(isim) pamuklu bez, patiska, basma

listen to the pronunciation of (isim) pamuklu bez, patiska, basma
التركية - الإنجليزية
calico
Having a pattern of red and contrasting areas, resembling the color of calico cloth

The calico patterned tablecloths were supposed to make the restaurant look rustic; instead, they made it look run down.

A plainly woven cotton fabric that is characteristically printed with a small repetitious design, often floral, on a contrasting background First made in Calicut, India during the seventeenth century, from where it derives its name
A tightly-woven cotton type fabric with an all-over print, usually a small floral pattern on a contrasting background color Common end-uses include dresses, aprons, and quilts
A term used by early European traders
Fibre: Cotton Weave: Plain - usually a low count Characteristics: Originated in Calcutta, India, and is one of the oldest cottons Rather coarse and light in weight Pattern is printed on one side by discharge or resist printing It is not always fast in colour Sized for crispness but washes out and requires starch each time Designs are often geometric in shape, but originally elaborate designs of birds, trees, and flowers Inexpensive Similar to percale Very little on the market to-day, but the designs are still in use on other fabrics and sold as "calico print" Uses: Housedresses, aprons, patchwork quilts
Made of, or having the appearance of, calico; often applied to an animal, as a horse or cat, on whose body are large patches of a color strikingly different from its main color
a plain, closely woven, inexpensive cloth, usually cotton or a cotton/manufactured fiber blend, characteristically having figured patterns on a white or contrasting background Calico is typically used for aprons, dresses, and quilts
A kind of rough cloth, often printed with a bright pattern
Originally a general name for all kinds of cotton cloth imported from Callicut, India, and from the East (2)
Calico is plain white fabric made from cotton
Cotton cloth printed with a figured pattern
coarse cloth with a bright print
Originated in Calcutta, India, and is one of the oldest cotton staples on the market This plain and closely woven, inexpensive cloth is made in solid colors on a white or contrasting background Very often, one, two, or three colors are seen on the face of the goods, which are discharge or resist- printed Calico is not always fast in color Medium yarn is used in the cloth, and the designs are often geometric in shape The yarn used is 30s, and the texture is about 66 x 54 Uses are for aprons, dresses, crazy quilts
made of calico or resembling calico in being patterned; "calico dresses"; "a calico cat"
{i} plain lightweight cotton fabric with figured pattern printed on one side; plain white cotton fabric (British usage); animal with spotted or color-patched coat (such as a cat)
cotton cloth imported from India; a plain white cotton fabric that is heavier than muslin; any of various cheap cotton fabrics with figured patterns Originated in Calcutta, India, and is one of the oldest cottons Rather coarse and light in weight Pattern is printed on one side by discharge or resist printing It is not always fast in colour Sized for crispness but washes out and requires starch each time Designs are often geometric in shape, but originally elaborate designs of birds, trees, and flowers Similar to percale
coarse cloth with a bright print made of calico or resembling calico in being patterned; "calico dresses"; "a calico cat
having sections or patches colored differently and usually brightly; "a jester dressed in motley"; "the painted desert"; "a particolored dress"; "a piebald horse"; "pied daisies"
(isim) pamuklu bez, patiska, basma
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