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Look up: Reeding

  1. Reeding
    Cut or moulded relief ornamentation (also called ribbing when moulded) of a series of parallel convex reeds (as opposed to flutes, which are concave)
    Found on http://www.great-glass.co.uk/glass%20not

  2. reeding
    a series of convex mouldings
    Found on http://www.lancashirechurches.co.uk/glos

  3. reeding
    machine for drawing the warp yarns through the reed or comb Category: Various industries and crafts
    Found on http://www.mijnwoordenboek.nl/definition

  4. Reeding
    decoration consisting of series of convex mouldings - the opposite of fluting.
    Found on http://www.trp.dundee.ac.uk/research/glo

  5. Reeding
    An enrichment comprised of parallel convex mouldings (the opposite of fluting)
    Found on http://www.crsbi.ac.uk/crsbi/frglossary.

  6. reeding
    The converse of fluting - a relief decoration of parallel, convex ribs, or reeds. See decorative motifs.
    Found on http://www.antique-crafts.co.uk/glossary

  7. Reeding
    Reed"ing noun [ From 4th Reed .] 1. (Architecture) A small convex molding; a reed (see Illust. (i) of Molding ); one of several set close together to decorate a surface; also, decoration by means of reedings; -- the reverse of fluting . » Several reedings are often placed together, parallel to each other, either projecting from, or ins …
    Found on http://www.encyclo.co.uk/webster/R/33

  8. reeding
    1. A small convex molding; a reed; one of several set close together to decorate a surface; also, decoration by means of reedings; the reverse of fluting. ... Several reedings are often placed together, parallel to each other, either projecting from, or inserted into, the adjining surface. The decoration so produced is then called, in general, reedi …
    Found on http://cancerweb.ncl.ac.uk/cgi-bin/omd?r

  9. Reeding
    The notching or decoration of the coin edge. Reeding was introduced in the late seventeenth century, and was originally intended to prevent coins from being cut or clipped. The edges of the Maria Theresa Thaler, restruck in its original form by the Austrian Mint, is protected by raised lettering.
    Found on http://www.austrian-mint.com/5

  10. Reeding
    • (n.) A small convex molding; a reed (see Illust. (i) of Molding); one of several set close together to decorate a surface; also, decoration by means of reedings; -- the reverse of fluting. • (n.) The nurling on the edge of a coin; -- commonly called milling.
    Found on http://thinkexist.com/dictionary/meaning

  11. Reeding
    Decoration formed by a series of bead moldings set together in parallel lines.
    Found on http://www.artisansofthevalley.com/comm_

  12. Reeding
    A moulding consisting of two or more parallel half-flutes. Sometimes combined with a ribbon-like motif traversing the reeded bands to form borders such as reed-and-tie and reed-and-ribbon.
    Found on http://freespace.virgin.net/a.data/gloss

  13. reeding
    Security edging on coins, consisting of close vertical ridges. As a rule, this appears all round the edge, but some coins, for example New Zealand`s 50c (1967) and the Isle of Man`s £1 (1978), have segments of reeding alternating with a plain edge, to help blind and partially sighted persons to identify these coins.…
    Found on http://www.oenb.at/dictionary/termini.js

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10 January 2009

This day in history:
In 1863 the London Underground was first opened, using steam trains running over four miles (six km) of track between Paddington and Farringdon Street. Nowadays there are eleven lines covering 254 miles (408 Km), with 270 stations. It was Charles Pearson who first proposed the notion of ‘trains in drains’ in 1845, when the railway was a relatively new invention. He helped raise the finance from private investors and the City of London, and excavation began in 1860, with a shallow trench dug beneath Euston Road and then covered over. read more

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