-
Armenian bole, also
known as
bolus armenus or
bole armoniac, is an
earthy clay,
usually red,
native to
Armenia but also
found in
other places. The term...
- otherwise. However,
bole in art is a good deal more red and less
brown than the
modern shade; it is
often called Armenian bole.
Although bole also
means the...
-
Bole or
bole in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Bole may
refer to:
Bole District,
Ghana Bole, Ghana, town
Bole (Ghana
parliament constituency)
Bole,...
- help
soothe areas of skin that were afflicted, egg
white mixed with
Armenian bole could help
restore the fibers. Egg
whites are also used in bookbinding...
-
around 80
different patterns.
These tiles exhibit the
early use of
Armenian bole, a tomato-red
pigment that
would become characteristic of İznik pottery...
-
Levant bole is an
earthy clay
brought from the Levant, and
historically used in
medicine for the same
purposes as
Armenian bole. It was
indeed so similar...
-
gilding to
adhere sheets of gold leaf to a
substrate (parchment, canvas,
Armenian bole, etc.). It has a much
longer working time than water-based size and...
- jewelry.
Certain types of hematite- or iron-oxide-rich clay,
especially Armenian bole, have been used in gilding.
Hematite is also used in art such as in...
- meat, fish and
sauces taken at
breakfast he
would consume more or less
Armenian bole, red lead, or even
bisulphuret of
mercury [vermillion, HgS]. At dinner...
- uses of clay as
medicine go back to
prehistoric times. An
example is
Armenian bole,
which is used to
soothe an
upset stomach. Some
animals such as parrots...