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"studding" Definitions
  1. a number of studs, as in a wall or partition.
  2. timbers or manufactured objects for use as studs.

139 Sentences With "studding"

How to use studding in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "studding" and check conjugation/comparative form for "studding". Mastering all the usages of "studding" from sentence examples published by news publications.

The Air Harp is a finely carved wooden box with holes studding the lid.
In fact, there's a long history in cinema of studding movie titles with exclamation points.
Right now, seasonal flu vaccines target ice cream cone-shaped proteins studding the flu virus's coat.
This season that meant glen plaid, lingerie silks, punk studding, distressed denim and lacy doilies, remixed in a cleverly calibrated patchwork of multifunctional dressing.
Or I could have prepared it in a more French manner, studding it with garlic, rubbing it with rosemary and thyme and roasting it medium-rare.
He was led away from his wife and young son and sat down in front of a high-ranking Lebanese officer with decorations studding his shoulders.
Some stallions will breed with well over 100 mares a year, and their studding careers can last a decade or more; Galileo's, for example, has already lasted almost 20 years.
All that studding certainly makes for a sturdy bag you're not afraid to place on the ground during brunch, or wherever you're toting that Rockie to, of course, but it's damn heavy.
The primitive fish had gaping jaws lined with three rows of sharp, inch-long teeth, and as if that weren't enough, it had yet more teeth studding the center of its hungry mouth.
In the manner of a genial professor studding a seminar with lively demonstrations, he shows that he can manipulate our laughter as easily as Marcel manipulated the bowler hat earlier in the evening.
Jeffrey Gibson brings in a parallel history of marginalized people, acknowledging his Cherokee Indian background by delicately lining a punching bag with bright streamers whose beading and studding are inspired by Native American craft motifs.
My mum used to work with a lot of people doing homework—making stuff for the shop at home—and the bikers and the Hell's Angels used to do a lot of the studding and leather stuff.
With more than 20,000 pearls studding the gown and jacket, and especially when worn with a striking tiara (as she did for a state visit to Hong Kong in 1989), this dress is royally elegant, just like Diana herself.
This is also the second thing you'll encounter, because just inside the original entryway, Ferguson has exactly replicated it, including the large, colorful mural on the left-hand wall and the constellation of dirty tape marks studding the door.
" The styles included hand-painted floral-print gowns in whisper-thin lamé and silk, feather-trimmed halter-neck midi dresses, and velvet jumpsuits and blazers with embroidered silver studding inspired in part by reruns of the 1980s TV show "Dynasty.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads MONTSOREAU, France — Of the over 2000,26 châteaux studding France's Loire Valley, some are still in private hands, while others have been taken over by the local authorities and filled with interactive displays and period-costumed waxworks for the benefit of tourists in pursuit of some local history.
Upon entering the gallery space, visitors are greeted by three towering snowman-shaped figures, rendered by wrapping up long, narrow strips of orangey upholstery foam into giant yarn-ball forms, stacking them, and studding them with a decorative bedazzling of discarded battery canisters, Sprague Electric Company resistors and capacitors, and mango pits.
But this Berry Campbell show is a critical milestone because it spotlights the final climactic chapters of a career wherein the painter, who died in 2000, retooled the vocabulary of Color Field painting by studding the canvas with relief effects, which he coordinates with an iridescent palette and apparently endless variations on impasto.
After consulting a map, I narrowed down a circuit encompassing the mighty Sossusvlei dunes, the quaint beach town of Swakopmund, and the notorious Skeleton Coast — it is said it is so named because it's where ships and whales come to die, studding the shore with their sun-bleached remains — before veering inland, through the phantasmagoric mountainscape of Damaraland, back to Windhoek.
Anyway: If you ever fancy mulled wine—very, very, very bad mulled wine—without the sheer rigmarole of studding an orange with cloves and warming it slowly in a deep pan while children sing carols around you, then I can sort of recommend that you add a dab of PSL syrup to some Merlot before chugging the whole thing down.
Assembling in the lee of Scotland's 62% vote against leaving the EU (outweighed by England's 53% vote in favour), her members in Glasgow knew the score, studding themselves with stickers and badges reading "Yes2" (nationalist-speak for a new plebiscite), cheering a French delegate who praised the party's Europeanism and experiencing paroxysms of delight when Ms Sturgeon announced that she would consult on a new referendum bill.
There was also a series of beautiful necklaces, like the Passionate — in the palette of the African savanna — with a lion in 18-karat gold running atop a detachable, giant 30-carat orange topaz with a waterfall of 82 pink sapphires; or the Legendary, with 1,200 diamonds, including a 30-carat yellow one, studding a lion's head and mane; plus numerous dazzling cuffs, rings and chokers.
Ermonela Jaho recalls with affectionate amusement the paranoid, isolationist atmosphere in which she grew up: with one television channel and one state-approved comedian (Norman Wisdom, a Londoner); with baby boys being named Adriatik after the sea they had to cross to make their fortune; with hundreds of thousands of pill-box bomb-shelters studding the landscape; but also with a heady form of polyphony which has been sung at village weddings since antiquity.
Crown Hotel, Nantwich, an example of late 16th century close studding Close studding is a form of timber work used in timber-framed buildings in which vertical timbers (studs) are set close together, dividing the wall into narrow panels. Rather than being a structural feature, the primary aim of close studding is to produce an impressive front.Looking at Buildings (Pevsner Architectural Guides): Close Studding (accessed 20 October 2017) Close studding first appeared in England in the 13th century and was commonly used there from the mid-15th century until the end of the 17th century. It was also common in France from the 15th century.
61 The main-mast and fore-mast both carried courses, topsails, topgallant sails, staysails, and studding sails. The vessel also carried spanker, jib, and flying jib sails. Mexicana was similarly rigged, but did not carry topgallants or studding sails.
Above the window is a carved tie-beam, and a gable containing herringbone studding. The bargeboards are moulded with a drop finial.
'The age of carpentry: the new art and society in Plantagenet England' (2001) (accessed 10 October 2007) Close studding is very common in the Normandy region of France. St Michael's Church, Baddiley, one of the oldest surviving close-studded buildings Compared with square framing, close studding uses a lot of timber and is time consuming to construct; it was therefore particularly employed for buildings of relatively high status. Public buildings such as guildhalls, market halls, churches and inns often employed close studding. It was also used for private houses of the wealthy, particularly townhouses but also the more prosperous farmhouses.
He is married to Amat Uz Zahra Begum, daughter of Salar Jung I, with whom he fell in love while studding at the age of 18.
Close studding with (right) and without (left) middle rail. Braces are not shown Although close studding is defined by the distance between the vertical timbers, the spacing used is variable, up to a maximum of around 2 feet (600 mm). Studs can either span the full height of the storey or be divided by a middle (or intermediate) rail. To give the frame stability, some form of diagonal bracing is required.
Close studding was not usually employed in outbuildings, although occasional examples exist, such as the Gunthwaite Hall barn in Barnsley.Images of England: Gunthwaite Hall barn (accessed 10 October 2007) Although most examples occur in entirely timber-framed buildings, close studding was also used on the upper storeys of houses with a stone or brick ground storey; examples include the Dragon Hall in Norwich and the Café 'Cave St-Vincent' in Compiègne, France. With its lavish use of timber, close studding was extravagant and was seen as a status symbol.Russell P. 'Timber framed buildings and roofs' The Building Conservation Directory, 1993 (accessed 11 October 2007) This led to it being faked with paint or even cosmetic planking.
The Pemberton Icefield or Pemberton Icecap, is the southernmost of the series of very large icefields studding the Pacific Ranges of the southern Coast Mountains in British Columbia, Canada.
It consists of a hall with a cross-wing. The hall dates probably from the 17th century, and the cross-wing probably from the previous century. Both parts contain close studding.
Tehran, Iran. Persian language and literature. 1989 B.A. Teacher Training University. Tehran, Iran. Persian language and literature. Fotoohi lives in Mashhad, Iran and has a daughter, studding at York university in Toronto.
Archibald (1971), p. 49 (drawing). Canada flew a barque or ship rig of sail on three masts, including studding sails on fore and mainmasts.Harland, John H. (1985), Seamanship in the Age of Sail, p. 172.
Archibald (1971), p. 49 (drawing). Cordelia flew a barque or ship rig of sail on three masts, including studding sails on fore and mainmasts.Harland, John H. (1985), Seamanship in the Age of Sail, p. 172.
Archibald (1971), p. 49 (drawing). Cleopatra flew a barque or ship rig of sail on three masts, including studding sails on fore and mainmasts.Harland, John H. (1985), Seamanship in the Age of Sail, p. 172.
Archibald (1971), p. 49 (drawing). The ships flew a barque or ship rig of sail on three masts, including studding sails on fore and mainmasts.Harland, John H. (1985), Seamanship in the Age of Sail, p. 172.
The trams were connected with Albert couplers.Andersen & Kjenstad: 135 The cars were built with welded, closed studding filled with wood. The roof had thick steel plates which were welded to the roof arches. The roof and studdings were all part of the carcass.
Greyfriars is a two storey timber frame building with close studding and jettied upperfloor. It is 69 feet long and has a curved facade that follows the line of the street. It has been subject to numerous extensions and alterations throughout its life.
The river was named after the boom of the stuns'l, sailors slang for studding sail located on the outside of the square rigging of a sailing ship, after Robert Fisher and others found a stun'sail boom at its mouth on 7 November 1836.
Black boring worms grow to up to 1 cm in total length. They are small black worms which infest encrusting algae and have protruding gills and palps. They look like black stars studding the algae.Branch, G.M., Branch, M.L, Griffiths, C.L. and Beckley, L.E. 2010.
The use of close studding possibly originated in East Anglia, where the technique was employed in the earliest surviving timber walls thought to date from the early 13th century. Among the earliest examples outside East Anglia are St Michael's Church, Baddiley in Cheshire (1308)Images of England: Church of St. Michael (accessed 9 October 2007) and Mancetter Manor in Warwickshire (c. 1330). It became fashionable in England around 1400, and by the middle of the 15th century close studding was widely used across that country.Harris, 2003, pp. 22–25 Its popularity coincided with the dominance of the Perpendicular style of architecture, with its emphasis on verticals.
Attached to the house by a covered way is a separate timber building, also with exterior studding. The building is raised on concrete stumps and has a gabled roof clad in corrugated iron. A modern concrete garage has been constructed to the rear of the house.
24Harris, p. 70McKenna, p. 35 The ornamental panelling is not carried to the rear of the west face, presumably for cost reasons. Close studding with a middle rail is used on the back half of the west face, as well as parts of the Hospital Street façade.
Other drawings and photographs show a ship rig, with yards and square sails on the mizzenmast. Archibald (1970), p. 49; J.S. Virtue & Co., lithograph of HMS "Calliope", 3rd Class Cruiser See Commons images and photographs linked below. including a full set of studding sails on fore and mainmast.
8 and the Chantry House in Bunbury.McKenna, 1994, pp. 6–7 In later use, however, braces were usually constructed on the interior and concealed by plaster panelling. Close studding was sometimes used in association with decorative panel work or close panelling, particularly from the end of the 16th century.
These lardons are to be cut in strips about 3 mm thick and 3 mm wide, and it is essential that the fat be chilled before cutting and threading. The technique is explained at length in the classic book of French cuisine La bonne cuisine de Madame E. Saint-Ange, which details two techniques: surface larding, or "studding", in which the lardons are threaded onto the surface, and interior larding, in which the lardons are left in a channel (made with a larger-sized needle than is used for studding) inside the meat. Madame St. Ange recommends larding for braised calf's sweetbreadsÉbrard 303. (as does the French Laundry cookbook) and for a specific style of cooking hare.
Beatriz Gonçalves Monteiro (born February 23, 1999) is a Portuguese actress. She gained prominence when interpreting Lua and Vitória in the series Chiquititas and Floribella. Among several projects, she rose to national fame by participating in Pai à Força for almost 4 years. She is currently studding Theatre Arts in London.
The building is two storied with an attic and slate roof. Plain stone chimney of untypical form. The timber framed construction has close studding to the ground floor, and square timber-framing. The upper storey of the porch has bold diamond framing which is similar to Glas Hirfryn and Rhydycarw in Trefeglwys.
This mix of decorative framing with close studding is unusual in Nantwich; other examples are Churche's Mansion and two houses built after the fire, 46 High Street and 3 Church Lane.Lake (1983), pp. 106–11 The rear of the building has small framing. Numbers 67–71, showing the 18th- century doorcase in no.
In sailing, an extra is a sail that is not part of the working sail plan. The most common extra is the spinnaker. Other extras include studding sails, the modern spanker (or tallboy), and some staysails and topsails. In yacht racing, there are often separate divisions depending on whether extras are permitted.
A characteristic of the eastern school is close studding which is a half- timbering style of many studs spaced about the width of the studs apart (for example six-inch studs spaced six inches apart) until the middle of the 16th century and sometimes wider spacing after that time. Close studding was an elite style found mostly on expensive buildings. A principal style of the western school is the use of square panels of roughly equal size and decorative framing utilizing many shapes such as lozenges, stars, crosses, quatrefoils, cusps, and many other shapes. The northern school sometimes used posts which landed on the foundation rather than on a sill beam, the sill joining to the sides of the posts and called an interrupted sill.
Reproduction tapestries are hung on the walls. In the 19th century, this room was transformed with the addition of the stairs and passage. The original timber studding can be seen on two walls, showing the lath and plaster structure. The layout of the New Parlour shows typical features of a modest 17th-century dining room.
The timber framework, when exposed will be visible as squares or rectangles panels. and the houses will also show signs of bracing, particularly at the corners. Many of the Welsh houses have decorative features in the panels, such as quatrefoils and lozenge or herringbone deceptive woodwork. The panels may also be filled by Close studding.
The whole of the building was roofed with corrugated iron. Drawings show that the second classroom was of single-skin construction with studding exposed externally on the verandahs and internally on the new gable end. Walls were high. There was a high level vent in the gable and the ceiling was raked with a vent.
An immediate comparison to ‘’The Lack’’ is Glas Hirfryn in Llansilin on the Denbighshire/Montgomeryshire border. This has identical patterned herringbone timbers on the upper storey and similar close studding to the ground floor. It is similarly jettied with decorative brackets supporting the bressumer. Glas Hirfryn has been dated by dendrochronology to 1559 or shortly afterwards.
The architectural historian Nikolaus Pevsner comments that the black-and-white decoration of this bay is "very rich". It consists of studding in the ground floor, lozenges and shaped balusters in the upper floor, and lozenges and serpentine struts in the gable. In the adjacent bay is a wooden doorcase with a triangular pediment. All the windows are casements.
While the system was generally confined to the larger gauges (O gauge and above) the Märklin company has for many years used a version of the system (known as the Märklin system) for their HO gauge range. Peco Products make studding for their 00/H0 track range. Part nos SL-17 for track and SL-18 for turnouts.
The exterior is decorated with close studding and chevrons. The porch dates from the 19th century, and is also timber-framed. On the left side of the wing is a projecting canted bay containing sash windows. To the right of the wing is a later addition consisting of a three-storey bay surmounted by a spire.
At the top of the tower is a double-pitched roof with a lead spire. The south front of the church is clad with close studding, and it contains four-light windows with perpendicular-style tracery. The vestry has a half-hipped roof and a six-light casement window. In the chancel is an east window.
He immigrated to Israel in 1971 from Georgia with his parents Anna and Ruben, a religious Zionist family. After rapid absorption, he continuous studding in religious school of Torah in Petah Tikva. He was elected as the Student Council chairman. After graduating from the high school he served in the air forces, as part of the reserve and was named an honorary soldier.
The lower storey has close timber studding and an eleven-light leaded window. Above this is a row of twelve quatrefoil panels which slope slightly outwards over which is a continuous 34-light leaded window. The two gables are carried on brackets which curve outwards, and have herringbone struts, moulded bargeboards and shaped finials. The north face give the appearance of two buildings.
The former school teacher's residence is situated east of the office and west of the garage. It is a small timber-framed building set on concrete flooring. It has a hipped bungalow roofline clad in corrugated galvanised iron. The core of the cottage is single skin with exposed studding lined with vertical jointed tongue and groove boarding, the ceiling dropped with battens.
It contains a mixture of 12- and 16-pane sash windows, and two Venetian windows. On the courtyard side is a two-storey timber-framed porch bearing a long inscription dated 1581. The east wing is timber-framed, with close studding, on a rubble stone plinth. It contains mullioned and transomed windows, a small oriel window, and 12- and 16-pane sash windows.
The plan of the church is simple consisting of a three-bay nave and a narrower lower chancel with a vestry to its north. In the west wall is an inset porch. The timber framing of the chancel is now infilled with brick which has replaced the original wattle and daub. Its north and south walls feature close studding with no middle rail.
Second storey, showing continuous windows and overhang The Crown Hotel is a black-and-white, timber-framed and plaster three-storey building with a tiled roof. The street-facing front, described by Nikolaus Pevsner as "impressive", is flat and features close studding with a middle rail. Unlike many buildings of a similar date in the town, it lacks ornamental panelling.McKenna, p.
Close studding remained in common use in England until the end of the 17th century. Close-studded buildings dating from the 15th and 16th centuries are also seen in France,Hartills Art 2004: Section Two – Medieval (accessed 10 October 2007)Hartills Art 2004: Section Three – Renaissance Architecture (accessed 10 October 2007) and some experts believe the technique might have originated there.Currie CRJ.
An orange studded with cloves. One modern style of pomander is made by studding an orange or other fruit with whole dried cloves and letting it cure dry, after which it may last many, many years. This modern pomander serves the functions of perfuming and freshening the air and also of keeping drawers of clothing and linens fresh, pleasant- smelling, and moth-free.
The adult plants are killed by wildfires, but the seeds can survive such an event. The flowers are pollinated by birds. The fruits are numerous, studding the base of the dried, old flower head, which itself remains attached to the plant after senescence. The seeds are retained in the fruits for a few years, until they are eventually dispersed by the wind.
Jerrett took over the shingle and lumber mill business, producing shingles, laths, lobster cases, matched lumber, and clapboard. In 1895, it was reported that Jerrett's Mill was also producing spruce joisting and studding. From 1894-1899 (at least), Jerrett also operated another shingle mill in Shoal Bay, Trinity Bay. In the early 1900s, as the Horwoods moved their operations, at least two other mills opened.
This allows the horse to be ridden safely on slippery surfaces. This must be done with a hoof boot with a sufficiently thick and inflexible sole to avoid bruising of the hoof sole. Boots with soles that are too flexible are unsuitable for studding. A horse with hoof boots on its front hooves The other major use of horse boots is for veterinary medicine.
A hall was founded at Lower Hardwick in the Tudor period with bays, studding, and diagonal cross-bracing. A new wing was added on the north-western side in the Jacobean era. Gabled windows are distinguished by the lozenges with elaborate carved mouldings on diagonal wooden dragon-beams in the roof with supporting columns. There was a hop farm at Wicton with three large square kilns.
Richard George Suter was born in London and migrated in 1853. By 1865, Suter was working with Backhouse whilst establishing his own practice. After Backhouse left Queensland in 1868, Suter was offered independent commissions from the Queensland Board of Education. Suter was to develop the use of exposed external studding on timber buildings which was particularly popular in school building constrained by cost and availability of materials.
They typically carried extra sails, such as skysails and moonrakers on the masts, and studding sails on booms extending out from the hull or yards,Villiers (1962), frontispiece and p.220 which required extra sailors to handle them.Villiers (1962), p. 216, 220 In high winds where other ships would shorten sail, clippers drove on, heeling so much that their lee rails were in the water.
Price S, Molyneux N. 'The domestic timber-framed tradition', p. 38, in Brooks & Pevsner, 2007 In such buildings, the lower storey would usually employ close studding, while the upper storeys would have small square panels with or without ornamentation. Examples include the White Lion in Congleton and Moat Farm in Longdon. An ornamental effect was also sometimes obtained with herringbone or chevron bracing between the uprights.
Wall construction consists of outside studding with timber cross bracing and single skin linings of timber boards. The boards in exterior walls are laid horizontally. They are profiled as chamferboards on the outside and as beaded boards on the internal face. Newer sections of the house are clad and lined with cement sheeting, except for the southern wall of the house which is clad with timber chamferboards.
The exterior is modestly detailed, with bracing, studding and nogging over tongue-and-groove boarding, paired shaped eaves brackets under the main roof, and timber doors and double hung sash windows. The verandah has square timber posts with a braced balustrade. The Landsborough Street elevation has central timber stairs with a timber pediment above the landing. The Little Brown Street elevation has timber stairs, new doors, and a partially enclosed verandah.
Although a relatively plain building it achieves some prominence through its size compared to its neighbours and the effect of the deep, scalloped valance below the first floor veranda balustrade. The hotel is of timber frame construction with exposed studding and horizontal chamferboard walls with internal beading. These materials have been overlaid or replaced in several areas. There is a substantial, rendered masonry (probably concrete block) extension to the south wing.
A T-plan house of high status, tree-ring dated to between 1545 and 1566.Tree ring dating undertaken on behalf of the Royal Commission, Historic Monuments Wales Medieval hall. The studding to the whole – infilled with oak panels – is largely hidden by render, the fenestration all later. On the north side – the original front – the massive wall-plate is supported by brackets springing from pilasters carved on the studs.
Regent and Warwick House is a timber-framed, black-and-white building, constructed around the corner of the street. It has three storeys, each of which have jetties, under a tiled roof. The exterior has close studding on the first and second storeys. There is a middle rail on the first storey and two horizontal timbers on the second storey, which was substantially altered in the 18th century.
There are two public houses, The Crown on Henley Street (the Crown Public House supports all sports clubs which in return provide an important additional revenue stream.) and the Red Lion on Station Road, ¼ mile west of the church. It may be one of the oldest buildings in the village, it has some closeset studding of the 16th century and a wide fireplace with a moulded lintel. The roof is tiled.
This design formed the basis of school planning for the next 50 years. The early Suter timber schools were low-set, gabled structures, rectangular in plan with a porch and no verandahs, and utilised external studding to the walls. After 1873 Suter introduced an "improved plan" adding front and rear verandahs to provide hat rooms and additional play and classroom space. The minimum size of a school was accommodating 48 pupils.
The dogs are German Shepherds with "reverse mask" markings. After purchasing London, Eisenmann began to breed his own dogs, mostly studding out his males, even though he owned some females that he bred to as well. He bred particularly for the reverse mask, that is commonly seen on all of his dogs, and is unpopular with breeders of the German Shepherd dog as it is not in the breed standard.
In particular, studding sails or topping sails could be easily added for light airs or high speeds. Square rigs have twice the sail area per mast height compared to triangular sails, and when tuned, more exactly approximate a multiple airfoil, and therefore apply larger forces to the hull. Windage (drag) is more than triangular rigs, which have smaller tip vortices. Therefore, historic ships could not point as far upwind as high-performance sloops.
Some timber framing survives around these extensions, including part of one gable, small framing to a projecting wing with a diagonal brace, and close studding with a middle rail on the first floor between the two wings. The interior has oak panelling in places, some of which has a linenfold design, as well as exposed beams to the ceiling, which are ovolo moulded. There is an inglenook fireplace. The oak staircase has large ball finials.
The church at this time was of single skin timber construction with exposed bracing and studding on the exterior and a timber shingle roof. All the principal interior fittings were also designed by Stanley and made of cedar. F.D.G Stanley has been described as "the best known of all Queensland's early architect's because of the quality, diversity and extent of his work". He designed ten churches for the Anglican Church, five of which survive.
Suter also undertook a considerable amount of work for the Queensland Board of Education. Like his churches, Suter's early schools used timber with outside studding as a construction technique, an ingenious modification of traditional half-timbered construction developed and popularised by Suter in Queensland. He designed relatively few houses, but residences such as East Talgai (1868) and Jimbour (1873-4) homesteads are some of the most substantial and distinguished ever erected in Queensland.
Guildhall, Lavenham, an example of close studding of the East Anglia school Regional variation occurred across England in the use of the middle rail, which was common in the midlands but rare in the east and south east.Harris, 2003, pp. 60–63 Variation in bracing is also seen. Some close-studded buildings, mainly dated before the mid-16th century, have arch or tension bracing to the exterior; examples include the Guildhall in LavenhamMcKenna, 1994, p.
Boston: Focal, 2002. Print. 73-77. Also important are the construction details of the framing with steel studs, wider stud spacing, double studding, insulation, and other details reducing sound transmission. Sound transmission class (STC) ratings can be increased from 33 for an ordinary stud-wall to as high as 59 with double drywall on both sides of a wood stud wall with resilient channels on one side and fiberglass batt insulation between the studs.
In the tropics, where most of the time the wind is lighter, a folkboat is often under-powered with the standard rig. Some owners choose to rerig for a larger jib. A tropical conversion favored by several cruisers is to add a short removable ("studding") bowsprit and light removable top-stay. This lets a folkboat fly a very light full genoa jib (a drifter) outboard of the cut of its standard jib.
Papa Clem finished fourth in the May 2, 2009 Kentucky Derby, the first leg of the U.S. Triple Crown series. At age 4, after dropping six races in a row, Papa Clem battled for, and won, the 2010 San Fernando Stakes. Papa Clem was retired to stud in 2010 and currently stands at Legacy Ranch in Clements, California for $6,500. In 2017, Papa Clem was bought by Turkish breeder Resat Akkan and brought to Turkey where he continues studding.
On a square- rigged mast, the sails had names which indicated their vertical position on the mast. The lowest square sail was the course, the next sail up the mast was called the topsail, the next the topgallant sail. Many vessels shipped a fourth sail called the royal, above the other three, some even more on trades with light winds. Sometimes a vessel might put out studding sails which would be fixed outboard of these sails along the yards.
At the rear, what may be an early detached kitchen now forms part of the house. On the western side of the building towards the rear a section of verandah has been removed, exposing a portion of wall with exterior studding. A verandah side awning cuts across a window at this point, evidence of the series of adjustments made to the house to accommodate changing use. On the eastern side there is a deck with an awning over.
The side facing Lower Bridge Street contains three casement windows, and that facing Shipgate Street has two similar windows and a doorway. The upper storey is timber-framed, with close studding. On the side facing Lower Bridge Street are two five-light mullioned windows, above which are two blank gables; that facing Shipgate Street has two two-light mullioned windows, above which are two gables, each containing a four-light mullioned window. The rear of the building is clad in brick.
Suter was a private architect commissioned from 1865 by the Board of General Education to design school buildings. After 1868, Suter was responsible for most of the Board's buildings until 1875. As an architect in the early years of the colony, Suter was prolific despite only practicing for approximately 10 years in Queensland and had a strong influence on the establishment of Queensland architecture, being credited with introducing "outside studding" construction technique to the state. Suter's Brisbane school buildings were of brick construction.
The external appearance is early Elizabethan, with both ornamental panelling and close studding. It was recorded in 1577, and is known to have survived the fire of 1583, which destroyed the adjacent building. It has been substantially altered from its original form, in particular with the addition of a pentagonal bay in the late 16th or early 17th centuries. The timber frame was covered with render in the 18th century, and by the mid-20th century the hall had become very dilapidated.
The original house dates from the late 16th or early 17th century and features close studding; it has a projecting wing with a jettied gable. The former service wing dates in part from the late 17th or early 18th century, and has some small framing.Images of England: Nos.1–4 Black and White Cottages (accessed 19 May 2010) Finally, a two-storey outhouse on Wirswall Road adjacent to The Swan dates from the 17th century, and features small framing with brick infill.
Close-studding panels create a much more narrow space between the timbers: anywhere from 7 to 16 inches (18 to 40 cm). For this style of panel, weaving is too difficult, so the wattles run horizontally and are known as ledgers. The ledgers are sprung into each upright timber (stud) through a system of augered holes on one side and short chiseled grooves along the other. The holes (along with holes of square paneling) are drilled at a slight angle towards the outer face of each stud.
Remnants of the timber frame to the front face survive around the entrance porch. Close studding remains on the north-east face of the right- hand wing on the first floor adjacent to the chimney, with a middle rail and a higher cross rail. The first-floor window on this side dates in part from the 16th or early 17th century; it has four wooden mullions and a transom. The house was extended at the rear in the 19th and 20th centuries, in two separate wings.
The young Kizito refused to quit his studies and in return was forced by his father to leave his home. The next few months Kizito lived as a street child, knocking on random doors and offering to work in return for food and shelter. Eventually he was picked by a local man and allowed to reside with him. The next couple of years Kizito spent studding in the morning and working in several coffee plantations at the afternoon in order to pay for his tuition and keep.
Another northern style was to use close studding but in a herring-bone or chevron pattern. Roof structure of the Barley Barn, Cressing Temple, EssexAs houses were modified to cope with changing demands there sometimes were a combination of styles within a single timber frame construction.Vince, J.; The Timbered House; Sorbus, 1994; The major types of historic framing in England are 'cruck frame', box frame, and aisled construction. From the box frame, more complex framed buildings such as the Wealden House and Jettied house developed.
At 15:30, Canonnière and Tremendous began exchanging fire from their chase guns. After a 7-hour chase, Tremendous had closed in enough to make the battle inevitable, and Canonnière turned hard to starboard and opened fire, Tremendous responding in kind. However, Canonnière had the initiative and had prepared her rigging before the manoeuver, while Tremendous had had to imitate the frigate in haste and was still sailing full sail, including her studding sails. This induced a pronounced listing on Tremendous, hindering the efficiency of her artillery.
Neptune formed part of the weather column in the Battle of Trafalgar on 21 October, and was the third ship from the lead, situated between her sister HMS Temeraire, and the 74-gun . Fremantle had been promised a position second to Nelson aboard , and by 10 o'clock was sailing fast enough to threaten to overtake her. Fremantle hoped to pass her, and lead the line into battle, but Nelson ordered Neptune, take in your studding-sails and drop astern. I shall break the line myself.
The Cholmondeley Arms public house, a converted schoolhouse on the A49 at , is included in the Good Pubs Guide.The Good Pub Guide: Cholmondeley Arms, Bickley Moss (accessed 15 August 2007) The Cholmondeley Castle Farm Shop, in the Castle Farm House at , sells produce from the Cholmondeley Estate and incorporates a post office. The grade-II- listed Field's Farmhouse () dates originally from 1648 and was restored in 1903. A three-bay farmhouse with timber framing and brick infilling, it features jetties and close studding with a middle rail.
The church is half- timbered on a brick plinth with a red tile roof. The framing is mostly close studding with a middle rail. It has been suggested that timber framing was used, not only for aesthetic reasons, but also because the foundations on underlying peat were not sufficiently stable for a stone building. The plan of the church consists of a five-bay nave, a bell turret on the west gable end, a south porch, a narrow north aisle, a two-bay chancel at a lower level, a north organ chamber, and a vestry.
Most buildings were framed with the posts landing on a heavy timber sill, the sills (rarely) laid on the ground, supported by stones or, late in the 19th century, concrete. The structural carpentry of the walls are of several types and are discussed in detail below. French settlers called placing studs or posts on a sill spaced slightly apart poteaux-sur-sol which is similar to the English close studding. These are examples of half timbering where the framing is infilled with another material such as a mud mixture, stones, or bricks.
The ovary is 4.2 mm long and covered in long, reddish-brown hairs. The style is slender, 21.2mm long, strongly curved to sickle-shaped, becoming subulate upwards, and arising from a keeled, widened and bulbously thickened base. The stigma is 3.2mm long, subulate, with an obtuse end, and obscurely bent at the junction where it joins the style. The seeds are stored in the many woody fruit studding the dried, old, fire- resistant inflorescence, and after these capsules eventually open after wildfires a few years later, are dispersed by means of the wind.
The house faces St Margaret's Church and is oriented north–south on West Street, on which it is the only building to "[make] a major effect". There are projecting wings to the west and east, of which the latter has a brick entrance porch with an ogee-headed hood mould above an arch. This may have been moved here from an older building. The building is largely late-16th-century and is of timber frame construction filled with plasterwork, and with some brickwork and studding to the ground floor.
During this time, Cerberus also chased the privateer Buonaparte but failed to capture the French ship after Cerberuss studding sails and top gallant mast were carried away. Buonaparte was armed with 32 guns and had a crew of 250 men. Apparently, in order to escape Cerberus, Buonaparte threw many of her guns and stores overboard, necessitating her return to Bordeaux. On 11 January 1798 Captain Drew, his nephew Lieutenant James Drew, Captain John Pulling and some ten men in Cerberuss pinnace drowned in a boat accident in Plymouth.
Autumn is scenic as the gambel oaks studding the hillsides change color, and spring brings a tide of violas and other flowers, particularly bulbs, from traditional daffodils to native sego lilies. Unlike other communities in the valley and further west on I-70, Glenwood does not primarily serve as a bedroom community. Due to severe geographic constraints, if further population growth is to be accommodated, it must come primarily from multifamily infill development. Bloomberg Business named Glenwood Springs the 7th wealthiest small town in America in 2015, due principally to the influence of Aspen.
The Victoria Park Hotel was a two-storey timber structure situated at the corner of Boundary Street and Sixth Avenue, South Townsville and has major elevations to both streets and a corner entrance. The hotel was approximately L-shaped in plan with the roof, core structure and awnings truncated at the corner facing the intersection. The roof was hipped and clad in corrugated iron. The hotel had exposed exterior studding and was shaded at the street elevations by a balcony on the upper storey and a wider awning that spanned the pavement at street level.
Thinking the vessel chasing him was a superior 55-gun warship, he sought to avoid conflict, and continued to sail with the wind rather than head north as he had originally intended. In an effort to increase her speed, the French frigate's crew put out studding sails to catch more wind. The behavior of Pitot's frigate signaled to Truxton that she was really a French warship, so he ordered Constellation cleared for action and gave chase. By 08:00 he struck the British colors and raised the American flag.
In the upper storey of each bay is a five-light window, in the lower storey of the left bay is a four-light window and in the lower storey of the right bay is a six-light window. All these windows are stone and are mullioned and transomed. In the middle bay is an arched doorway. The timberwork in each gable is different; in the left bay it is heavy with close studding and a middle rail, in the middle bay the timberwork is light, and in the right bay it is herringbone.
Further advances in liposome research have been able to allow liposomes to avoid detection by the body's immune system, specifically, the cells of reticuloendothelial system (RES). These liposomes are known as "stealth liposomes". They were first proposed by G. Cevc and G. Blume and, independently and soon thereafter, the groups of L. Huang and V. Torchilin and are constructed with PEG (Polyethylene Glycol) studding the outside of the membrane. The PEG coating, which is inert in the body, allows for longer circulatory life for the drug delivery mechanism.
The studding is exposed on the verandahs of both sections and with the stud layout and cross-bracing typically associated with Suter designs on the north-western part. The 1871 room is wide with exposed Queen post trusses and a diagonal boarded ceiling and horizontal beaded boards on the walls. The windows are narrow horizontal pivot windows placed with two low (although sill heights are high) and one high on the gable walls. The windows in the verandah walls are casements with fanlights over and lower sills and are possibly a modification.
The London firm of Morris Singer & Co Ltd cast central sculpture and bronze panels over the doors but the flame surrounding the sculpture and the bronze grilles on the lower windows were made in Australia by Castle Bros, while Kell & Rigby themselves produced the bronze nails studding the doors. Homebush Ceiling Works made the ceilings and supplied the 120,000 stars for the dome, the latter being gilded by A. Zimmerman. Kellor and Yates completed the plasterwork. The Electrical and General Installation Co was responsible for the electrical installation and Nielsen and Moller made the light fixtures.
The interior layout of the ground floor of the Royal Oak The ground floor pair of bars (one either side of the door) have been knocked through into the extensions to the rear to create an open-plan layout for the bar, which is a common feature of pubs. The ground floor also has a function room and kitchen. Studding at the back of the bar may be the original rear wall. Some of the principal timbers survive, such as some original chamfered beams that are visible except in the northern room, however most of the joinery has been replaced over the years.
During his absence, Liverpool unexpectedly succumbed to part-time Worcester City in the third round of the FA Cup. Liddell had played in 40 consecutive cup fixtures, but his involvement in the 2–1 defeat had been limited to the studding of his colleagues' boots. Having missed the 1959–60 season opener in August, Liddell replaced Bimpson for the match against Bristol City and scored a brace in a 4–2 win. He had numerous chances to complete a hat-trick, including two disallowed goals and a penalty taken by Jimmy Melia which the crowd had urged Liddell to take.
The pumps were manned, but could not keep up with the ingress of water, and by midnight there was of water in the hold. At dawn on 25 December, an attempt was made to fother the hull by lowering an oakum-packed studding sail over the side to cover the gash in the hull and slow the flooding. This was temporarily successful and by 11 o'clock the pumps had been able to reduce the water to a level of . The respite was short-lived, when the sail split under the pressure of the water and the water level began to rise again.
Weatherboarding was used to re- face the north front. The house is a "House with an Open Hall" and consists of two bays and is in contracted form, incorporating a single bayed hall at one end with an overshot cross-passage and a standard servants area at the other. It shows a good example of close-studding, which was decorative framing used on the street-facing side of the building while the less decorative large panel framing was used on rear elevations. It was introduced into this part of Sussex from 1430 and became common from 1450.
Satellite image of the Monarch Icefield Near Princess Mountain on the Monarch Icefield The Monarch Icefield is the northernmost of a series of large continental icecaps studding the heights of the Pacific Ranges of the Coast Mountains in southern British Columbia. Located southeast of the town of Bella Coola and west of the headwaters of the Atnarko River, a tributary of the Bella Coola River, it lies to the north of the Ha-Iltzuk Icefield, which is the largest icefield of the group and home to the Silverthrone volcano. The Monarch Icefield is very remote and is rarely visited by mountaineering parties.
There was two feet of water in the hold and more was rushing in, while the sea was rising and a gale had sprung up. The pumps were manned, but could not keep up with the influx of water, and by midnight there was 6 feet of water in the hold. At dawn on Christmas Day, an attempt was made to fother the hull, which involved lowering an oakum-packed studding sail over the side to cover the gash in the hull and slow the flooding. This was temporarily successful and by 11 o'clock the pumps had been able to reduce the water to a level of 19 inches.
The French frigate's stern-chasers continued to inflict damage on Unicorns rigging, at one point snatching away the main topsail and it was only when night fell, and the wind with it, that Williams was able to gain on the French ship through the use of studding sails. At 22:30, following a chase of northwards into St George's Channel, Unicorn was finally able to pull alongside Tribune. For 35 minutes the frigates battered at one another from close range. Under cover of smoke, Moulston then attempted to escape by pulling Tribune back and turning across Unicorns stern, seeking to rake the British frigate and move to windward.
As at 4 March 1999, Sugarloaf Farm is a largely intact farm complex dating from the 1840s through to the 1940s and demonstrating a range of uses throughout its life. The main homestead represents the first phase of use of the site for cereal cropping and the associated outbuildings represent various changes of use to dairying (1890s), horse and cattle studding (1940s) and riding school (1980s). The site has retained much of its original setting allowing a high degree of interpretation of the historic landscape. Sugarloaf Farm is of State Significance for its association with the early settlement and development of Menangle as a farming district.
Holy Family Church in Cahokia, Illinois was built of walnut timbers in the poteaux-sur-sol style in 1799 replacing a similar structure built in 1699. Poteaux-sur-sol ("posts on a sill" – sol is also spelled sole and solle) is a style of timber framing, in which relatively closely spaced posts rest on a timber sill. Poteaux-en-terre and pieux-en-terre are similar, but the closely spaced posts extend into the ground rather than resting on a sill on a foundation, and therefore are a type of post in ground construction. Poteaux- sur-sol is similar to the framing style known in the United Kingdom as close studding.
James (Vol.VI) (p.83) Having by this time repaired much of the damage that had been done, Byron ordered the studding sails out and set course for Halifax. The American squadron gave up the chase and returned to their original mission, searching for the Jamaican merchant fleet, not realising that Belvidera had, over the last 15 hours, led them further away from it.James (Vol.VI) (pp.83–84) Belvidera arrived in Halifax on 27 June with a number of American prizes she had managed to capture en route. On hearing of the altercation, Admiral Sawyer despatched the sloop to New York to demand an explanation.
In order to reserve as much of the budget for the interior as possible, the architects designed a relatively plain brick and brownstone exterior that could be clad in marble if funds became available later. The ornate auditorium has an "open horseshoe" shape and proscenium columns with elliptical cross-sections in order to provide more direct sight lines from the seats in the side balconies. The auditorium is enclosed by a solid three-foot brick wall with studding and pine boards lining the inner sides to prevent echoes and absorb sound. The upper balconies are recessed in a tiered fashion and supported by 14 Corinthian columns.
Three timber-framed, black-and-white buildings in the village centre are listed at grade II. Marbury Cottage on Church Lane dates originally from the late 16th or early 17th century and is believed to have formerly been a dower house. The two-storey, T-shaped building has both close studding and small framing with brick infill. Some 17th- and 18th-century doors survive on the interior.Images of England: Marbury Cottage (accessed 19 May 2010) On the corner of Church Lane and Wirswall Road stands 1–4 Black and White Cottages, which was once a single house with a service wing, but is now divided into four cottages.
One pair of sails was fitted in 1987 The sails were turning in the Great Storm of 1987 although the brake was on. The second pair of sails were fitted in 1988. The roundhouse was rebuilt in 1990 and the restored mill ground for the first time on 4 April 1991. In 2008 discovery of rope burns on the studding by the spout floor window revealed that this was probably originally a pop-hole through which the brake rope would have been dropped, thus allowing the miller to operate the brake from the side of the mill exterior, rather than from behind the mill, as had been the practice in recent years.
Glas Hirfryn is contemporary with Great Cefnyberen in the Vale of Kerry, dendrochronologicaly dated to 1545–60. This house has a jettied first floor supported by massive brackets, but unlike Glas Hirfyn it has a central chimney stack and rather than a lobby entrance has a chimney backing on to the entrance with a post and panel screen or cross passage of Smith’s type B.’‘Smith’’, 1988, 447, Map 29a Also in the Vale of Kerry, but just in Shropshire in Brompton and Rhiston is the ‘‘Lack’’. This is a jettied house of the Montgomeryshire Lobby entrance type , with herringbone work in the upper story and Close studding to the lower floor.”Moran’’, 396.
The tornado reached its maximum intensity, likely in the upper range of the F3 category, as it approached the Trinity River. In this area, between Singleton Boulevard and Riverside Drive, homes were completely swept off their foundations, and nearby railroad cars were overturned; while the damage appeared to be F4 in appearance, the homes had been poorly constructed, lacking wall studding and being "set on piers on center." Thus the tornado was officially rated F3, which is consistent with photogrammetric estimates of peak winds in the worst damaged area. Some time after crossing the Trinity River, the tornado weakened, and shortly afterward passed over a parking lot about west of the U.S. Weather Bureau office at Love Field Airport.
Mickley Bridge over the Shropshire Union Several buildings within the parish are listed at grade II, the lowest of the three grades. The oldest listed building is Top of the Town, off Heatley Lane, a farmhouse dating originally from the early 17th century. It has projecting end bays and a tiled roof, and is part roughcast over brick and part timber framed, featuring some close studding with a middle rail. Two farmhouses on Heatley Lane are listed: Heatley is an L-shaped, red-brick building with a slate roof, dating from around 1750, and The Coronerage is a roughcast brick building with a tiled roof, dating originally from the early 19th century.
Some of the many cafés and restaurants along Sheep Street Sheep Street runs from Ely Street eastwards to the Waterside. It was a residential quarter in the 16th century, some of the buildings were rebuilt following the fire of 1595, although many, such as Number 40, date from 1480. Formerly a two-story building that was extended in the early twentieth century has a lower story of substantial close-set studding: the upper is of more widely spaced thin vertical timbers. As the name suggests Sheep Street, which leads down from the Town Hall to Waterside and the RST, was from early times and until the late 19th century, the area where sheep, brought from the neighbouring Cotswold Hills to be bought and sold.
William Lewis Belew (May 20, 1931 – January 7, 2008) was an American costume designer who created stage outfits worn, among others, by Elvis Presley, Ella Fitzgerald, The Band, Gladys Knight, Gloria Estefan, Josephine Baker, Brooke Shields, Joan Rivers, Dionne Warwick, the Osmonds, and the Jacksons. It was Josephine Baker who encouraged Belew to work as a costume designer. While he made costumes for plays, musicals, operas, ballets, TV specials and TV series, Belew is particularly famous for the stage outfits he made for Elvis. He created the tight-fitting black leather outfit that Elvis wore in the 1968 NBC Comeback Special, and the bell-bottomed jumpsuit outfits with high Napoleonic collars, pointed sleeve cuffs, wide belts and capes, decorated with gems, metal and rhinestone studding, sequins and embroidery.
The elimination competition is on Fridays, and the loser leaves Calle 7 for ever. This season is formally presented Jean Philippe Cretton as the co- host of Calle 7. The Final was on January 29, 2010 on a prime time schedule (22:00 hours GMT-4) the contestant that became the winner of the 2nd season of Calle 7, for second time, Francisco "Chapu" Puelles taking the big final prize 5 million chilean pesos (US$9,500) a prize that he share 50% with Felipe Camus, so he can continue his dream of studding. Felipe Camus take the second place and obtain 500,000 chilean pesos (US$930), and also a symbolic award "Spirit of Calle 7" for being the one the better shows the values of the program, as clean competition and friendship.
In 1913, after studding next to maestro Emilio Blaqué, Naranjo traveled to Spain to assist for the following to years of study at the Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando from which also Pablo Picasso and Salvador Dalí graduated in the coming years. During this period in Madrid, the artist gained the benefits of a grant instituted by the Count Eusebi Güell of Barcelona. The grant permitted Naranjo to travel to Italy where in 1917 and 1918 he assisted as student to the studio of maestro Antonio Mancini in what was known as "La Hebrea" workshops. During those workshops Naranjo won the recognition of his teacher and fellow students and a second place with "El filósofo" (Oil on Canvas) depicting the head of count Leon Tolstoy.
In this position, Ferguson developed designs for single skin timber school buildings based on the Suter style, but "avoiding the technical disadvantages of exposed studding by reverting to external sheeting". In 1885, Ferguson resigned from the Department of Public Instruction to become a partner in his brother-in-law's firm, John Petrie and Son. He resumed employment with the Public Service as Surveyor to the Meat and Dairy Board in 1894, a position in which he remained until his death in 1906. In 1880 a public meeting was held at Monkland to discuss the establishment of a school for the district. Following the discovery of some of the most prosperous gold mines in the Gympie region in the early 1870s, the area had rapidly expanded and by 1873, a number of shops and four hotels were trading in the main street.
His timber buildings in particular for both organisations established a local tradition, albeit without the architectural pretensions of Suter's original designs, of timber buildings with outside studding which combined economy, internal finish, and picturesque appearance. Architect also to several churches constructed in stone, it was Suter's timber churches such as St Augustine's (believed to be his only remaining timber church) which presented a challenge to the theological thinking of the time which viewed timber as an unsuitable material to be used in the construction of the houses of God. Together with other buildings of the nineteenth century particularly of the 1860s and 1870s, St Augustine's is a symbol of the more prosperous times of Leyburn and an integral part of its townscape which presents a remarkably intact example of an early Queensland township as well as an important representation of the settlement of the Darling Downs. The place demonstrates rare, uncommon or endangered aspects of Queensland's cultural heritage.
" New York Observer, March 27, 2006. The New York social critic Paul Goodman, whose early essays in politics seeded his flowering into mainstream fame twenty years later, famously asserted that Macdonald "thinks with his typewriter", a restless, perpetually self-revising (and, often enough in rueful retrospect, self-mocking) quality that saw Macdonald studding the later book versions of his magazine essays with a sort of after-the-fact Greek chorus of second thoughts, self-recriminations and liberal, as it were, doses of l'esprit de l'escalier, that lent his writing a quality one criticPaul Berman in The New Republic, September 12, 1994: "The habit of heckling his own opinions was a main element in Macdonald's prose style, too. He was always posting footnotes or intruding parentheses into his own sentences in order to add a second point of view, normally quite skeptical of the first. You could almost imagine that 'Dwight Macdonald' was actually two persons: a Macdonald from Yale who was urbane, relaxed, witty and intelligent, and a second Macdonald from Yale who was even more urbane, relaxed and so forth.

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