The agricultural products are dairy and beef products, pork, poultry, potatoes, and flax. |
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The account of breaking, scutching and hackling flax, for example, is the clearest and most informative short discussion that I have seen. |
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He was quick to launch a money-making scheme, supplying a steady stream of stripped flax, or muka, to Australian merchants. |
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Resources of grass and gold dominated the early period of European settlement following exploitation of fur seals and flax. |
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Oats, millet, opium poppies, and flax were also being cultivated by the end of the Neolithic period. |
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On Shrove Tuesday, people still go sledding to make flax plants grow taller. |
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This twine is now roped with a small thread of cotton, hemp or flax to keep the ends from projecting. |
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Laces were typically made from flax, silk, metal wrapped silk and some cotton and wool. |
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New Zealand flax with pink-toned leaves, for example, blends well with pink flowers. |
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Two teaspoons of flax seed simmered in one quart water makes a good fiber solution. |
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And short flax fibers can be blended with cotton or other fibers to make medical products such as bandages. |
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He advises consumption of expeller-pressed seed oils such as flax and borage oils, as well as coconut oil, rather than corn oil or margarine. |
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In the dappled light, woven flax fans became fish and hanging strips of polythene were swaying palm trees, reeds or bamboo. |
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The Pomak economy is based on agriculture and their major crops include rye, barley, corn, flax, potatoes and tobacco. |
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At the time, there was great demand in Europe for good processed flax to make naval rope, cordage and sails. |
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I rub my hair with oil pressed from hemp seed, oil from the crushed seed of flax, wool fat boiled from the shorn fleeces of ivory ewes. |
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Prior to that, cushions were stuffed with flax, cotton or other padded materials and the result was fairly deadening. |
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Irish farmers came to rely on imported flax seed because the very best linen required the harvesting of flax before the seed could mature. |
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The international media's attention was drawn sharply to a heavily tattooed Maori warrior, wearing nothing but a flax skirt with a black thong. |
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Once inside the factory, the flax was fed into a stripping machine, which took all the green covering off the fibre and left it bare. |
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She is combing out flax and keeping herself cheerful with a pitcher of wine. |
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The fibres damaged the skin on the women's hands if their job was to comb the flax by hand. |
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If moisturising is continuous over the hygroscope moisture content then flax can mould even during a couple of days. |
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The farmers cleared the land, cultivated rye and flax, and raised cattle, sheep, pigs, and poultry. |
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When the flax is sufficiently watered it is taken out of the pond and beaten by an implement called a swingle. |
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Only then did they turn to color, using purples like heliotrope and verbena to complement the flax, and soft apricots for gentle contrast. |
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Other Cretan agricultural products are carob beans, fava, mountain tea, broad beans, oregano and flax. |
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After the flax had been hatcheled, it was in the form of short, broken fibers called tow. |
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They then scutched and hatcheled which was mainly to get off the shaff. Then they spun the inner part of the flax on a flax wheel. |
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In this issue we will learn about that often overlooked tool used in flax processing, the hackle, also called a hatchel or a hetchel. |
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In addition to collecting and using my antique spinning wheels and weaving looms, I also have a collection of antique flax hetchels. |
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One of our companions was astonished to find that the local Afghans only used flax as an oilseed, and had never heard of linen. |
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The year after they introduced their seeds, Taylor switched from canola to flax, a different kind of oilseed. |
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As steamships gradually replaced sailing vessels the demand for ropes was reduced and by 1890 the flax mill was closed. |
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Drinking water was gathered in calabashes from a spring half way up the western face, reached by a brave volunteer lowered on a flax rope. |
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The series provides human-grade ingredients and healthful extras like spirulina, flax seed and cranberries. |
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It took me a week alone to strip back the flax and remove the muka, weave it and dye it. |
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Other Iron Age crops included the more ancient emmer wheat, bread wheat, oats, rye, peas, Celtic beans, and flax. |
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The woman constantly dipped her fingers into water to moisten the flax and keep it from breaking. |
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The plant-species selected for production is a stone age crop known as false flax or gold of pleasure. |
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The second type of laxative is a lubricating bulk laxative, including demulcent herbs such as psyllium and flax seed. |
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Though working with flax was considered mainly women's work, slaves were often kept as free labour to help process it for sale. |
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Moments earlier he was presented with a traditional, ceremonial coat, a korowai made of flax and kiwi feathers. |
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Having prepared the wool or flax the women would then have spun it using a drop spindle. |
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Embedding flax fibers into composite materials and nonwoven sheets provides strength and reinforcement to the goods. |
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In late November, the same producer might then plant a flax crop to grow through March. |
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Many of the second and third generation of settlers grew flax and spun and wove yarn in addition to tending a small farm. |
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They are made of New Zealand flax, phormium tenax, from the fibres extracted from the leaves. |
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Additions such as flax, nuts, seeds and cracked wheat add even more fiber and nutrition. |
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What was the need, then, for a specific text to prove the permissibility of mingling wool and flax in zizith? |
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But they also look great with ornamental grasses, New Zealand flax and daylilies in the same tones. |
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The captain and his crew on the brig Elizabeth exchanged a cargo of flax for transport to Akaroa. |
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The farmer passed handfuls of flax through a tool called a flax brake to break up the hard inner core. |
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The young and tender nettle is an excellent pot-herb and the stalks are good as flax for making cloth. |
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Women prepared and preserved food, made medicines, and used spinning wheels, looms, and needles to turn wool and flax into clothing. |
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This process usually requires a flax brake, a wooden device consisting of two hinged blades. |
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Polyunsaturated oils, such as flax, corn, hemp, safflower, sesame and sunflower, have at least two gaps. |
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There are many packets of pumpkin seeds, sticky bottles of flax oil, dehydrating apricots and slimy salad in kitchens up and down the land. |
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This is necessary, that the makutu may take effect, and the person who stole the flax be discovered. |
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He stayed single and spent his daylight hours clearing the land of manuka, fern and flax. |
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The collection also includes other Maori art forms such as carving, tukutuku panels and flax weaving. |
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These fibres would then be spun in the same way as flax or wool. |
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Many have abundant gardens, with brilliant red poppies, orange marigolds, blue flax, pink clematis and jacaranda, and large cypress and eucalyptus trees. |
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Early in the nineteenth century crews of visiting ships came looking for flax, and from 1829 whalers came to share the bounty in this southern area. |
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A lash, also of flax, was then attached and the whip was finished. |
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As a native Californian, she was particularly drawn to plants that define Southern California gardening, such as agaves, bush anemones, cycads, and New Zealand flax. |
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Instead, the composition is one of molten plastic and flax, an agriproduct that is not biodegradable, and thus doesn't have the absorptive capabilities of wood. |
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Raw flax and wool was spun into yarn, this was then dyed or bleached, woven into cloth and then cut and sewn into the garments their families needed. |
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This Surrey Wildlife Trust reserve consists of 6.6 acres of chalk grassland with flowers including small scabious, fairy flax, yellow-wort common rock-rose and autumn gentian. |
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Linen is from flax, a bast fiber taken from the stalk of the plant. |
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He still makes traditional cow bands, used by farmers for tethering cattle and other farm jobs, out of Egyptian flax on an old-fashioned rope-making sled and top. |
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The fact of her covering the spies with bundles of flax which lay on her house-roof is an undesigned coincidence which strictly corroborates the narrative. |
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Some accounts of the battle say that the English archers had kept their flax bowstrings dry by putting them under their helmets as it had been raining the day before. |
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After a few other steps, women put the flax fibers on the spinning wheel, bleached the thread with water and ashes, wove it on a loom and bleached the linen again in the sun. |
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The image is framed by a garland of wheat, clover, and flax flowers. |
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The principal crops are grain, sunflower seeds, sugar beet, and flax. |
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Nevertheless, linseed itself is sometimes used as a food grain in India, where the species originated and where flax has been cultivated since earliest times. |
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Stronger than flax, fiber from white dead-nettle was also spun into fishing nets by North American Indians, through a process of decay rather than retting. |
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The plant sources are flax seed, walnuts, and purslane, a succulent weed. |
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It expects total production for its six major crops wheat, barley, durum, canola, flax and oats to reach 50 million tonnes this year, up from 43 million last year. |
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Perhaps he imagines that the flax is first bundled and then beaten, though that would go against the flailing process which is normally done on a threshing floor. |
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These poor people worked on the docks unloading inbound vessels and loading outbound vessels with wheat, corn, and flax seed. |
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Little shiny leaves and manuka flowers, rusty rimu needles and cabbage trees, flax and silver fern. |
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The polish remover combines acetone with natural drying oils including apricot seed, flax seed and parilla oils. |
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These natural fibers include flax, hemp, jute, sisal, kenaf, coir, kapok, banana, henequen, and many others. |
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In Europe, large-seeded false flax evolved several ecotypes that are closely associated with flax production. |
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Effects of flax fiber on laxation and glycemic response in healthy volunteers. |
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This was only possible because coal, coke, imported cotton, brick and slate had replaced wood, charcoal, flax, peat and thatch. |
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The first operation in dressing flax is to swingle or beat it, in order to detach it from the harle or skimps. |
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Emmer, barley, lentil, pea and flax were all important contributors to the household economy. |
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Old Cigfolla, who despite stiff joints could outspin any of them, drew out a fine thread of flax. |
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Just like the fairy tale figure Rumplestiltskin who spun flax into gold, Alaska must learn how to turn gas into cash. |
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The national flower of Scotland is the thistle, of Northern Ireland is the flax flower and the shamrock, and of Wales is the daffodil and leek. |
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He started using the beer to trap slugs, which were attacking his New Zealand flax plant. |
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Then, with a smile that seemed to have all the freshness of the matutinal hour in it, she bent again to her work of hackling flax. |
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Also known as false flax or gold-of-pleasure, it thrives in the semi-arid conditions of the Northern Plains. |
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Add no more than a quarter cup of camelina or flax oil each day until you reach the desired amount, and continue to monitor the results closely. |
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The bordering countries have also traditionally exported lumber, wood tar, flax, hemp and furs by ship across the Baltic. |
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There were poppies in abundance, cornflowers, toadflaxes, bullwort, wild carrot, larkspur, gypsophilia, flax and numerous grasses. |
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Since I had been confused about the name of the flax brake, I thought I had already completed scutching so I skipped that part of the process. |
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Linen workers and flax farmers prevented the introduction of heckling and scutching machines. |
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The textile industry, based on cotton and flax, employed about half of the industrial workforce for much of the industrial period. |
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For example, Pimelea, a native Australian plant, also known as flax weed, is highly toxic to cattle. |
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At St Martin in the Fields, children were trained in spinning flax, picking hair and carding wool, before being placed as apprentices. |
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Camelina sativa, also known as gold of pleasure or false flax, is a member of the mustard family and a distant relative to canola. |
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Camelina, also known as false flax, is native to Mediterranean regions of Europe and Asia. |
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False flax as an example of such alternative sources of raw material is one of the oldest cultural plants. |
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It is related to the mustard plant and is also known as false flax or gold of pleasure. |
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At the time when these inventions were made the flax trade was on the point of expiring, the spinners being unable to produce yarn to a profit. |
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Heckling was the preparation of flax for spinning by splitting and straightening the flax fibres. |
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Murray made important improvements to the machinery for heckling and spinning flax. |
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Other sources of omega-3 fatty acids include sardines, mackerel, swordfish, walnuts and flax seeds, BBC site reported. |
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Before the 1770s, textile production was a cottage industry using flax and wool. |
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During the 16th century a treadle wheel with flyer was in common use, and gained such names as the Saxony wheel and the flax wheel. |
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It is usually made of spun fibre, originally wool, flax and cotton, today often of synthetic fiber such as nylon or rayon. |
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Other crops that were occasionally grown were flax and members of the mustard family. |
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Before the advent of synthetics, textile manufacturing depended almost exclusively on wool, silk and fiber plants such as cotton and flax. |
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The use of flax fibre in the manufacturing of cloth in Northern Europe dates back to Neolithic times. |
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Fibres from the stalks of plants, such as hemp, flax, and nettles, are also known as 'bast' fibres. |
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The use of milkweed stalk fibre has also been reported, but it tends to be somewhat weaker than other fibres like hemp or flax. |
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Nettles have also been used to make a fibre and fabric very similar to hemp or flax. |
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Russian thistle, Salsola tragus, has become an icon of the American West since arriving in the 1870s as a flax seed contaminant. |
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Cotton, flax, jute, hemp, modal and even bamboo fibre are all used in clothing. |
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Yarn is produced by spinning raw fibres of wool, flax, cotton, hemp, or other materials to produce long strands. |
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They farmed grain and millet as their cereal crops, grew flax, and raised oxen, pigs, sheep and horses. |
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Other rope in antiquity was made from the fibres of date palms, flax, grass, papyrus, leather, or animal hair. |
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Marshall's Mill was one of the first of many factories constructed in Leeds from around 1790 when the most significant were woollen finishing and flax mills. |
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Smaller settlements, which included Killeshandra in County Cavan, contributed to the expansion of flax cultivation and the growth of the Irish linen industry. |
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In 1789, due to a lack of trade in the Darlington flax mills, Murray and his family moved to Leeds to work for John Marshall, who was to become a prominent flax manufacturer. |
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Wool was the main source of fibres for clothing, and flax was also common, although it is not clear if they grew it for fibres, for oil, or as a foodstuff. |
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In 1760 England, yarn production from wool, flax and cotton was still a cottage industry in which fibres were carded and spun by hand using a spinning wheel. |
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The demand for heavier fabric was met by a domestic industry based around Lancashire that produced fustian, a cloth with flax warp and cotton weft. |
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He is known to have worked in a flax mill on the Glasgow Vennel. |
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Hall added that usually the men do not wear anything under the piupiu, the flax skirts, but because of the high-profile guests they'll wear black undies to welcome them. |
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Most farmers grew flax for their wives to spin and this, along with imported cotton, provided the material for many newly established cotton mills. |
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Farmers also expanded their production of flax seed and corn since flax was a high demand in the Irish linen industry and a demand for corn existed in the West Indies. |
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Camelina, also known as gold-of-pleasure or false flax, is an energy crop, given its high oil content and ability to grow in rotation with wheat and other cereal crops. |
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