Definition of Dyewoods. Meaning of Dyewoods. Synonyms of Dyewoods

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Dyewoods. Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Dyewoods and, of course, Dyewoods synonyms and on the right images related to the word Dyewoods.

Definition of Dyewoods

Dyewood
Dyewood Dye"wood`, n. Any wood from which coloring matter is extracted for dyeing.

Meaning of Dyewoods from wikipedia

- A dyewood is any of a number of varieties of wood which provide dyes for textiles and other purposes. Among the more important are: Brazilwood or Brazil...
- sugar and tobacco. Forest products included rubber, carnauba wax and dyewoods. Exports included hides, skins, rubber, wax, tobacco and cotton. Teresina...
- access to foreign markets, so that they could always obtain coffee, cotton, dyewoods, fur, pepper, and sugar. He acted to create a favorable balance of trade...
- African slaves were put to work alongside Indians and convicts, cultivating dyewood and maize and harvesting solar salt around Blue Pan. Slave quarters, built...
- bees are raised. From the tropical forests of the inland regions come dyewoods, hardwoods, and rubber. About 20% of the state's territory is forested...
- over all of Central America. Their main occupation was cutting logwood, a dyewood in high demand in Europe. The center of their activity and the primary...
- Armenian cochineal Black walnut Bloodroot Brazilin Cochineal Cudbear Cutch Dyewoods Fustic Gamboge Dyer's broom Henna Indigo Kermes Logwood Madder Polish cochineal...
- New World. The new method used logwood (Haematoxylum campechianum), a dyewood native to Mexico and Central America. Although logwood was poorly received...
- (1830–1917) and Johann Muller-Pack acquired a site in Basel, where they built a dyewood mill and a dye extraction plant. Two years later, they began the production...
- shipped valuable exports such as agricultural goods, tropical hardwoods and dyewood, then a widely used textile dye in Europe. It also handled gold and silver...