Well, darling, a "fuller of cloth" is actually a person who gathers and cleans newly woven cloth to remove oils, dirt, and other impurities. They use a process called "fulling" which involves beating or pressing the cloth to make it denser and more durable. So, next time you need your cloth to be cleaned and toughened up, you know who to call - a fuller of cloth!
Fuller is an English occupational name denoting one who fulls wool or cloth.
In the Middle Ages, a fuller was a skilled craftsperson who worked with cloth. Their main task was to clean and thicken the woven fabric using a process called fulling. This involved soaking the fabric in water and then pounding it with specific tools or stomping on it with their feet. The fuller's work helped to remove impurities from the fabric and make it denser and more durable.
A fuller in colonial times was a tradesperson who specialized in the process of fulling woolen cloth. This process involved cleaning and thickening the fabric by removing oils and dirt, often using water, clay, and other substances. Fullers would stomp on the cloth in large vats or use tools to ensure the fibers mat together, resulting in a denser and more durable material. This trade was essential for producing the high-quality wool textiles that were important in colonial economies.
No, it is a slang word. Not a word in the dictionary to describe something that is Full.A fuller is another word for a blood groove on a bayonet.
Ed Fuller died March 15, 1935, in Hyattsville, MD, USA.
A fuller was a person who fulled woolen cloth. This involved making the cloth thicker by causing it to felt or mat, by washing or beating it. This process made the cloth more thick or full, hence the words fulling and fuller.
A "fuller" is someone who cleans cloth, especially wool, and prepares it for weaving.
Fuller is an English occupational name denoting one who fulls wool or cloth.
The English surname Fuller is believed to have derived from the description of a worker (called a fuller)that washed yardage by scouring and thickening the cloth, readying it for pre-shrinking. This was accomplished by trampling and beating the raw cloth while it was soaking in water.I couldn't find anything about the name's Irishorigination.
The English surname Fuller is from the Latin fullo.Fuller is an occupational name for a dresser of cloth, from Old English fullere. The work of the fuller was to scour and thicken the raw cloth by beating and trampling it in water. This surname is found mostly in southeast England and East Anglia. In a few cases Fuller may be of German origin with the same form and meaning as the English name from Latin fullo.
St. James the Lesser
it is took from a fuller in the medieval times who scoured and thickened raw cloth and comes from America and France. the first know recording of someone with the last name of fuller lived in Yorkshire and came from France.
Fuller can have either one of two meanings in the context of medieval times:The sword's "fuller" purpose was to act as a flexible spine for the blade that reduced weight and gave the sword both strength and flexibility.Alternately a fuller (a person) worked with woolen cloth. The fuller first pounded the cloth with sticks or walked on it while wet to cleanse it and whiten the fibers. The walking on the cloth gave fullers their other name of "Walker" The job was not pleasant as the ammonia used in the process came from the urine in the fluid. Additional materials in the wash included Fullers earth (ammonium silicate). The fulling process also thickened the cloth by felting the fibers (tangling them up) and made the material somewhat waterproof. As an aside the foul smelling washing liquid was removed before the cloth was stretched and dried.
a poisonous spider often found in Hawaii a fuller of cloth it also means food in Australian
Use Fuller's Earth to absorb. Will require multiple treatments.
Fullers used a plant called Fuller's Teasel to raise the nap on woolen cloth. The natural prickly seed heads of Fuller's Teasel were ideal for teasing and raising the fibers of the woven wool, which helped to create a softer and more uniform surface on the fabric.
Fulling is a step in woollen cloth making which involves the cleansing of cloth (particularly wool) to eliminate oils, dirt, and other impurities, and making it thicker. A clay called 'fullers earth' was used to do this and the people that did it were called fullers.