Question 1: Embroidery and Tapestry Weaving, by Grace Christie, 1912, from ________. | |||
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Question 2: Kilims and ________ are also types of tapestry work. | |||
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Question 3: In the 19th century, ________ resurrected the art of tapestry-making in the medieval style at Merton Abbey. | |||
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Question 4: Over time, the craft expanded to ________ and the Netherlands. | |||
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Question 5: The Bayeux Tapestry, which depicts the events surrounding the ________; note that this is not (strictly speaking) a tapestry, but is instead embroidery. | |||
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Question 6: The principles articulated by Chevreul also apply to contemporary television and computer displays, which use tiny dots of red, green and blue (________) to render color. | |||
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Question 7: Morris and Company made successful series of tapestries for home and ecclesiatical uses, with figures based on cartoons by ________. | |||
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Question 8: Tapestry is a form of textile art, woven on a vertical ________. | |||
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Question 9: The tapestries formerly belonged to the ________ and are now in the Victoria and Albert Museum. | |||
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Question 10: The six-part piece La Dame à la Licorne (The Lady and the Unicorn), stored in l'Hôtel de Cluny, ________. | |||
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