- in
British usage since 1505) is a
heavy plain-woven
textile made from
unbleached, and
often not
fully processed, cotton. It may also
contain unseparated...
-
grayish yellow or
cream colour. It
initially indicated the
colour of
unbleached linen (approximately #FEFEE0 ), and some
English dictionaries still define...
- as silk and
linen in
their unbleached state. Ecru
comes from the
French word écru,
which means literally "raw" or "
unbleached".
Since at
least the 1950s...
-
needed to give the
bread better rising (gas holding)
qualities and chew.
Unbleached flour is
simply flour that has not
undergone bleaching and
therefore does...
- a
supplier of natural, less
processed and
unbleached base paper,
which could be made into "vegan"
unbleached rolling papers in booklets. The
concept was...
-
cotton fabric with a
strong bias (diagonal) in the weave. It can be used
unbleached,
although it is more
often bleached or d****.
Light weight drill is used...
-
dependent on
whether the
cotton is
bleached or
unbleached. A khadaṟ muṇṭŭ is made
using handlooms. When
unbleached, the
mundu is
called nēriyatu. In modern...
- and
other baked goods, and also
typically mixed with
lighter "white"
unbleached or
bleached flours (that have been
treated with
flour bleaching agent(s))...
-
Solid unbleached board, also
known as SUB, is a
grade of
paperboard typically made of
unbleached chemical pulp. Most
often it
comes with two to
three layers...
-
included the
production of
piece goods, calicos, and muslins,
available unbleached and in a
variety of colours. The
cotton textile industry was responsible...