Gore (fabrics)

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Four trapezoidal gores make a skirt Four-gored-skirt.png
Four trapezoidal gores make a skirt

In clothing and similar applications, a gore is a triangular or trapezoidal piece of a textile as might be used in shaping a garment to fit contours of the body.

The word is derived from Old English gār , meaning spear. In the course of time the word came to be used for a piece of cloth used in making clothes. [1] In dressmaking and hatmaking, it refers to triangular or rhomboid pieces of fabric which are combined to create a fuller three dimensional effect. In knitting gloves and mittens, a "thumb gore" is often incorporated from the wrist part way to the tip of the thumb to accommodate the gradually increasing width of the hand.

The part of a bra that links the two bra cups is called the "centre gore". [2]

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The Chinese Button Knot is worn throughout China on underwear and night clothes. Buttons of this sort are more comfortable to lie on and to rest against compared to common bone and composition buttons, and they cannot be broken even by the laundry.

A Chinese tailor ties the knot without guide, flat on his table. But one may be more quickly and easily tied in hand by a modification of the sailor’s method of tying his knife lanyard knot (#787). The two knots are tied alike, but they are worked differently.

References

  1. Skeat, Walter William (1901). A Concise Etymological Dictionary of the English Language. Oxford: Clarendon Press. p. 218.
  2. Kemp-Griffin, Kathryn (2017). Paris Undressed: The Secrets of French Lingerie. Atlantic Books. ISBN   9781952535901.