The basic garments for women consisted of the smock, fur, linen, cambric, silk, and the cloth of silver or gold & the richer Middle Age women would wear more expensive materials such as silk, or linen.
32.
Evening dresses, ribbons, cambrics, imitation cashmere dresses, festoons, embroidered gauze, black crepe, artificial flowers, Brussels and French lace dresses, fine and coarse French laces, perfumery, toys, confectionery, coats, waistcoats and gloves.
33.
The most important of these new roads connected a newly laid down Market Square, which still survives, with a linen and cambric factory at its eastern end, adjacent to what was once an army cavalry and artillery barracks ( now Aiken Barracks ).
34.
An evening dress in white net with cambric roses, which Ethel Barrymore wore in the 1901 production of " Captain Jinks of the Horse Marines, " is displayed near a Sargentesque portrait of the actress in the selfsame garment by Sigismond De Ivanowski.
35.
Other American engineering companies here include Cambric Consulting of Draper, Utah, which has 300 employees, and Harza Engineering of Chicago, which builds hydroelectric plants and has an agreement with the national Hydroelectric Institute to " borrow " 100 of its engineers for big projects.
36.
|| Originally a silk mill, Rose Mill on Ellesmere Street, north of the Bridgewater Canal was later owned by Leigh Friendly Co-operative Society Ltd . It was a weaving shed with 578 looms producing fine shirtings and cambrics . | | | | | }}
37.
"Our investigation revealed that amounts withheld from employees'pay for contribution to the plan were not forwarded to the plan in a timely manner, and in some cases, not forwarded at all, " wrote Leonard Garofolo, regional director of the PWBA, in a 1997 letter to Cambric.
38.
That year, Rudolph Ackermann's " Repository of Fashions " described the new textile as a " fine clear stuff, not unlike in appearance to leno, but of a very strong and durable description : it is made in different colours; grey, and the colour of unbleached cambric are most in favour ."
39.
He appears to have had some complaint with his clothing; author Alan Haynes describes this as a skin disorder so acute that " he could not endure any shirt but of the finest holland or cambric ", although author and historian Antonia Fraser has written of his propensity to sweat so much that he changed his shirt twice a day.
40.
With a most bewitching bonnet and veil, a very pink dress, beflounced to the waist, lace-fringed trousers of the most spotless purity, and red leather boots, the ensemble completed by the green parasol and white cambric pocket handkerchief, Master Juba certainly looked the black demoiselle of the first ton to the greatest advantage.