The Phoenicians
He invented a machine for spinning strong threads, and then a machine for producing cloth. Because he moved cloth making out of people's homes and into factories, he is known as the father of the factory system.
Known as fact Answer mostly purple with yellow outlines
The Phoenicians are known for their trading skills and for the purple dye they made from a special snail that had dye in its shell. They are also known, of course, for spreading their alphabet far and wide; almost all modern phonetic alphabets are derived from this alphabet.
The Shang are best known for their ability to weave silk cloth with threads from the silkworm and their bronse work.
The earliest known people in the Caribbean are the Taino indians
They made a purple dye from shellfish.
We know very little about Saint Lydia Purpuraria except what little mention of her is found in the Acts of the Apostles. She was a business woman in Thyatira, dealing in purple cloth, the most expensive type, in the 1st century Middle East. She was Paul's first known convert. No birthdates or dates of death are known.
The cloth that the Ashanti people weave is called Kente cloth. It is a type of silk and cotton fabric made of interwoven cloth strips and is known for its vibrant colors and intricate patterns, each with its own symbolic meanings.
it was obviously created by the rare underwater unacorn also known as the narwal
Of Cloth.
Purple quartz is also known as amethyst.
The insides of potatoes that are commonly known for their purple hue are typically a vibrant purple color.
The purple dye from a sea snail was adopted by kings for their robes, and was much in demand - the colour was known as Tyrian Purple after the Phoenician city of Tyre.
A draper.
He invented a machine for spinning strong threads, and then a machine for producing cloth. Because he moved cloth making out of people's homes and into factories, he is known as the father of the factory system.
Cloth and pottery
The city-state of Tyre, and Phoenicia generally, was well known for the production of Tyrian Purple, which was a strong purple dye. However, Phoenicia, which was where Lebanon sits now, is north of Israel, not west of it. West of Israel is the Mediterranean Sea.