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TAMBOUR

Volume 21 · 169 words · 1842 Edition

in Architecture, a term applied to the Corinthian and Composite capitals, as bearing some resemblance to a drum, which the French call tambour. Some choose to call it the vase, and others campana or the bell.

TAMBOUR is also used for a little box of timber-work; tambour covered with a ceiling, within the porch of certain churches; both to prevent the view of persons passing by, and to keep them off the wind, &c. by means of folding doors, &c.

TAMBOUR also denotes a round course of stone, several of which form the shaft of a column, not so high as a diameter.

in the arts, is a species of embroidery. The tambour is an instrument of a spherical form, upon which is stretched, by means of a string and buckle, or other suitable appendage, a piece of linen or thin silken stuff; which is wrought with a needle of a particular form, and by means of silken or gold and silver threads, into leaves, flowers, or other figures.