KirjeldusQSMM Northrop 'S' model loom with Leesona Unifil 2663.JPG
Queen Street Mill in Harle Syke, a suburb to the north-east of Burnley, Lancashire, was built in 1894 for the Queen Street Manufacturing Company. It closed on 12 March 1982 and was mothballed, but was subsequently taken over by Burnley Borough Council and used as a museum. In the 1990s ownership passed to Lancashire Museums. Unique in being the world's only surviving steam-driven weaving shed.
The Northrop loom was invented in 1891 by James Henry Northrop who invented the self changing shuttle device. The model S has a dobby to control the main weave with a jacquarette to to handle the pattern in the green name band.
The Leesona Unifil was first sold in 1958 is a high speed pirn winder where a depleted pirn is filled and replaced in the pirn rack.
Queen Street Mill: Photographs taken for the Backstage Pass Event at the museum on 4th May 2013, or subsequently in co-operation with the museum staff - contact the museum directly for higher resolution images. Preparatory visit
Litsents
Autoriõiguse omanikuna avaldan selle teose järgmiste litsentside all:
Luba on antud selle dokumendi kopeerimiseks, avaldamiseks ja/või muutmiseks GNU Vaba Dokumentatsiooni Litsentsi versiooni 1.2 või hilisema Vaba Tarkvara Fondi avaldatud versiooni tingimuste alusel; muutumatute osadeta, esikaane tekstideta ja tagakaane tekstideta. Sellest loast on lisatud koopia leheküljel pealkirjaga "GNU Free Documentation License".http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.htmlGFDLGNU Free Documentation Licensetruetrue
omistamine – Pead materjali sobival viisil autorile omistama, tooma ära litsentsi lingi ja märkima ära, kas on tehtud muudatusi. Sobib, kui teed seda mõistlikul viisil, kuid seejuures ei tohi jääda muljet, et litsentsiandja tõstab esile sind või seda, et sina materjali kasutad.
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0CC BY 3.0 Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 truetrue