Sugar Coated Shroud of Turin
 
 

twill in weaving

Twill Defined

By varying the number of warp threads passed over or under (for instance over one, under two, and so forth), and varying the starting point, different patterns of cloth can be created. Such patterns are called twill. Examples of twill include gabardine, tweed, serge and herringbone.

herringbone twill pattern

warp threads

weft threads

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  WHY THE SHROUD OF TURIN IS PROBABLY REAL EVEN IF THE MEANING IS UNCLEAR



What is the Shroud of Turin? The Shroud Described.

How the images might have formed. Images on the Shroud of Turin.

Hints from Edessa, 544 AD. Early Shroud of Turin History.

How a medieval artisan caused Carbon 14 Dating Errors.

Startling, Mysterious, Unexplained. The 3D Encoding of the Shroud.

The Variegated Cloth. Fooled by the Shroud's Background Noise.

The Art Connection. Christ Pantocrator and the Shroud of Turin.

Was the Shroud of Turin Described? Voices from the Past

Medical Perspective: Forensic Pathology of the Images

The Second Face: From the Back of the Cloth

Some say . . . Painted, Leonardo da Vinci, Jacques deMolay, Coins, etc.


 
    
 

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