... | |
| Edmund Ruffin - 1839 - 830 pagine
...distiuguishes it from all other vegetable fibres, and is characteristic of the fully ripe and mature pod. This form and character the fibres retain ever after,...the subsequent domestic operations of washing, &c. 8cc., till the stuff is worn to rags, and then even the violent process of reducing those rags to pulp... | |
| Philip Henry Gosse - 1847 - 386 pagine
...character the fibres retain ever after, and in that respect undergo no change through the operations of spinning, weaving, bleaching, printing, and dyeing,...observable by the aid of an excellent instrument."* Brought to the test of microscopical examination, the samples of Egyptian cloth collected from very... | |
| James Dunwoody Brownson De Bow, R. G. Barnwell, Edwin Bell, William MacCreary Burwell - 1847 - 464 pagine
...corkscrew twist of the cotton fibre is said by Mr. Bauer to be always retained, undergoing no change in spinning, weaving, bleaching, printing and dyeing,...all the subsequent domestic operations of washing, etc., till the stuff is worn to rags; and then even the violent process of reducing these rags to pulp... | |
| Leonhard Schmitz - 1849 - 510 pagine
...assume the form already described, and which is accurately delineated in the accompanying drawing. This form and character the fibres retain ever after,...operations of washing, &c., till the stuff is worn to rags; and then even the violent process of reducing those rags to pulp for the purpose of making paper, effects... | |
| John Forbes Royle - 1851 - 678 pagine
...undergo no change through the operation of spinning, weaving, bleaching, printing, and dyeing, nor in the subsequent domestic operations of washing, &c., till the stuff is worn to rags ; and then even the violent process of reducing these rags to pulp, for the purpose of making paper,... | |
| J. Forbes Royle - 1851 - 664 pagine
...undergo no change through the operation of spinning, weaving, bleaching, printing, and dyeing, nor in the subsequent domestic operations of washing, &c., till the stuff is worn to rags ; and then even the violent process of reducing these rags to pulp, for the purpose of making paper,... | |
| John Forbes Royle - 1851 - 664 pagine
...undergo no change through the operation of spinning, weaving, bleaching, printing, and dyeing, nor in the subsequent domestic operations of washing, &c., till the stuff is worn to rags ; and then even the violent process of reducing these rags to pulp, for the purpose of making paper,... | |
| James Dunwoody Brownson De Bow - 1852 - 492 pagine
...corkscrew twist of the cotton fibre is said by Mr. Bauer to be always retained, undergoing no change in spinning, weaving, bleaching, printing, and dyeing,...all the subsequent domestic operations of washing, etc., till the stuft is worn to rags ; and then even the violent process of reducing these rags to... | |
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