Paisley (Design)

Paisley is a droplet-shaped vegetal motif, similar to half of the T'ai Chi symbol, the Indian bodhi tree leaf, or the mango tree. The design originated in India and spread to Scotland when British soldiers brought home cashmere shawls. From roughly 1800 to 1850, using Jacquard looms, the women of the town of Paisley, Scotland adapted the design and wove woolen shawls, hence the design is popularly known as the Paisley pattern. Changes in fashion led to the demise of the shawl bringing hardship to the weavers in Scotland and the originators in Kashmir. The shape has been widely adopted since then. Although the influence is not clear, the Turkish tughra calligraphic seal strongly resembles the paisley shape. Some design scholars call the distinct shape boteh and believe it is the convergence of a stylized floral spray and a cypress tree -- a Zoroastrian symbol of death and eternity.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
planet rock the album
ecological land classification
call me
cough
uss tennessee (bb 43)
tales of mystery and imagination
tennessee class battleship
jagged little pill
swallowing
south carolina class battleship
gastroesophageal reflux disease
manometry
the national council against health fraud
barrett's esophagus
isidor isaac rabi
geomancy
endoscopy
chris ofili
humboldt state university
subjective
dilation
down to earth
esophagitis
paranoid (album)
gallbladder
bile duct
university of east anglia
pierre gassendi
uss mississippi (bb 23)
moral community
mencius
greek chorus
california proposition 215 (1996)
artificial organ
chiropractic
treatment
uss michigan (bb 27)
university of new england, australia
pheng xat lao
global 200
howard fast
german east africa
cardigan (sweater)
catharsis