Summary of your 'study carrel' ============================== This is a summary of your Distant Reader 'study carrel'. The Distant Reader harvested & cached your content into a collection/corpus. It then applied sets of natural language processing and text mining against the collection. The results of this process was reduced to a database file -- a 'study carrel'. The study carrel can then be queried, thus bringing light specific characteristics for your collection. These characteristics can help you summarize the collection as well as enumerate things you might want to investigate more closely. This report is a terse narrative report, and when processing is complete you will be linked to a more complete narrative report. Eric Lease Morgan Number of items in the collection; 'How big is my corpus?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 6 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 32999 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 75 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 illustration 2 fabric 2 cloth 1 work 1 wool 1 weave 1 thread 1 textile 1 style 1 stitch 1 silk 1 sidenote 1 sewing 1 seam 1 jacobean 1 good 1 form 1 finish 1 fiber 1 english 1 edge 1 country 1 cotton 1 chair 1 art 1 Yarn 1 Woollen 1 Windsor 1 William 1 White 1 Velvet 1 TABLE 1 Silk 1 Sheraton 1 School 1 Queen 1 Printed 1 Phillips 1 OAK 1 Muslin 1 Messrs. 1 Mary 1 Indians 1 Grey 1 Flannel 1 FIG 1 England 1 Economics 1 Dyed 1 Cotton Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 986 fabric 644 cotton 606 thread 586 cloth 454 illustration 422 yarn 392 weave 365 material 354 design 333 piece 331 silk 306 wool 300 stitch 300 form 286 chair 278 inch 274 style 268 work 261 warp 260 pattern 259 surface 238 side 228 furniture 214 type 212 example 212 art 210 sidenote 200 century 198 figure 198 edge 197 seam 193 leg 192 color 191 table 185 name 181 length 180 line 178 end 175 twill 172 term 170 effect 169 use 169 good 168 class 166 width 166 part 157 back 154 hand 154 colour 149 process Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1163 _ 177 Cotton 118 Cloth 99 Dyed 91 Printed 90 Silk 90 Anne 85 Queen 82 White 74 FIG 71 Grey 71 Chippendale 62 OAK 60 Chincha 58 Fig 51 . 49 Woollen 49 Velvet 49 Muslin 48 Windsor 48 Plain 47 C. 46 Yarn 46 II 46 England 45 William 45 Flannel 42 Velveteen 41 | 41 walnut 41 English 41 China 38 Indians 37 Wool 37 Plush 37 Charles 36 Weave 35 Sheraton 34 CHAIR 33 Mr. 33 Mary 33 London 32 Phillips 32 Lawn 32 Figured 31 Cambric 30 Yarns 30 Union 30 Sheeting 30 Satin Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 1157 it 304 they 137 we 131 them 87 he 67 i 38 itself 33 you 23 themselves 20 us 18 she 16 one 11 himself 9 him 8 me 7 her 2 ourselves 2 herself 2 ''em 1 yourself 1 yew 1 wool= 1 4- Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 7001 be 1236 have 692 make 601 use 530 weave 308 show 281 see 265 give 260 do 248 produce 223 dye 220 find 195 know 183 take 173 illustrate 156 cut 151 apply 141 print 134 run 132 weft 129 turn 129 come 123 finish 107 become 106 form 103 call 101 stitch 101 appear 99 leave 93 draw 89 place 86 follow 84 describe 82 spin 80 employ 80 designate 79 say 77 fold 75 add 74 hold 73 obtain 73 fill 72 pass 72 cover 71 sew 69 vary 69 remove 68 worst 68 raise 66 bleach Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 645 not 343 plain 331 more 298 other 254 fine 246 warp 236 same 209 well 209 such 190 very 183 only 182 so 182 early 178 back 176 great 170 long 165 first 164 generally 157 old 154 good 151 most 145 many 139 up 139 much 138 often 130 also 128 together 126 as 123 always 120 small 119 out 118 single 109 simple 105 soft 104 light 103 then 101 textile 101 similar 99 usually 99 different 98 now 98 even 98 certain 97 heavy 95 white 94 weft 94 right 93 various 93 sometimes 92 large Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 63 good 26 most 20 simple 20 fine 18 early 12 least 12 high 9 great 8 large 5 Most 4 narrow 3 low 3 late 2 wide 2 strong 2 small 2 short 2 rich 2 old 2 few 2 cheap 2 bad 1 sure 1 soft 1 rude 1 rough 1 pure 1 noble 1 mild 1 mean 1 happy 1 foremost 1 fast 1 coarse 1 clear 1 bast 1 Balbriggan.=--Named 1 -low Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 124 most 5 well 1 least 1 cotton.=--a Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 157 _ see _ 8 fabric is essentially 4 chair illustrated p. 4 fabric is not 3 fabric does not 3 fabric having thick 3 yarn is often 2 art has not 2 art is not 2 cloth is usually 2 cloth showing use 2 cloths are allover 2 cloths are generally 2 cotton does not 2 designs showing various 2 fabric are equally 2 fabric is also 2 fabric is generally 2 fabric is often 2 fabric is similar 2 fabric made generally 2 fabrics does not 2 material is also 2 piece is about 2 threads are not 2 threads are very 2 threads being effectually 2 threads do not 2 warps do not 2 weave is sometimes 2 work is very 1 = dyed fustians.=--fustians 1 = dyed reps= 1 = weft sateen.=--a 1 _ appear _ 1 _ be twice 1 _ form _ 1 _ is french 1 art apply equally 1 art are strong 1 art gives rise 1 art is doubtless 1 art is serious 1 art is unimportant 1 art were favorable 1 arts are not 1 arts are wholly 1 century is hardly 1 century was equal 1 century was not Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 art having no parallel 1 art is not sufficiently 1 design do not readily 1 examples are not easily 1 fabric is no longer 1 fabrics are not brocades 1 material is no longer 1 patterns are not exclusively 1 threads are not parallel 1 work are not uncommon 1 work knows no sequence 1 yarn are not as 1 yarn is not very A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 52227 author = Blanco, A. E. title = Piece Goods Manual Fabrics described; textile, knit goods, weaving terms, etc., explained; with notes on the classification of samples. date = keywords = Cloth; Cotton; Dyed; Flannel; Grey; Muslin; Printed; Silk; Velvet; White; Woollen; Yarn; fabric; weave summary = cotton warp yarns were dyed prior to weaving and the piece of fabric fabric of light weight and low-count yarns, woven with a plain weave, =Denim.=--A stout cotton warp-faced twill cloth, generally woven =Dyed Drills.=--A heavy twill-woven all-cotton fabric, the weave of =Dyed Lawns= are plain-woven light-weight cotton fabrics of soft plain weave--a yarn-dyed cotton cloth in stripes or checks. When woven as a warp-faced twill fabric from strong yarns, the cloth =Grey T-Cloths.=--All-cotton plain-woven unbleached fabric of low =Italian Cloth, Figured, Cotton Warp and Wool Weft.=--This fabric, When woven with cotton warp and wool weft, Italian Cloth =Marquisette.=--A sheer plain-weave fabric of silk or cotton, having =Papoon.=--An all-cotton fabric woven from coloured yarns, the warp all-cotton fabric woven with a plain weave, having the warp and Cloth, is a plain-woven cotton warp and woollen weft fabric, woven in =Waste Cloths.=--Cotton fabrics woven from waste yarns, generally id = 44603 author = Hayden, Arthur title = Chats on Cottage and Farmhouse Furniture date = keywords = Anne; Charles; Chippendale; England; Mary; Messrs.; OAK; Phillips; Queen; Sheraton; TABLE; William; Windsor; chair; country; english; illustration; jacobean; style summary = tables, dressers, and chairs possess particular styles of treatment dates to cottage and farmhouse furniture--Oak the chief wood early seventeenth century--the chest, the table, the form, and the use until mid-seventeenth-century days the illustration of an oak dresser, the table and the chair in its various forms, the Bible-box fine example, in date about 1640, of a triangular gate-leg table. chairs had at a later date, when every country cabinet-maker was and in executed furniture, the old gate-leg table still survived. Of this particular type of oak Dresser the two examples illustrated The forms of design of tables of eighteenth-century date are Early days--The typical Jacobean oak chair--The evolution of Early days--The typical Jacobean oak chair--The evolution of [Illustration: COUNTRY CHIPPENDALE CHAIR, STYLE MERGING INTO [Illustration: TWO CHAIRS COUNTRY HEPPLEWHITE STYLE MADE ENTIRELY [Illustration: TYPES OF COTTAGE CHAIRS IN OAK. [Illustration: ELM CHAIR, COUNTRY CHIPPENDALE STYLE.] [Illustration: OAK CHAIR, COUNTRY CHIPPENDALE STYLE. id = 17730 author = Holmes, William Henry title = A Study of the Textile Art in Its Relation to the Development of Form and Ornament Sixth Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1884-''85, Government Printing Office, Washington, 1888, (pages 189-252) date = keywords = FIG; Indians; art; form; illustration; textile; work summary = features observed upon the surface, the colors and patterns (Fig. 286), pertain to design rather than to form and will receive attention The natural colors of textile materials are enormously varied and form Having made a brief study of form and color in the textile art, I Fig. 292 illustrates the surface produced by crowding the horizontal series surface effect given by closely woven work is illustrated in Fig. 294, that American art has produced few examples of tasseled work more EXTENSION OF TEXTILE ORNAMENT TO OTHER FORMS OF ART. EXTENSION OF TEXTILE ORNAMENT TO OTHER FORMS OF ART. textile art to the parentage of geometric ornament and that the Form in textile art and its relation to ornament, with illustrations Geometric design, relations of, to textile ornament 202-244 Textile art in its relation to the development of form and ornament, Textile art in its relation to the development of form and ornament, id = 42375 author = O''Neale, Lila M. (Lila Morris) title = Chincha Plain-Weave Cloths date = keywords = Chincha; cloth; illustration summary = This study of the Chincha plain-weave materials in the Max Uhle One hundred twelve cloths in the plain-weave group were measured. From the twenty Chincha plain-weave cloths with intact lengths (fig. Complete lengths of Chincha plain-weave cloths in order from shortest Complete widths of Chincha plain-weave fabrics in order from narrowest In the Chincha 4specimens, where congestion of edge yarns occurs, combinations of pairs of warps or wefts with single yarns of the Thread counts in this group range from 13 warps by 18 wefts to In two Chincha plain-weave cloths, as in the Nazca Chincha plain-weave cloths (pl. Chincha plain-weave cloths (pl. Stripes in this sample group either border the edge of the cloth or Edge stripes occur on a relatively fine cloth, specimen Five cloths in the Chincha lot are allover striped. No specimen in the Chincha plain-weave group has stripes showing more Diagrams of stripings in Chincha plain-weave id = 21534 author = Watson, Kate Heintz title = Textiles and Clothing date = keywords = Economics; School; cloth; cotton; edge; fabric; fiber; finish; good; illustration; seam; sewing; sidenote; silk; stitch; thread; wool summary = In making a cloth with plain weave, that is, with every thread Canvas--A linen, cotton, silk, or wool cloth of different weaves stitch is also useful in binding down open seams for flannel hems, line of sewing smoothed on the thread at each needleful of stitches. ordinary thread, cotton or linen, sewing silk, or twist. A seam is the line of sewing that joins material; it may be plain or with silk or very fine thread with small, even stitches. _A_--Finished with a stitched seam; _B_--Edge hemmed down and cloth cut make with colored thread (1) a line of even basting stitches, (2) edge, and basted with close stitches, pressed, hemmed down to the facing stitch on the machine through velveteen, cloth, and lining (or facing) Stitch the seams just outside the basting, then remove the line of soft cloth, makes a good board on which to press the curved seams of a