The dining room is elegant with yellow damask wallpaper and white chair railing.
From the courier-journal.com
On one visit there, Mr. Sokolowski found his friend wearing a red damask jacket.
From the post-gazette.com
If you can't afford new furniture, consider adding silk or damask throw pillows.
From the kansas.com
The walls were covered with red damask silk and intricately carved wainscoting.
From the heraldtribune.com
A white miter was set on his head, which rested on three golden damask pillows.
From the timesunion.com
The Queen Anne-style chairs were reupholstered in a soft gold colored silk damask.
From the en.wikipedia.org
The day had a black and white theme which they accented with a damask pattern.
From the smh.com.au
Who decided to replace it with the gold damask frock of a Southern aristocrat?
From the washingtonpost.com
Mattress fabrics can be knits, damask or printed wovens, or inexpensive nonwovens.
From the en.wikipedia.org
More examples
Having a woven pattern; "damask table linens"
A fabric of linen or cotton or silk or wool with a reversible pattern woven into it
Damask (Arabic: u062Fu0645u0633u0642u200Eu200E) is a reversible figured fabric of silk, wool, linen, cotton, or synthetic fibres, with a pattern formed by weaving. Damasks are woven with one warp yarn and one weft yarn, usually with the pattern in warp-faced satin weave and the ground in weft-faced or sateen weave. Twill damasks include a twill-woven ground or pattern.
Miss Steed (Emma Steed), also known as Black Queen is a fictional character, a mutant in the Marvel Comics Universe. Her first appearance as Miss Steed was in Excalibur #96.
An ornate silk fabric originating from Damascus; A damask rose; A grayish-pink color, like that of the damask rose; To decorate or weave in damascene patterns; Of a grayish-pink color, like that of the damask rose
A heavy fabric made from cotton, silk, linen, wool or synthetic yarns, typically used for draperies and home decor. Typically made using a satin weave, this reversible fabric is named for a luxurious silk fabric introduced through Damascus, Syria.
A glossy jacquard fabric, usually made from linen, cotton, rayon, silk, or blends. The patterns are flat and reversible. The fabric is often used in napkins, tablecloths, draperies, and upholstery.
Elaborately woven linen, cotton, or rayon (originally silk in antiquity), the surface design being reversed on the backside.
Damask is a fabric of silk, wool, linen, cotton, or synthetic fibers, with a pattern formed by weaving. Today, it generally denotes a linen texture richly figured in the weaving with flowers, fruit, forms of animal life, and other types of ornament.