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The whole art of dying. In two parts. The first being an experimental discovery of all the most useful secrets in dying silk, wool, linnen and the Manufactures thereof, as Practised in England, France [...]

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Publiée
Contributeur
cdevauxe
Dernière modification
02/12/2021 09:26 (il y a presque 3 ans)
Type de document
Référence complète
The whole art of dying. In two parts. The first being an experimental discovery of all the most useful secrets in dying silk, wool, linnen and the Manufactures thereof, as Practised in England, France, Spain, Holland and Germany. To which is Added, A Discourse of Pot and Weyd Ashes, as well as several other Foreign Ingredients used in Dying. Written originally in the German language. The second part is a general instruction for the dying of wools and Woollen Manufactures of all Colours; for the Culture of the Drugs used in the Tinctorial Art, as also for the Dying of Hats; published by the especial command of the present French King in that language, and Illustrated with several Philosophical and Practical Annotations by the German Translator. Both which are Faithfully rendred into English from their Respective Originals. London : William Pearson, 1705. 356 p.
Langue
Ouvrages
Titre ouvrage : 
The whole art of dying. In two parts. The first being an experimental discovery of all the most useful secrets in dying silk, wool, linnen and the Manufactures thereof, as Practised in England, France, Spain, Holland and Germany. To which is Added, A Discourse of Pot and Weyd Ashes, as well as several other Foreign Ingredients used in Dying. Written originally in the German language. The second part is a general instruction for the dying of wools and Woollen Manufactures of all Colours; for the Culture of the Drugs used in the Tinctorial Art, as also for the Dying of Hats; published by the especial command of the present French King in that language, and Illustrated with several Philosophical and Practical Annotations by the German Translator. Both which are Faithfully rendred into English from their Respective Original
Publications en série / contributions
Nombre de pages : 
356 p.
Éditions
Date d'édition : 
1705
Lieu d'édition : 
Éditeur : 
William Pearson
Sources en ligne
Référence de notice : 
ark:/13960/t5x652k8t
Date de consultation : 
31/12/2020
Source
source : Institut national d'histoire de l'art (France) - licence : Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)