List of synonyms from "enameling" to synonyms from "encephalitis"
Discover all the synonyms available for the terms enceinte, enbosom, enamor, enamored of and many more. Click on one of the words below and go directly to the synonyms associated with it.
Definition of the day : « enameling »
- As in painting : noun the act of applying paint
- As in plate : verb coat with metallic material
- As in varnish : verb add a layer to; embellish
- As in coat : verb cover with layer of material
- As in color : verb make pigmented; shade
- As in glaze : verb varnish, lacquer
- No amount of painting and enameling can restore its youthful bloom.
- Extract from : « Bizarre » by Lawton Mackall
- I went to one Mark Antonio, an incomparable artist in enameling.
- Extract from : « The Diary of John Evelyn (Vol 1 of 2) » by John Evelyn
- The worst annoyance must be the enameling of ice our winter woods sometimes get.
- Extract from : « Birds and Poets » by John Burroughs
- This method leaves the cover to be decorated in some other way, either by embossing or by enameling or by both.
- Extract from : « Copper Work » by Augustus F. Rose
- The edge of the tray or plate may be decorated either by piercing, embossing, etching, or enameling.
- Extract from : « Copper Work » by Augustus F. Rose
- The process of making an enameled letter has four stages—stamping, enameling, firing, and filing.
- Extract from : « Scientific American Supplement, No. 841, February 13, 1892 » by Various
- Guy smiled—he had never suspected that Wilfrid felt about the enameling as he himself did.
- Extract from : « In the Days of the Guild » by Louise Lamprey
- He was clever with a brush and soon acquired the knack of enameling and varnishing without leaving a sag or a brush mark.
- Extract from : « Plowing On Sunday » by Sterling North
- The process of making the Sèvres ware is not yet published in book form, especially the method of coloring and enameling.
- Extract from : « The Wit and Humor of America, Volume VI. (of X.) » by Various
- Enameling is a style of glaze mostly applied to a stronger, more opaque body, often not porcelain at all.
- Extract from : « Pottery and Porcelain, from early times down to the Philadelphia exhibition of 1876 » by Charles Wyllys Elliott
