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Blue buntings
Blue buntings








blue buntings

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blue buntings

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blue buntings

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  • Wakefield: A Study of Arrested Urban Development. Textile manufactures in early modern England.
  • ^ One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed.
  • ^ Oxford English Dictionary on CD-ROM, Oxford University Press, 2002.
  • ^ "They were also highly glazed by hot-pressing and other means." ( Kerridge 1988, p. 53).
  • ^ "One special form of tammy, called bunt or bunting, was sold for making flags" ( Kerridge 1988, p. 53).
  • ^ "Worsted tammies, white and coloured, broad and narrow, were made in Norwich and East Norfolk, seemingly from about 1594, certainly from 1605" ( Kerridge 1988, p. 53).
  • ^ "The gradual change of spelling undergone by this name from 'estamet' to 'tammy' had by that date proceeded as far as 'tamett'.
  • The officer responsible for raising signals using flags is known as bunts, a term still used for a ship's communications officer.īunting is a popular choice of decoration at parties, weddings and within gardens.Įxample of personalised nursery bunting in the UK See also The term bunting is also used to refer to a collection of flags, and particularly those of a ship. The origin of the word is uncertain, but bunt means colourful in German. NSE Eridge-Edenbridge celebrations (1988) with Red, White and Blue commemorating the Hundred Years of the Line. Amongst other properties that made the fabric suitable for ribbons and flags was its high glaze, achieved by a process including hot-pressing. Typical forms of buntings are strings of colorful, monochrome, beige triangular flags and lengths of fabric in the colors of national flags gathered and draped into swags or pleated into fan shapes.īunting was originally a specific type of lightweight worsted wool fabric generically known as tammy, manufactured from the turn of the 17th century, and used for making ribbons and flags, including signal flags for the Royal Navy. flags and red, white and blue bunting.Ī bunting is any festive decorations made of fabric, or of plastic, paper or cardboard in imitation of fabric. An example of bunting in Wilmette, Illinois Bunting in the form of triangular flags in the West Midlands, United Kingdom 4th of July decorations in Roche Harbor include Canadian and U.S.










    Blue buntings