An artisan who beats gold into gold leaf.
Sinònims
Examples for "goldbeater"
Examples for "goldbeater"
1The skins used by the goldbeater are produced from the offal of animals.
2For the records here recorded either glass or goldbeater's skin was used as a diaphragm.
3The Hungary water was immediately brought to bathe it, and goldbeater's skin applied to stop the blood.
4They are made of goldbeater's skin, and range in capacity from 7,000 to 10,000 cubic feet, the majority being of the former capacity.
5Dismissing considerations of cost, goldbeaters' skin would doubtless have been more suitable.
1I applied the lunar caustic to form an eschar and then the gold-beater's skin.
2The bags, eighteen in number, are made of rubber-proofed fabric lined with gold-beater's skin.
3It was a bluish-black, and as thin as gold-beater's skin.
4I applied the lunar caustic to form an eschar and protected it with gold-beater's skin.
5High above the hills, to the left of the path, hung a speck of gold-beater's skin.
6A gold-beater from Fürth had created so much excitement that the police had to be called in.
7The envelope was fish-shaped and composed of gold-beater's skin, with a volume of 21,000 cubic feet.
8At this period, the inflammation having somewhat abated, I applied the lunar caustic to form eschars and protected the parts with gold-beater's skin.
9What it sees is a bag made of ultra-fine gold-beater's skin, translucent, stiff and white, retaining the complete form of the original egg.
10The tympan employed for receiving is made of gold-beater's skin, having a stud at its centre and a springy stylus of steel wire.
11In this the diaphragm was a piece of gold-beater's skin, which Bell had selected as most closely resembling the drum in the human ear.
12It was made of layer after layer of gold-beater's skin and contained two ballonets- asmallship compared to the Zeppelins, and non-rigid in type.
13He had experienced the common lot of young artists in those days, and had been apprenticed to a gold-beater, but preferred the profession of painter.
14There he took into his service goldsmiths and gold-beaters, architects and bombardiers.
15His skin, like that of the porpoise, is as thin as gold-beaters' leaf.
16It was what is called gold-beaters' skin.