Oil cloth table cover : Twig placemats : Linen and chair cover rentals
Oil Cloth Table Cover
oil cloth
- A canvas coated with linseed or other oil and used to cover a table or floor
- Fabric treated on one side with oil to make it waterproof
- True oil cloth (impregnated with a form of linseed oil or equivalent) was used for the top decks on commercial vehicle bodies and a few closed-bodied cars prior to 1940. It was also used for rain-curtain material on early open-bodied buses.
- Cotton fabric that has been treated on one side with a drying oil to make it impervious to water.
- A plain-weave cotton fabric which is treated with a solution of linseed oil (an extract of the flax plant) and a coloring, and then glazed to ensure water-resistance. Oil cloth has been mostly replaced with plastic coated cloth, and was popular for tablecloths and rainwear.
table
- postpone: hold back to a later time; "let's postpone the exam"
- a piece of furniture having a smooth flat top that is usually supported by one or more vertical legs; "it was a sturdy table"
- Postpone consideration of
- Present formally for discussion or consideration at a meeting
- a set of data arranged in rows and columns; "see table 1"
cover
- blanket: bedding that keeps a person warm in bed; "he pulled the covers over his head and went to sleep"
- Scatter a layer of loose material over (a surface, esp. a floor), leaving it completely obscured
- provide with a covering or cause to be covered; "cover her face with a handkerchief"; "cover the child with a blanket"; "cover the grave with flowers"
- Put something such as a cloth or lid on top of or in front of (something) in order to protect or conceal it
- Envelop in a layer of something, esp. dirt
- screen: a covering that serves to conceal or shelter something; "a screen of trees afforded privacy"; "under cover of darkness"; "the brush provided a covert for game"; "the simplest concealment is to match perfectly the color of the background"
'Dame Mildred Porch and Miss Sarah Tin were in no way related to each other, but constant companionship and a similarity of interests had so characterized them that a stranger might easily have taken them as sisters as they stepped from the train on to the platform at Debra Dowa. Dame Mildred was rather stout and Miss Tin rather spare. Each wore a khaki sun-hat in an oil-cloth cover, each wore a serviceable washable frock, and thick shoes and stockings, each had smoked spectacles and a firm mouth. Each carried an attache-case containing her most inalienable possessions - washing things and writing things, disinfectant and insecticide, books, passport, letters of credit - and held firmly to her burden in defiance of an eager succession of porters who attempted in turn to wrest it from her.' Black Mischief (1932) Evelyn Waugh
Christopher Barson Interior Associates Project: Prominent DC Residence
Seasoned warmth and elegance is cheerfully enhanced by my bold use of color and texture in this small but beautifully appointed dining room in Forest Valley, Washington, DC. A heavily distressed 19th century table rests upon a Christopher Barson Exclusive painted oil-cloth floor cover. I chose a Pierre Frey fabric for my chair cushions. Each cushion required two yards of fabric, because we cut and applied only portions of the overall pattern to create the skirts and sashes. An 18th century plate warmer serves as a pedestal for a rare glass vase of sunflowers. The chairs are Crate and Barrel and the chandelier is Neirmann Weeks.
Related topics:
love moon anion sanitary napkinbeautiful napkin ringswedge placematsclear plastic tablecloth protectormens white linen suitshillhouse wheat bed linensbiodegradable napkins