Gazpacho
what is made in to cloth by this process
it is made from linen.
linen. A type of cloth made of flax.
The first aircraft were made with wood frames, often spruce. The frame was covered with thin cloth, often muslin and was tightened by varnishing it. some small parts and of course the engine, were metal.
Basically they're cookies made with Spanish butter which is butter made with Spanish olive oil.
Wood and metal braces. Cloth or canvas for the tops.
If you are asking about Oil Cloth, it is not made from oil, it is a plastic covered cloth that repels oil. There are fabric products made from petroleum products, but they are not made directly from oil.
No, cloth and hardcover are not the same. Cloth refers to the material used to cover a book while hardcover refers to the type of book binding where the cover is made of a rigid material such as cardboard or thick paperboard. Hardcover books can be covered in cloth, but not all cloth-covered books are hardcovers.
Made of six to twelve sails covered in reed matting or cloth material
A tack cloth is most commonly made out of a cotton textile with an additional tacky substance woven into the material to allow it to clean surfaces without leaving residue behind.
Cloth made from wool is called wool cloth.
what is made in to cloth by this process
Cotton cloth is made out of plants
They did not. The flag was made of cloth
Thread is made into cloth by weaving.
A cloth covered casket is a - usually wooden - coffin the exterior of which is covered with textile. Other wooden casket have a natural wooden exterior. Most cloth covered caskets are made of wood, either of softwood (woods from needle or cone bearing trees like: Pine, Poplar, Spruce, Red Cypress, Cedar and Redwood) or of wood products like particle boards, pressed wood, high strength cardboard, corrugated fiberboard, composite wood or plywood. The cloth for covering the exterior of the casket usually consists of textiles like doeskin (moleskin), broadcloth, plush (highpile), lambskin, felt or denim, but sometimes also of brocade, ventura cloth, tweed, velvet, suede or other textiles. The cloth may be plain or for embossed, for example with patterns like leaves; in rare cases colorful patterns can be found. Cloth covered caskets are oftentimes used as infants' caskets, but also als economical adults' coffins, both for earth burials and cremations. Cloth covered caskets often have a square or octagonal shape and a flat top or a hinged cap lid. In most cases low cost interiors made of crepe, satin or twill are used. In the US, most cloth covered caskets currently (2014) range between $ 300 and 1,500 in retail prices - much lower than the retail price of the average casket, which was around 2300 already in 2009. While in 1950 still more than one-half of all caskets sold in the US were cloth-covered caskets, this proportion fell until 2009 to 11% and is now probably around 10%. While in the 1950s almost every casket manufacturer had cloth-covered caskets in its line, there are today only three dozen companies manufacturing such products. Most of these companies manufacture for local or regional markets only.
A cloth covered casket is a coffin the exterior of which is covered with textile. Most cloth covered caskets are made of wood, either of softwood (woods from needle or cone bearing trees like: Pine, Poplar, Spruce, Red Cypress, Cedar and Redwood) or of wood products like particle boards, pressed wood, high strength cardboard, corrugated fiberboard, composite wood or plywood. The cloth for covering the exterior of the casket usually consists of textiles like doeskin (moleskin), broadcloth, plush, lambskin, felt or denim, but sometimes also of brocade, tweed, velvet, suede or other textiles. The cloth may be plain or embossed, for example with patterns like leaves; in rare cases also colorful patterns can be found. Cloth covered caskets are oftentimes used as infants' caskets, but also as economical adults' coffins, both for earth burials and cremations. Cloth covered caskets often have a square or octagonal shape and a flat top or a "hinged cap" lid; round corner and urn shaped designs are rare. In most cases low cost interiors made of crepe, satin or twill are used. In the US, most cloth covered caskets currently (2014) range between $ 300 and 1,500 in retail prices. While in 1950 still more than one half of all caskets sold in the US were cloth covered caskets, this proportion fell until 2009 to 11% and is now probably around 10% and while in the 1950s almost every casket manufacturer had cloth covered caskets in its line, there are today only some three dozen companies manufacturing such products. Most of these companies manufacture for local or regional markets only.