To the nearest 12 inches it is 12 inches long. To the nearest 14 or 18 inches, it is 0 inches long.
An eighth of and inch is half of a quarter of an inch!
uhhh 32 inches?
25 inches is two feet and an inch.
How many squares with sides that are 6 inches long I needed to cover a square with a side length of 30 inches without overlapping
A standard twin mattress measures 39 inches wide and 76 inches long. If you are making a quilt to fit this mattress, you will want to have at least six additional inches on each side of the quilt to cover the sides of the mattress. Those dimensions would then be 51 inches wide and 88 inches long. As 51 cannot be evenly divided by 4, the width dimension needs to be increased to 52 inches. To achieve a quilt 52 inches wide by 88 inches long, each row will contain 13 four inch squares. You will need to make 22 rows.
A square foot is 12 inches by 12 inches and contains 144 small one-inch squares. If "4 inch squares" means 4 inches long on each side then... 4 inches x 4 inches = 16 sq inches. 144 / 16 = 9 There are three four-inch segments along each side of the square, making 9 smaller squares within the 12 x 12 large one.
You can make it out of either paper or cloth. Paper squares can be glued to a long strip of butcher paper, or taped together to make a big quilt, and cloth squares can actually be sewn into a real quilt.
There would be about 8 to 9 ten-inch squares that can be cut from one yard of fabric, depending on how efficiently the squares are arranged and how much fabric is lost due to cutting and trimming.
Seven 9 inch squares placed end to end would form a rectangle that was still 9 inches wide but 7 x 9 = 63 inches long. The distance around such a rectangle would measure its perimeter. Two sides are 9 inches long and two sides are 63 inches long. The perimeter would be 63 + 63 + 9 + 9 = 144 inches.
Hey, guys, do you have drawers full of T-shirts? You commemorated the rock concerts, the trips to exotic places, your favorite radio station, etc., by purchasing T-shirts. Others gave them as gifts to you, since you seemed to be collecting them. Actually, you are proud of the variety in your collection as well as the many locations they represent. You want to do something with them to free up drawer space and make good use of the T-shirts. There is a great way to display the T-shirts and get a lot of good from them. The design parts of the men’s T-shirts can be made into a quilt. A custom-made T-shirt quilt is a great way to get a bedspread and incorporate great memories into it.Steps:1: Decide which of two ways to make your T-shirt quilt works best for you. If you (or your significant other) are familiar with quilting, make it yourself. For the sewing-impaired, there are many businesses listed on the Internet that provide this service. To find one, search for "t-shirt quilts" on your favorite search engine. Pick from the many companies that provide this service. If you are making the quilt yourself, you can find a lot of helpful information on some of the search-result websites.2: Determine what size quilt you can make. 15-inch squares are usually used for these quilts. A twin-size quilt, 60 inches wide by 90 inches long, requires 24 T-shirt squares. Full-size, 75 inches wide by 90 inches long, requires 25 squares. Queen-size, 105 inches wide by 90 inches long, requires 42 squares.3: Follow the instructions on the chosen website, or do-it-yourselfers go to Step 4.4: Accurately cut the squares from the T-shirts. Arrange and rearrange them until you have the look you want. Sew the squares together. Sashing, a colored fabric strip between each square, may be used or not. It is recommended when squares are very similar in color.5: Complete the quilt with batting, backing, and binding of your choice. If sashing is used, the same fabric is a good choice for backing. Quilt as desired.
Anything over an 18 inch throat space is classified as a 'long arm' machine. 'Mid-arm' is 11-16 inches, 'short arm' is 9-11 inches. The bigger throat space the bigger area you are able to quilt between rolling the quilt on the frame.
Yes into 10 inches by 10 inches squares
Standard King size quilt (120" x 128") = 144 10inch blocks. That does not include any sashing or borders. (Roughly 12 squares across, 12 squares down. Though I'd expand to 13 squares down for aesthetic reasons.)
To the nearest 12 inches it is 12 inches long. To the nearest 14 or 18 inches, it is 0 inches long.
It can be any rectangle having a combination of width and length that, when multiplied together, yield a product of 100 squares. The rectangle could be 1 square wide and 100 squares long, or 5 squares wide and 20 squares long, or it could be a plane square with 10 squares wide on each side.
An eighth of and inch is half of a quarter of an inch!