Some embroiderers call it a shaded or padded eyelet.
Now-a-days the crafty manufacturers stamp the material to imitate the hand-made embroideries and use a thread of the same quality so that sometimes the professional embroiderersfind it hard to distinguish it from the real.
But the bestembroiderers never use them, as their mechanical correctness makes the work too much like machine work.
There may be embroiderers who are experts in one branch of the subject and yet who will do very unsatisfactory work in another.
Some embroiderers and some schools of embroidery contend that the number of embroidery stitches is almost infinite.
These two methods are a serious and dignified form of embroidery, and were often used by the great mediaeval embroiderers on a rich figured or damask silk, and sometimes on plain silk, and sometimes on a silky velvet.
The Persians and embroiderers in the Grecian Archipelago have excelled in such work, producing wondrously delicate textile grills of ingenious geometric patterns.
These survivals help us to understand the casual mention we find in classical authors, of the works of the Plumarii, which appellation was given at last to all embroiderers who were not Phrygians.
He considers that the Sarazinois were embroiderers as well as weavers--and this theory is supported by extracts from an inventory of Charles VI.
There was no guild of embroiderers in England that we know of till that incorporated in the reign of Elizabeth.
We must remember that, as she was a British princess, it is likely that she had learnt her art at home, and therefore that the women of England were already embroiderers as early as the beginning of the fourth century.
But in the Middle Ages the embroiderers were ambitious artists.
A guild ofembroiderers was formed in 1779, who submitted their statutes to the Tribunal of Commerce.
The following list of Spanish embroiderers is taken from Cean's "Dic.
At her invitation, tapestry-workers from Milan and Florence came to settle at Ferrara, and skilledembroiderers were brought over from Spain.
When I remarked that this seemed a very large sum, the duchess confessed she had paid some of it to embroiderers and other craftsmen.
For an account of the conditions under which Greek and Roman embroiderers worked, see Alan S.
The names of two Florentine embroiderers of the 14th century--both men--have come down to us, inscribed upon their handiwork.
Perhaps the most remarkable example of all which have survived to illustrate the work of the Byzantine embroiderers is the blue silk robe known as the dalmatic of Charlemagne or of Leo III.
A guild of embroiderers was in standing in Seville in 1433, where Ordinances were enforced to protect from fraud and otherwise to regulate this industry.
With such instruction, there was nothing left for the mediƦval embroiderers but to render the figure with as much realistic emaciation as possible.
This differed entirely from what modern embroiderers mean by cut work, as has been explained.
The "Embroiderers of the King," as they are called, still turn out splendid specimens of this heavy and elaborate work, which are used for the gorgeous trappings of the horses of the nobility on gala days and state occasions.
The Spanish embroiderers used these forms of couching over stuffing with coloured silks as well as gold, and produced wonderfully rich effects.
Silk, gold, and silver embroideries are very common, and the embroiderers are so numerous that they are to be found in every street.
He keeps eighty men embroiderers constantly employed, and pays them an average of 18 cents a day.
Very little account is taken of the labor expended upon them, although the designs and the workmanship are exquisite, because the weavers and embroiderers are paid only a few cents a day.
In 1815 he succeeded the Pons Brothers, embroiderers to the Court, and was judge in the tribunal of commerce.
At that time he was a widower, his first wife being a Demoiselle Pons, sole heiress of the celebrated Pons family, embroiderers to the Court during the Empire.
In 1809 she was called to Paris by Adeline's husband and placed as an apprentice with the well-known Pons Brothers, embroiderers to the Imperial Court.
Indian embroiderers depart sometimes so far from mechanical precision as to shock the admirers of monotonously even work.
The Spanish embroiderers made most ornamental use of a wee loop at the points of the leaves where the cord must turn; but the device of looping may easily be used to frivolous purpose.
One ought to read the by-laws and regulations of the Guild of Master Workmen, where it is laid down that 'The embroiderers of the King have always the right to summon, by armed force if necessary, the workmen of other masters.
For four hundred years, the line of Huberts, embroiderers from father to son, had lived in this house.
In the deep dens that serve as shops, shoemakers were still plying their trade, makers of horn rings were still at their primitive lathes, and embroiderers were still busily sewing in the yellow lamplight.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "embroiderers" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.