Cotton fabric with a basket weave with slight variations of thickness of warp filling yarns.
prop n. A University near Didcot. Referred to as 'that university' and 'the other place' in Cambridge.
Soft, porous cotton fabric made with a modified plain or basketweave, frequently used to make pajamas and shirts.
A fabric woven in a basket weave and made of cotton or a cotton blend. It often has a thin, colored warp and a thick, white filling.
Oxford is a plain basket weave of medium or heavy weight. Made with a variety of cotton, rayon, or polyester/cotton yarns. The majority of oxfords are of combed yarns, with heavier filling than warp yarns. Cheaper grades are mixed carded and combed yarns, and sometimes all carded yarns. Two warp yarns, placed flat next to each other, are woven over and under one heavier filling thread. Usually mercerized. A number of variations of this weave are on the market. For shirtings, dresses, and similar purposes.
a city in southern England northwest of London; site of Oxford University
a university town in northern Mississippi; home of William Faulkner
a city in Newton County, in the Atlanta metro area
A lightweight woven fabric that is usually made of cotton. It is most commonly used for shirts.
A fine, soft, lightweight woven cotton or blended with manufactured fibers in a 2 x 1 basket weave variation of the plain weave construction. The fabric is used primarily in shirting.
A modified plain or weave – normally found in formal shirts. Normally hard wearing
Cotton fabric with a basket weave and slight variations of thickness or warp filling yarns.
Group of cotton fabrics made with modified plain of basket weave.
a low shoe laced or tied over the instep. A soft durable cotton or synthetic fabric with a silky luster made in plain or basket weaves; also called oxford cloth. Warp has two fine yarns which travel as one and one heavier softly-spun bulky filling which gives it a basket-weave look. Better qualities are mercerized. rather heavy. Usually is all white but some has a spaced stripe in the warp direction. Launders very well but soils easily. When made with yarn dyed warp and white weft, it is called oxford chambray. The one remaining commercial shirting material made originally by a Scotch mill which bore the names of four Universities - Oxford, Cambridge, Harvard, and Yale.
A fine, soft, lightweight woven cotton or blended with manufactured fibres in a 2 x 1 basket weave. For examples of products using reactive dyes please see our woven shirt.
soft, somewhat porous, cotton shirting weave that creates a soft, nubby texture.
A fine, soft and lightweight woven cotton blended with manufactured/synthetic fibers in plain or basket weave.
A modified plain or weave. Can be striped or checked by using groups of various colored yarn.
is shirting fabric with a lustrous, soft finish. It is characterized with narrow stripes and can be woven in plain or basket weave. Also a term used for wool fabric that has black and white fibers.
A type of fabric where the fibers are either cotton or blended man-made fibers.
A good quality shirting fabric made in a plain-weave with two ends weaving as one. It is generally made from cotton. Stripes of dyed yarn or decorative weaves are sometimes introduced.
Oxford is a city and local government district in Oxfordshire, England, with a population of 134,248 (2001 census). It is home to the University of Oxford, the oldest university in the English-speaking world.
Oxford is a federal and provincial electoral district in Ontario, Canada, that has been represented in the Canadian House of Commons since 1935. It will elect a member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario in the next provincial election.
Oxford was a parliamentary constituency in the United Kingdom. It comprised the town of Oxford in the county of Oxfordshire, and elected two Members of Parliament from its creation in 1295 until 1881. From 1885, the seat elected only one member.