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The man's voice: "I can see some between the studding.
Close studding was an elite style found mostly on expensive buildings.
An arc leaped off a studding and hit me in the toe.
Close studding remained in common use in England until the end of the 17th century.
Rather than being a structural feature, the primary aim of close studding is to produce an impressive front.
The left hand wing of the entrance front is timber-framed, and includes close studding.
It has two gabled end bays, one of which features close studding.
It was the only frame building in the group of structures, about twelve feet by twenty, with unfinished open studding on the inside.
He felt solid studding and boards of heavy hard wood like the one he had just taken hours to cut through.
Close studding is very common in the Normandy region of France, many images are here.
Another northern style was to use close studding but in a herring-bone or chevron pattern.
The exterior is decorated with close studding and chevrons.
Dividing one room into two is not a difficult operation, and simple studding can provide adequate support for sheet plasterboard.
The original timber studding can be seen on two walls, showing the lath and plaster structure.
The upper storey is timber-framed, with close studding.
Close studding was sometimes used in association with decorative panel work or close panelling, particularly from the end of the 16th century.
The external appearance is early Elizabethan, with both ornamental panelling and close studding.
The east wing is timber-framed, with close studding, on a rubble stone plinth.
They went into a bare attic with exposed studding, a square window in front and rear, shut tight, the glass painted black.
His small, blunt-fingered hands were playing with the leather-and-metal studding of the little kilt he wore.
A tight studding of black eyes.
Public buildings such as guildhalls, market halls, churches and inns often employed close studding.
The debris had long since been cleared away but the heavy studding remained, for Juan had always thought they might rebuild.
With its lavish use of timber, close studding was extravagant and was seen as a status symbol.
In such buildings, the lower storey would usually employ close studding, while the upper storeys would have small square panels with or without ornamentation.