Some very curious filigree work was brought to Great Britain from Abyssinia after the Battle of Magdala : armguards, slippers, and cups, some of which are now in the Victoria and Albert Museum.
32.
One distinct type of silver work is the filigree work used to produce earrings among the Mazahua people that live in the eastern part of the state in municipalities such as Zit�cuaro and Huetamo.
33.
Filigree work in silver was practised by the Moors of Spain during the Middle Ages with great skill, and was introduced by them and established all over the Iberian Peninsula, hence it was carried to the Spanish colonies in America.
34.
In July 1789 Charlotte announced her retirement from the theatre in order to open a school teaching filigree work to ladies, but the school was not a success and in 1793 Charlotte emigrated to America to resume her interrupted stage career.
35.
Cuttack, of the eastern Indian state Odisha, features traditional filigree work Known as " tarakasi " in the Odia language, most filigree work revolves around images of deities, though due to lack of patronage and modern design ideas, it is a dying art.
36.
Cuttack, of the eastern Indian state Odisha, features traditional filigree work Known as " tarakasi " in the Odia language, most filigree work revolves around images of deities, though due to lack of patronage and modern design ideas, it is a dying art.
37.
As though in nose-thumbing response to critics who claim this razor-witted writer doesn't give his female characters the time of day, Mamet has devised a filigree work that is, on the surface, the reverse image of " American Buffalo, " the play that made his reputation.
38.
The carved text on the pulpit is a rendering of Proverbs 25 : 11 : " Telles que sont les pommes d'or emaill�es d'argent, telle est la parole dit comme il faut [ A word fitly spoken is like apples of gold in filigree work ] ."
39.
With this exhibition Patrimonju thematically highlights various types of jewellery : amulets to ward off evil, the devotional and secular pieces of the 17th and 18th centuries, the local filigree work, the 19th century introduction of new materials and styles, and lastly the modern and contemporary pieces that bring us to our times.