10.24 square units.
The answer depends on the shape of the 9 square foot piece of fabric. If the piece is 36 feet x 3 inches, for example, you will not get a single 5 inch square from it.
For a piece of fabric, it is the ratio of its mass (expressed in grams) to its area (expressed in square metres).
Fold the fabric on the diagonal so that one side edge is on the top edge. If you then cut along the shortest vertical edge, and unfold, you now have the largest square possible.
An example: Feet for first piece of fabric: 2 Inches for first piece of fabric: 7 Feet for 2nd piece of fabric: 2, Inches for 2nd piece of fabric: 6 I need the program to print: Feet: 5 Inches: 1
10.24 square units.
The answer depends on the shape of the 9 square foot piece of fabric. If the piece is 36 feet x 3 inches, for example, you will not get a single 5 inch square from it.
For a piece of fabric, it is the ratio of its mass (expressed in grams) to its area (expressed in square metres).
It is an Arabian scarf...
Fold the fabric on the diagonal so that one side edge is on the top edge. If you then cut along the shortest vertical edge, and unfold, you now have the largest square possible.
725 yards
Area of a piece of fabric = (length) times (width) .Example:If the fabric is on a roll that's 1.5 meter wide,and you cut off a piece that's 3 meters long . . .You have a piece that's 3 meters long and 1.5 meters wide.Area = (3) x (1.5) = 4.5 square meters.
An example: Feet for first piece of fabric: 2 Inches for first piece of fabric: 7 Feet for 2nd piece of fabric: 2, Inches for 2nd piece of fabric: 6 I need the program to print: Feet: 5 Inches: 1
As your question is written, it is impossible to state how much a piece of shirt would weigh. Many factors would determine the weight, such as:the type of fabric / material (fabric can be light-weight to very heavy)the size of the 'piece' that was cut or torn away from the shirtwhether the shirt was outerwear or regular clothingwhether the shirt has any liningwhether the piece of fabric has any adornments, such as embroidery, buttons, beading, heavy stitching, etc.whether the piece of fabric has anything sewn into it, such as elastic or stiffening fabric (like in a collar).whether the piece of fabric has metal sewn into the fabric (such as in the shirt bottom on the front to hold the fabric downward).
You can tape or thumb-tack a large piece of flannel to your wall, and then pieces of fabric will "stick" to it. If the fabric is too heavy to stay up, you can pin it to the flannel.
It is important to test the machine on spare piece of fabric to make sure that it sews properly.
Yes