英:['su:tæʃ]
美:[su'tæʃ]
英:['su:tæʃ]
美:[su'tæʃ]
noun
a narrow braid with herringbone pattern used as trimming
French, from Hungarian sujtás
The first known use of soutache was in 1848
1 The gold-cord soutache embroidery that, at first glance, gave tuxedos, track suits and jumpsuits a bold, bandleader feel created skeleton-like outlines on their wearers.
2 And so you will wear that soutache embroidery and like it.
3 In a Virginia courthouse, such desperation was laid bare in the form of glazed linen and soutache embroidery.
4 "So far as they are concerned the soutache could be crimson and the yoke green, and if the price was right they'd buy it anyhow."
5 Indeed, I devoted the sole article the Yankees let fall from my two workboxes—a bunch of soutache—to the work.
6 You are all plain one minute, and the next you are all soutache and buttons.
7 The outer border of the work is composed of a piece of black soutache, edged with a tiny trefoil pattern in cerise silk.
8 She held a familiar garment in her hand, and in the dim light of Feinholz's private office the buttons and soutache with which the cape was adorned sparkled like burnished gold.
9 Materials: Crimson velvet; white satin beads; gold soutache; and fine gold bouillon.
10 Materials: Russia leather; blue silk; black purse silk; blue silk soutache; fine gold braid; and gold thread.
11 Another fashion first for fall is the costume sweater; some styles feature yoke designs of velvet, others, jet on wool, some pullovers have companion stripped sleeveless cardigans and others are wool jersey with soutache braid trim.