| 31. | These were produced in collaboration with Asta Musedalslien at Norsk Intarsia AS in Tyristrand, after designs by Tidemand-Johannessen.
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| 32. | In front of the latter there is a sixteenth-century reredos in wood displaying the Medici arms in gold intarsia.
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| 33. | The technique of intarsia was already perfected in Islamic North Africa before it was introduced into Christian Europe through Sicily and Andalusia.
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| 34. | He was also famous for the wooden room entirely of intarsia, the " Studiolo " in the Ducal Palace in Gubbio.
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| 35. | Other elements and the alabaster intarsia were added in 1584, when an earlier balustrade was dismantled and the pulpit was reconstructed.
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| 36. | The most elaborate examples of intarsia can be found in cabinets of this period, which were items of great luxury and prestige.
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| 37. | Intarsia and marquetry can appear very similar, but marquetry is much more common when semiprecious, or precious materials are being used.
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| 38. | This leads to a kind of Neo-Justinianism, but transformed into a characteristically Greek style through the technique of marble intarsia.
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| 39. | It is thought that the word'intarsia'is derived from the Latin word'interserere'which means " to insert ".
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| 40. | Priscilla Gibson-Roberts discusses four techniques for knitting intarsia in the round in her book, " Ethnic Socks & Stockings ".
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