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Her windows were draped in black satinette for the blaqueoute, the blackout.
Satinette may refer to:
Due to scarce supplies, they were made of jeans (a mixture of wool and cotton) or satinette and cassimere.
The fabric used in these jackets, ranged from the finer kerseys and broadcloths used early in the war, to the cotton/wool blends of jeans, satinette, and cassimere, to name several examples.
The first manufacture of "satinet" was at this mill.
In 1825, the stone Satinet Mill was erected.
The new mill was 80 by 30 feet, and its product was blue and blue-mix satinet.
Built on the site of the Satinet Mill, it was a five story stone building that was 208 ft long and 75 feet wide.
She turned slowly to face Steel, knowing she looked stunning in her gown of red and gold satinet, tightly laced across the bosom.
Nichols Satinet Mill Site (added March 23, 1996)
Satinet is a finely woven fabric with a finish resembling satin but made partly or wholly from cotton or synthetic fiber.
Twenty-five years afterward Calvin Thompson built a mill, which was first run by Coleman & Heminway as a satinet mill.
The Nichols Satinet Mill Site, also known as Site No. 97-14, is an archeological site in Newtown, Connecticut.
This mill helped to pioneer satinet, cashmeres, and utilized power looms, (first developed for woolens in the U.S. by John Capron from Uxbridge).
Entrepreneurs here innovated the first power looms for woolens, satinet, wool-nylon serge, and other wool synthetic blends, 'wash and wear' fabrics, and latch hook yarn kits.
After it was purchased by David Look in 1809 it was converted to a woolen mill, to manufacture Satinet and added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1984.
The historic mill town of Uxbridge was noted for leading with many advancements in the textile industry in America including power looms for woolens, complete vertical integration of textiles to clothing lines, blended fabrics and "satinet".
The listing includes the Rockville Warp Mill which is "an 1834 Greek Revival style stone mill built for the water-powered manufacture of cotton warps used locally in the production of a woolen cloth known as satinet.
Next day, she came back from the bazar with some black satinet, which she cut into a sort of dust-coat, tight at the throat and wrists, baggy elsewhere; and a shawl which she hemmed with a repellent nylon lace.