Lacebark has also been used in the manufacture of utilitarian items such as curtains, hammocks, rope, bridles, and whips.
12.
The survival of a number of objects that are well over a hundred years old testifies to lacebark's durability as a material.
13.
The lacebark tree's layers of inner bark can be carefully pulled apart to produce multiple sheets of white netting known eponymously as lacebark.
14.
The lacebark tree's layers of inner bark can be carefully pulled apart to produce multiple sheets of white netting known eponymously as lacebark.
15.
A male cricket " sings " by raising his wing covers ( tympanum with a mixture of cypress or lacebark pine tree sap and cinnabar.
16.
The lacebark tree has smooth, dark green, leathery, somewhat heart-shaped evergreen leaves, roughly long by 2.5 inches wide.
17.
The Qiaojia pine has a conic crown with flaky pale gray-green bark becoming dark brown with age, similar to the closely related Lacebark pine.
18.
The three bristlecone pine species of the high mountains of the southwestern United States, and the lacebark pines of Asia are closely related to the pinyon pines.
19.
The second half of the 19th century saw numerous appearances of lacebark items in industrial exhibitions, possibly because the British perceived a potential for expanded production in Jamaica.
20.
Distribution is larger than any of the other lacebark species and can be found mostly in the eastern South Island, and in the North Island from Taranaki down.