Dictionary Definition
crape
Noun
1 small very thin pancake [syn: crepe, French
pancake]
2 a soft thin light fabric with a crinkled
surface [syn: crepe]
Verb
1 cover or drape with crape; "crape the mirror"
[syn: crepe]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- krāp, /kreɪp/, /kreIp
- Homophones: crepe, crêpe
- Rhymes: -eɪp
Noun
- A thin, crimped stuff, made of raw silk gummed and twisted on the mill. Black crape is much used for mourning garments, also for the dress of some clergymen.
Translations
thin, crimped stuff, made of raw silk gummed and
twisted on the mill
- German: Krepp
Neapolitan
Noun
crape- Plural of crapa#Neapolitan|crapa
Extensive Definition
Crape (an Anglicized version of the Fr. crêpe
http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?search=crepe&searchmode=none)
is a silk fabric of a gauzy
texture, having a peculiar crisp or crimpy appearance. (The word
crape is also used as an Anglicized spelling of Crêpe (pancake).
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/crape)
Crape is woven of hard spun
silk yarn in the gum or
natural condition. There are two distinct varieties of the textile:
soft, Canton, or Oriental crape, and hard or crisped crape. Thin
crêpe is called crêpe de Chine ("Chinese crêpe").
The wavy appearance of Canton crape results from
the peculiar manner in which the weft is prepared, the yarn from two
bobbins being twisted together in the reverse way. The fabric when
woven is smooth and even, having no crape appearance, but when the
gum is subsequently extracted by boiling, it at once becomes soft,
and the weft, losing its twist, gives the fabric the waved
structure which constitutes its distinguishing feature. Canton
crapes are used, either white or colored, for scarves and shawls, bonnet trimmings,
etc.
The crisp and elastic structure of hard crape is
not produced either in the spinning or in the weaving, but is due
to processes through which the gauze passes after it is woven. In
1911, the details of these processes were known to only a few
manufacturers, who so jealously guarded their secrets that, in some
cases, the different stages in the manufacture were conducted in
towns far removed from each other. Commercially they are
distinguished as single, double, three-ply and four-ply crapes,
according to the nature of the yarn used in their manufacture. They
are almost exclusively dyed black and used in mourning dress.
In Great
Britain, hard crapes are made at Braintree
in Essex,
Norwich,
Yarmouth,
Manchester and
Glasgow.
The crape formerly made at Norwich was made with a silk warp and
worsted weft and is said
to have afterwards degenerated into bombazine. A very successful
imitation of real crape is made in Manchester of cotton yarn and
sold under the name of Victoria crape.
References
crape in Bulgarian: Креп
crape in Czech: Krep
crape in German: Krepp
crape in Modern Greek (1453-): Κρεπ
crape in French: Crêpe (tissu)
crape in Italian: Crêpe (tessuto)
crape in Portuguese: Crepe
crape in Swedish: Crêpe