frame | Transverse Ranges | Janet Frame | Frame Relay | space frame | A-frame | Universal Transverse Mercator coordinate system | Space frame | Pete Frame | frame story | Frame of reference | Frame | Fatal Frame | A Broken Frame | Wire-frame model | William Frame | Transverse foramen | ''The Virgin and Child with Canon van der Paele'', Oil on wood, 141 x 176.5 cm (including frame), 1434-36. Groeningemuseum | Terrestrial reference frame | Progressive segmented frame | Open reading frame | open reading frame | Main Distribution Frame (MDF) | Main distribution frame | Jordan frame (Jordan algebra) | It's A Frame-Up! | It's A Frame-Up | Inertial frame of reference | Full-frame digital SLR | frame of reference |
Longitudinal framing (also called the Isherwood system after British naval architect Sir Joseph Isherwood, who patented it in 1906) is a method of ship construction in which large, widely spaced transverse frames are used in conjunction with light, closely spaced longitudinal members.