Crossword clues for dyers
dyers
- Salon workers, at times
- Salon workers
- Makers of batik
- Garment workers
- Salon colorists
- Coloring experts
- Bottle redheads
- Bottle blondes
- Some garment industry employees
- Some clothing workers
- Lock changers?
- Hairstylists, at times
- Hairdressers, at times
- Hair colorists
- Gray removers
- Bottle brunettes
- Beauticians, sometimes
- What some beauticians are
- They often change locks
- They may turn blue jeans green
- They may make brunettes blond
- They don't show their true colors
- They change colors often
- They change colors
- They add color
- Textile plant employees
- Sources of highlights
- Some salon employees
- Some mill staff
- Some garment workers
- Rit users
- Ones who go platinum?
- Ones changing locks
- Fashion specialists
- Coloring pros
- Color men
- Clothing colorists
- Clothes colorers
- Certain colorists
- Beauty parlor workers
- Batik craftsmen, e.g
- Batik artists
- Salon professionals
- Color changers
- Easter egg colorers
- Salon employees
- Some leather workers
- Batik artisans
- Some blondes
- Tannery workers
- Batik artists, e.g.
- Color specialists
- Hair colorers
- Some lock changers
- Colorists
- Batik artists, e.g
- Ones preparing Easter eggs
- "The ___ Hand," Auden work: 1963
- Textile workers
- Those who tint
- Dry cleaners, at times
- Batik makers
- Tinters
- Easter-egg decorators
- Colorers
- Their work is colorful
- Fabric colorers
- Vatmen
- Cleaners' colleagues
- Some textile workers
- Batik experts
- They have colorful jobs
- Users of 11 Down
- Cloth colorers
- Beauticians, at times
- Fabric workers
- Color workers
- Users of Red 2
- They lead colorful lives
- They colour red say, losing heart when embarrassed
- Salon specialists
- Unnatural blondes, e.g
- Batik workers
Wiktionary
dyers
n. (plural of dyer English)
Usage examples of "dyers".
French Cleaners and Dyers, and ten associates of the Oakland Sugar House Gang, now being called Purple Gangsters by the local press, were indicted and held for trial on charges of extortion.
James had been city-born and -bred, and the stench of a warm day near the tanneries and dyers, or the pungency of the cattle pens and poultry yards, was taken for granted, fading into the background so that it went mostly unnoticed.