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- Cameline abstract "Cameline (/ˈkæməliːn/ KAM-ə-leen) was a fabric material used in the Middle Ages for cloth. By tradition it is commonly thought to have been originally made of camel's hair in Asia. It was imported from Cyprus and Syria into Europe. Cameline is described also as a cloak of the Arabs made of camel's hair which is oftentimes striped white and brown in color. Since history records it many times as a "common and cheap" textile it is thought that it was an imitation of the original Asian camel's hair fabric. It was sometimes a lower quality French cloth imitation made of goat's hair. The fibers were spun into yarn and produced in Flanders and the Duchy of Brabant in many colors in medieval times. It is also described as a warm light woolen textile of camel's hair combined with wool or cotton. It is considered of lesser quality than that of camlet, which is also made of camel's hair.Cameline is described in textile dictionaries as a coarse medieval fabric. The cloth of camel's hair is sometimes used in combination with other fabrics and made into a twill weave pattern or a basket weave which is finished with a soft nap. It is said to have been used in woolen clothing articles similar to cashmere wool clothing. Some authorities even think cameline is the same as we call today cashmere.".
- Cameline thumbnail Cashmere_blend_yarn.jpg?width=300.
- Cameline wikiPageID "28433787".
- Cameline wikiPageLength "8816".
- Cameline wikiPageOutDegree "25".
- Cameline wikiPageRevisionID "574614181".
- Cameline wikiPageWikiLink Amiens.
- Cameline wikiPageWikiLink Brussels.
- Cameline wikiPageWikiLink Cambrai.
- Cameline wikiPageWikiLink Camel_hair.
- Cameline wikiPageWikiLink Camelhair.
- Cameline wikiPageWikiLink Camlet.
- Cameline wikiPageWikiLink Cashmere_wool.
- Cameline wikiPageWikiLink Category:Animal_hair_products.
- Cameline wikiPageWikiLink Category:Woven_fabrics.
- Cameline wikiPageWikiLink Cloak.
- Cameline wikiPageWikiLink Commercy.
- Cameline wikiPageWikiLink Duchy_of_Brabant.
- Cameline wikiPageWikiLink Flanders.
- Cameline wikiPageWikiLink Geoffrey_Chaucer.
- Cameline wikiPageWikiLink Girdle.
- Cameline wikiPageWikiLink Jean_de_Joinville.
- Cameline wikiPageWikiLink Marco_Polo.
- Cameline wikiPageWikiLink Mechelen.
- Cameline wikiPageWikiLink Mechlin.
- Cameline wikiPageWikiLink Middle_English.
- Cameline wikiPageWikiLink Saint-Quentin,_Aisne.
- Cameline wikiPageWikiLink The_Romaunt_of_the_Rose.
- Cameline wikiPageWikiLink Twill.
- Cameline wikiPageWikiLink Twill_weave.
- Cameline wikiPageWikiLink Weaving.
- Cameline wikiPageWikiLink William_Goodhugh.
- Cameline wikiPageWikiLink File:Cashmere_blend_yarn.jpg.
- Cameline wikiPageWikiLink File:Pirosmani._Camel.jpg.
- Cameline wikiPageWikiLinkText "Cameline".
- Cameline hasPhotoCollection Cameline.
- Cameline wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:IPAc-en.
- Cameline wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Cameline wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Respell.
- Cameline subject Category:Animal_hair_products.
- Cameline subject Category:Woven_fabrics.
- Cameline hypernym Material.
- Cameline type ChemicalCompound.
- Cameline type Insulator.
- Cameline type Product.
- Cameline comment "Cameline (/ˈkæməliːn/ KAM-ə-leen) was a fabric material used in the Middle Ages for cloth. By tradition it is commonly thought to have been originally made of camel's hair in Asia. It was imported from Cyprus and Syria into Europe. Cameline is described also as a cloak of the Arabs made of camel's hair which is oftentimes striped white and brown in color.".
- Cameline label "Cameline".
- Cameline sameAs m.0crcgcw.
- Cameline sameAs Q5025899.
- Cameline sameAs Q5025899.
- Cameline wasDerivedFrom Cameline?oldid=574614181.
- Cameline depiction Cashmere_blend_yarn.jpg.
- Cameline isPrimaryTopicOf Cameline.