Smocking – מילון אנגלי-אנגלי
smocking
n.
decorative embroidery which gathers cloth into small even pleats
smock
v.
provide with a smock, dress in a loose fitting garment; decorate with smocking, gather in a pattern of small even pleats (of fabric)
Smocking
Smocking is an
embroidery technique used to gather
fabric so that it can stretch. Before
elastic, smocking was commonly used in
cuffs,
bodices, and
necklines in garments where
buttons were undesirable. Smocking developed in
England and has been practised since the
Middle Ages and is unusual among embroidery methods in that it was often worn by laborers. Other major embroidery styles are purely decorative and represented status symbols. Smocking was practical for garments to be both form fitting and flexible, hence its name derives from
smock — a farmer's work shirt. Smocking was used most extensively in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
smocking
Noun
1. embroidery consisting of ornamental needlework on a garment that is made by gathering the cloth tightly in stitches
(hypernym) embroidery, fancywork
(derivation) smock
smock
Noun
1. a loose coverall (coat or frock) reaching down to the ankles
(synonym) duster, gaberdine, gabardine, dust coat
(hypernym) coverall
Verb
1. embellish by sewing in lines crossing each other diagonally; "The folk dancers wore smocked shirts"
(hypernym) decorate, adorn, grace, ornament, embellish, beautify
(derivation) smocking
smocking
SMOCKING
RICAMO PIEGHETTATO. ORNANDO CON UN RICAMO PIEGHETTATO