The belt-plate and crescented sword scabbard were aflame with brilliants on blue enamelling.
2
In enamelling it would doubtless preserve its colour, and in exceptional cases might be useful.
3
Their faces were pale like porcelain with the enamelling effect of the liquid powder which they use.
4
They are enamelling his war; they are keeping it green; and they are taking it away from him.
5
The process of enamelling dates from late classical times and Venturi supposes that it was invented in Alexandria.
6
The reviver or re-discoverer of the art of enamelling in Italy was Luca della Robbia, a Florentine sculptor.
7
Ninety villagers who have been taught enamelling skills by a master craftsman who was trained at the Imperial Palace.
8
For enamelling it is inadmissible, the colour being destroyed by great heat; but in fresco it may safely be employed.
9
Brother Luke hath given me some skill in damask work, and in the enamelling of shrines, tabernacles, diptychs and triptychs.
10
On its slopes, in the low places, on the swells and higher hills, the earth sparkled with a strange enamelling.
11
The secrets of metallurgy, of dyeing, enamelling, inlaying, glass-blowing, as well as most of the ordinary manufacturing processes, were known to them.
12
Many inventions, hitherto supposed to be modern, such as glass, mosaics, false gems, glazed tiles, enamelling, were well known to the Egyptians.
13
Since that dear man in Paris has hit upon the real secret of enamelling, we are thinking of extending the limit to sixty-five.
14
When the King issued from the chair, his smile was broader than before, and his teeth seemed to have received a fresh enamelling.
15
Lloyd was not interested in the show-cases, and could not understand the conversation her father and mother were having with the shopkeeper about enamelling.
16
The art of enamelling metals appears to have been introduced from Byzantium through Venice into Western Europe at the close of the tenth century.