Plate No. 014pattern
First documented
Antiquity
Fiber
wool
Weave
2/2 broken twill
Family
twills

Plate No. 014 · pattern

Herringbone

Herringbone is a broken-twill pattern of short diagonal rows that reverse direction in adjacent columns, forming a continuous run of V shapes. It is produced by reversing the direction of a two-and-two twill at set intervals across the warp, and the abrupt reversal is what gives it the staggered, fishbone look. The structure is ancient, appearing in textiles and in Roman masonry laid in the same opus spicatum arrangement.

Illustration: Roman laborers in antiquity laying a road in herringbone brickwork, seen from above and at a distance, wooden stakes and lines, a milestone, cypress trees
Roman laborers in antiquity laying a road in herringbone brickwork, seen from above and at a distance, wooden stakes and lines, a milestone, cypress trees.

Named for

Named for its resemblance to the skeleton of a herring fish.

Often confused with

From the journal

  1. 1.Herringbone (cloth), Wikipedia
  2. 2.herringbone, Online Etymology Dictionary