Page:Pattern design - a book for students treating in a practical way of the anatomy, planning & evolution of repeated ornament.djvu/22

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XVI LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. NO. PAGE 163. Diagrams showing the correspondence in depth of repeat between the parts of a design . . . j42 164. Diagram showing the relation of diaper repeat to REPEAT OF side AND BOTTOM BORDERS . . . I43 163. Diagram showing portions of design answering practically to borders i45 166, 167. Diagrams of a iable damask design and the LINES ON which IT IS PLANNED .... I46, I47 168, 169. Diagrams of the centre part and lengthening PIECE of a SQU-^RE tablecloth 1 50 170. Diagram of the centre part of a long tablecloth, showing the introduction of lengthening pieces 151 171. Diagram showing change of colour in the weft threads 133 172. Diagram showing change of colour in the warp threads 154 173. Diagram showing revers.l of design in chenille WEAVING 153 174. Would-be free pattern falling into the lines of THE brick repeat MODERN FRENCH . . . 1 57 173. Diagram showing how a recurring feature marks the plan of a pattern 1 58 176. Painted diaper in which the " repe.t " does not WORK — English Gothic 159 177. Diagram showing the geometric recurrence of features not geometrically distributed . . l6o 178. Pattern falling into stripes — Old table damask . 161 179. Featureless " allover " pattern — Ceiling paper. L. F. D 162 180. Features of the pattern disguised, but not quite LOST, in " allover " EFFECT WaLL-PAPER. L. F. D. I63 181 Pattern with marked governing lines — Wall-paper founded upon an old stuff. l. f. d. . . 165 182. Pattern in which the lines of recurrence are purposely lost — Wall-paper — L. F. D. . . i66