pargeting การใช้
- It has two gables, each with pargeting decorated with foliated geometric patterns.
- The drawing room is finished in an extravagant rococo mode with extensive pargeting.
- Examples of simple pargeting on this earlier building can be seen within the building.
- Their gables have coved jettying and contain pargeting with patterns of leaves and flowers.
- This is also sometimes called pargeting.
- The building sports detailed pargeting, and also elaborate wood carvings around the front of the house.
- Parging ( or pargeting ) is usually applied with a trowel and pressed into the existing surface.
- He used gold leaf extensively and supplied relief to features like haloes with a plaster technique known as pargeting.
- The " Ancient House " in Ipswich shows a particularly fine example of pargeting, depicting scenes from the four continents.
- Four panels of pargeting show a America, Asia and Europe are shown-notably lacking Australia which was not discovered at the time.
- The elaborate moulded plasterwork ( pargeting ) decorating the Old Sun Inn in Saffron Walden, Essex features his battle against the Wisbech Giant.
- On the east side, the dining room cornice matches that in the hall, while the ceiling pargeting is a series of bands of various foliate motifs.
- In Pargeting I altered a location in the caption of an image, from'County Museum'to'Ancient House Museum', but upon saving I found I had inadvertently eliminated the image, which I do not want to do.
- The ground floor has extensive areas of tiling in contrasting colours; most light fittings are partly of wood, and some have multiple branches; the doors are panelled with two-tone wood; some walls have hardwood panels; and pargeting, mouldings are also visible.
- Pargeting derives from the word'parget', a Middle English term that is probably derived from the Old French " pargeter " or " parjeter ", to throw about, or " porgeter ", to roughcast a wall . ( Source : " Webster's Dictionary " . ) However, the term is more usually applied only to the decoration in relief of the plastering between the studwork on the outside of half-timber houses, or sometimes covering the whole wall.