Renaissance fabrics; a brief glossary
References:       Frick, Dressing Renaissance Florence
                        Tortora and Merkel, Fairchild’s Dictionary of Textiles
                        Munro IN Cambridge History of Western Textiles         
| Altobasso velvet aka figured   velvet | A velvet woven with the pile more   than one length to make a pattern.  The   pile might or might not be cut, some might be cut some not and the satin   ground might show through to form some of the pattern | 
| Broadcloth  | Top quality woollen  or worsted woven by two men on a wide loom.   See also woollen. | 
| Brocade | A  heavy silk fabric   often heavily patterned in two or more colours.  Brocade differs from Damask in that it is a   strictly one sided fabric with the floats on the back | 
| Brocatel | A cheaper brocade-like fabric being woven on a warp of   linen.  | 
| Cambric  | Linen of a finer quality than Holland   but not as fine as lawn | 
| Camel, aka Cam[b]let aka Camelot | A soft expensive cloth woven with camel hair or [later]   with best cashmere goat hair, often woven with silk  | 
| Cloth of gold [or silver] | A metal thread fill on a woollen warp, typically coloured   and shimmering in a metallic way with that colour such that one might speak   of a crimson cloth of gold. | 
| Cloth of tissue | A velvet, often altobasso or brocaded, in which gold   threads are to be found in the pile.    Strictly it is only cloth of tissue if there is 4oz [113.4g] or more   of gold per yard.  | 
| Cordovan  | Fine Spanish leather.  | 
| Damask | Generally silk or including silk, a weave in which the   pattern in one or more colours shows in relief on one side and reversed in   satin weave on the other side. Reversible. In two colour damask the colours   reverse.  | 
| Dickedinnen | Worsted  with thick   and thin threads to create an interesting surface; broadcloth. Speciality of Ghent.    | 
| Figured velvet | Either a brocaded velvet with different colours woven in   or Altobasso qv.  | 
| Frieze aka friezecloth | A rough very heavy wool cloth very hard wearing. | 
| Holland  | The coarsest grade of linen cloth. | 
| Kersey | A coarse woollen cloth costing only 70% of a standard   broadcloth | 
| Kerseymere | Fine wool with twisted twill weave [Cashmere] | 
| Lawn  | The finest and sheer grade of linen. | 
| Linen  | Fibre obtained from the flax plant. | 
| Linsey  | Cloth made of a wool/linen mix | 
| Linsey-woolsey  | A thin, coarse fabric of wool/linen mix; in later   centuries to refer to a fine light cloth.  | 
| Medley cloth | Cloth woven from a wool spun from several colours ‘dyed in   the wool’ and generally with a tendency towards groups of one colour eg blue   medley cloth.  This would not preclude   flecks of colour outside that range.  | 
| Merino | Just a note; the merino wool of the time was not as fine   as it became in later periods; it was just starting the breeding process that   would one day make it a byword for softness. | 
| Mockado | An imitation velvet, or piled fabric made commonly of wool   possibly with  silk fibres on a wool   ground | 
| Nettlecloth | Cloth woven from the fibres of the nettle.  This may be fine and lustrous but commonly   this term referred to the rough homespuns of this surrogate linen in this   period.   | 
| RayƩ  | Striped woollen | 
| Satin  | A shiny closely woven silk with lustrous unbroken surface   showing much of the warp thread.  | 
| Scarlet | The most expensive red colouring was made from the crushed   kermes beetle, the second most from the larva of another insect called grain   or grana.  Scarlet was however a term   used for any of the rich dark fabrics that employed these in the dyeing   process, including the most expensive black.    Medieval use of the word also extends to the cloth that was of   sufficiently high quality to be given an expensive dye job so rather an   ambiguous word and the name for the cloth may indeed have a different   etymological root entirely referring to it being much fulled and sheared. | 
| Serge  | A mix of woollen and worsted, requires some fulling and   shearing.   | 
| Silk  | The fibre obtained from the cocoon of the silk moth. The   best quality comes from the unbroken filaments from the cocoon but spun silk   is made by spinning the shorter lengths for a less strong fibre which was   used in the weft [and by the laws of Silk Guilds could not be used in the   warp]. At this period there was no real    western sericulture.  | 
| Strijptelaken | Striped wool, Flemish, speciality of Ghent | 
| Tabby | A coarse-waved or watered silk | 
| Taffeta | In this period a thin and glossy silk, often ‘shot’ or   having a different colour warp to weft | 
| Velvet  | A silk fabric woven with a pile and may be brocaded with   more than one colour, or figured with more than one length of pile. | 
| Wool | The hair of the sheep; comes in a variety of lengths   called staples according to the species.  | 
| Woollen | Fine, short staple fabric, requires fulling and shearing;   expensive to produce. A woollen broadcloth cost 7 to 8 times as much as a   worsted.  | 
| Worsted | Longer, stronger staple than a woollen, a light coarser   material.  Stronger than a woollen and requires   no finishing so cheaper to produce. | 
 

 
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