overplaid
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Noun
[edit]overplaid (plural overplaids)
- A plaid pattern that arises from color woven into a fabric that has another, different woven texture.
- 1948, George Edward Linton, Joseph James Pizzuto, Applied Textiles: Raw Materials to Finished Fabrics, page 174:
- Overplaids are ideal for travel as they do not show the dirt as readily as other cloths, generally speaking.
- 1987, Harriet Tidball, Two-harness textiles, page 21:
- As the overplaid is the dominate element of such a design, it must assert itself over the check through the strength of its color or its value.
- 2013, JoAnne Olian, Everyday Fashions of the Forties As Pictured in Sears Catalogs, →ISBN, page 8:
- The “Boyville” label in a suit means our best in fabric, stylen and tailoring details and choice quality, smooth finish all wool . . . popular diagonal weave with overplaid.
Verb
[edit]overplaid (third-person singular simple present overplaids, present participle overplaiding, simple past and past participle overplaided)
- To weave in this kind of pattern.