Decorated with a marble pattern.
A surface traversed by irregular veins of color; as block of marble often is.
The Tabby Pattern. Also known as Blotched or Classic Tabby.
To achieve a visual effect much like agate, different colored slips were poured onto the greenware and manipulated to gain the desired effect. Occasionally the wet, marbled slip was further manipulated with a comb or feather, producing a visual effect like fine book endpapers. Found most often on creamware and pearlware, marbling can also be found on red bodies, all dating from the late 18th and early 19th centuries. 19th century French peasant ware using this technique is today called Jaspe ware. Archaeologists refer to these types as variegated wares.
Paper mottled and streaked with colours and veins in imitation of marble. Endpapers and/or edges of older books are often marbled.
an irregularly patterned combination of translucent colors; used to describe plastics but not hard rubber
A faux-marble pattern often used for endpapers.
patterned with veins or streaks or color resembling marble; "marbleized pink skin"
Paper that has been marked by swirling patterns resembling the surface of marble.
A form of decoration done to paper, similar in appearance to the swirls inside a marble, usally used for endpapers and on boards
in pen terms, it is the mottled or swirled effect from combining different colors of plastic.
Marble patterned paper. [Back to the Top
page or paper with marbling, a decorative technique using coloured inks imitating the patterns found on the stone of the same name.
A process of decorating paper in which the result resembles the veins of stone marble.
A stone, or other object, with two or more colors swirled together.
When meet is veined with fat, this meat cooks very tender and juicy
Paper decorated with an imitation marble pattern.
a term for meat streaked with fat. When cooked, marbled meat is juicy and exceptionally tender, so this is a mark of a high-quality piece, especially sought after in steaks and beef roasts.