- its neck, and (in the case of "tailor's goose") its
usage by tailors.
Goffering iron This type of iron, now obsolete,
consists of a
metal cylinder oriented...
- ruff
retained the deep
projecting starched frill of
several separately goffered folds of
linen or muslin, and
supporting standard,
which arose in the sixteenth...
- into
elaborate figure-of-eight
folds by the use of heated, cone-shaped
goffering irons. At
their most extreme, "cartwheel ruffs" were a foot or more wide;...
- in an
attic above the café,
lying in bed
wearing white nighties and a
goffered cap. This is also
where the
British airmen and the
radio (complete with...
-
frequently bound in
goatskin leather and
decorated with
polygonal interlacing,
goffering, and stamping. The
primary materials used for the
pages were goat or sheep...
- Also
known as the mob cap, the cap was a
linen or
cotton head
cover with
goffered folded fabrics around the face. Some had long
lappets which hung down the...
- 'Champignon de Paris' (Chabeau
makes one of
these in fine
straw with a
goffered frill of
organdy under the brim that
somehow carries the
model away back...
-
young Victorian child and
remains so at tale's end,
taking delight in the
goffered pinafore and the
laundered handkerchiefs that
confine and
define such a...
-
printing with a dye, and the
petals are
given their natural rounded forms by
goffering irons of
various shapes. The next step is to ****emble the
petals and other...
- of
pubescence (sensu stricto);
devoid of any
sculpturing (sensu lato)
goffered with
regular impressions,
closely set, and
separated by
narrow ridges;...