As many as you like, provided they are small enough.
If the fabric is 44 inches wide and 36 inches long (one yard), you will get a maximum of 4 x 3 or 12 10-inch squares.
There are 4 fat quarters in a yard of fabric.When fabric comes off the bolt it is stored on, it is folded in half so that the selvedge ends are touching. To cut a fat quarter, a half yard is cut from the bolt of fabric. This half yard is then cut in half along the fold, resulting in a quarter yard of fabric (half of a half is a quarter).The fat quarter is used often in quilting because it provides more usable space for quilters than a standard quarter yard cut. A standard quarter yard is 9 inches wide, by the width of fabric on the bolt (anywhere between 40-44 inches is standard width of fabric). A fat quarter is wider, but less long at 18 inches wide by 20-22 inches long.Even though the fat quarter has a different length and width than a standard quarter yard cut, it still represents a quarter yard of fabric. Since four quarters make a whole, each yard of fabric can be cut into exactly 4 fat quarters.
3 dozen inches, but this isn't a customary unit of measure in this instance.
there are 3 feet in a yard, so do the math.. 15/3=5 yards
Remember this: 12 Inches = 1 Foot 3 Feet = 1 Yard 36 Inches = 1 Yard 64 inches ÷ 36 inches/yard = 1 Yard 28 inches 72 inches ÷ 36 inches/yard = 2 Yards 0 inches So you'd need 4 yards of fabric for a curtain 64 in. x 72 in.
9 with some left over fabric
44
You can get 12.
If the fabric is 44 inches wide and 36 inches long (one yard), you will get a maximum of 4 x 3 or 12 10-inch squares.
How many squares fit in 1 square yard will depend on the size of the squares.How many squares fit in 1 square yard will depend on the size of the squares.How many squares fit in 1 square yard will depend on the size of the squares.How many squares fit in 1 square yard will depend on the size of the squares.
Measure in inches the width of the fabric. This will usually be 36", 54" or 72" but may be something different. Ignore any surplus beyond a multiple of 6 as this portion won't enable you to create a 6" square. Call the width W. The total area of the fabric is W x 36 (as the length is 1 yard = 3 ft = 36") The area of each 6" square is 36 sq in. Then divide W x 36 by 36 to get the number of squares - and this results in W. In other words if the fabric is 82" long - we can only use 78" for making squares then you can cut out 78 squares.
It depends on the size of the squares.
The answer depends on the units used for 9 by 9. Since these have not been specified, there can be no sensible answer to the question.
One square yard of fabric is 36 by 36 inches. 100 10 by 10 inch squares would be equal to 1000 by 1000 inches. 1000/36 is just under 28, so you would need 28 square yards of fabric.
1 yard of fabric has a length of 1 yard but the width of the fabric is not specified and so the question cannot be answered.
There is no answer. A square is area. A yard is linear.
Depends on how wide the bolt of fabric is. A "yard" of fabric will always be three feet long, but it may be varyingly wide.