Glossary of terms used on this site

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Term Definition
Colophon
Derived from a Greek term meaning "finishing touch," it denotes a page at the end of a book traditionally listing details about the authorship and publication of the book. On many early books from the 15th and 16th centuries this is the only place such information is available. Title pages eventually replaced colophons in most books.
Composition
A material used from the 1920s to the 1950s to make dolls, consisting of malleable wood pulp and paste, or rags that had been boiled and formed.
Crystal
A high-quality glass made with oxide of lead, rather than soda, making it harder, clearer, brighter, and easier to cut than ordinary glass.
Cut glass
Glass into which a pattern is ground with a rotating wheel made of stone, wood, or metal, together with an abrasive suspended in liquid.
Daguerreotype
The first successful photographic process that became popular in the United States in the 1840s and 50s, consisting of one-of-a-kind images made on a copper plate coated with polished silver, giving them a mirror-like sheen.
Damask
A fine, lustrous fabric with flat patterns and a satin weave.
Décolleté
A low-neckline bodice of a blouse or dress. It is a traditional component of ladies' evening dresses and ball gowns.
Denim
A firm, durable twilled cotton fabric popularly used in blue jeans.
Depression glass
American glassware mass-produced from about 1920 to 1940, around the time of the Great Depression. It features smooth, shallow designs in a variety of colors. Now collectible, much Depression glass was sold inexpensively at dime stores or given away as promotions.
Directoire
A popular term for a high-waisted dress line. The directoire dress has a long, straight skirt, an exaggeratedly high waist line, low décolleté, and small, tight puff sleeves. It was popular in the 1880s, 1900s, and again in the 1960s.
Domestic wood
In the furniture trade, wood that comes from trees that are grown in the same country where the wood is to be sold. (See also: Imported wood)
Dovetails
A term for the interlocking wedge shapes used in woodworking as joints; they are both both strong and decorative.
Dowel
In woodworking, a cylindrical rod that fits into holes in two adjacent pieces to line them up and hold them together.
Dresden lace
Lace that combines a number of embroidery techniques, including satin stitch, tambour (chain stitch), and pulled stitches to create a lace-like surface. Also known as white work.
Dust jacket
A paper cover used to protect the binding of a book from dust and wear, sometimes referred to as a "book jacket" or "dust cover."
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