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Patterned Cloth

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{{Stars1}} ===Stripes===  {{Evidence|Art|Literature |Archaeology=* Skjoldehamn, Norway (~1075): The decorative square and collar on the shirt were of stripped 2/1 twill. The base colour is red with narrow strips of green and yellow next to each other. [LOVLID 2009 p. 97) * London, Milk Street and Watling Court (late C9th - early C12th): Three of the nine tabby woven fragments had weft strips of paired threads. In one case the strips may well have been dyed with madder to accentuate the pattern. [PRITCHARD 1984, p. 52) * London, Milk Street and Watling Court (late C9th - late C10th): A 2/2 twill was found which had a thicker thread in every third weft, which was dyed red with madder the other weft threads were dyed blue (woad), creating a textile which would have been blue with red strips. [PRITCHARD 1984, p. 57) *Hedeby-Settlement: Fragment S 27A is a 2/2 diamond twill which has two darker warp threads (ca. 1mm) after every ten light warp threads (ca 10mm). All the weft threads are dark. Under magnification the light threads are a reddish-yellow-brown, the darker threads are a reddish-brownblack, indicating a fabric woven from natural lighter and darker threads was dyed red. (HAGG 1991, p. 80) |Discussion }} <br> ===Checks===  {{Evidence|Art|Literature |Archaeology |Discussion }} <br> ===Damast style patterning===  {{Evidence|Art|Literature |Archaeology |Discussion }} <br> ==References== <nocite>  LOVLID2009PRITCHARD1984   </nocite><biblio force=false>#Redirect [[Template:BibCloth Colours & Patterns]]</biblio><HarvardReferences />