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"Feet" describes a length or distance, like a piece of thread or a road trip. "Square feet" describes a flat area, like a bedroom wall or a football field. They're used to describe completely different quantities, and neither one can be converted into the other one. No matter how long your piece of thread is, it can't cover your front yard. "No matter how long your piece of thread is, it can't cover your front yard." Is actually incorrect. Depending on thickness of the thread, and length of thread, you COULD cover a yard with it. By reaching the end of your yard, and then running it back the other way side by side, this does not decrease the length of thread but it does allow you to cover said yard. Unless you mean "No matter how long your STRAIGHT piece of thread is, it can't cover your front yard." unless of course its a very thick thread.
First take a piece of thread having length of 10 yards. Weight it. then devide it at 10. now you have the weight of one yard. now multiply it to your desired length.
Your tension is too tight. To adjust your tension, thread your machine and sew a test piece. It should be perfectly even within the test piece. If the threads are not centered, adjust your tension wheel and re sew until the threads align. See your owner's manual for instructions.
The problem that you describe requires one more piece of information in order to be solvable, which is, to what depth do you intend to cover those 288 quare feet?
"Square feet" describes the size of a piece of surface that's being covered, like the size of a floorcovered by carpet, or a yard covered by grass, or a wall covered by paint.You don't use square feet to describe a length or a distance, like a piece of rope, a broom handle,or a trip to the store. Those use "feet".You don't use square feet to describe how much something can hold, like a barrel, a bottle,a shopping bag, or a ballon when it's blown up. Those use "cubic feet".
One-piece cranks use 1/2" thread
One-piece cranks use 1/2" thread
"Feet" describes a length or distance, like a piece of thread or a road trip. "Square feet" describes a flat area, like a bedroom wall or a football field. They're used to describe completely different quantities, and neither one can be converted into the other one. No matter how long your piece of thread is, it can't cover your front yard. "No matter how long your piece of thread is, it can't cover your front yard." Is actually incorrect. Depending on thickness of the thread, and length of thread, you COULD cover a yard with it. By reaching the end of your yard, and then running it back the other way side by side, this does not decrease the length of thread but it does allow you to cover said yard. Unless you mean "No matter how long your STRAIGHT piece of thread is, it can't cover your front yard." unless of course its a very thick thread.
it will tickle your throat
With a needle and thread. Or a sewing machine.
It's a thread that's been formed by rolling the piece while hot between two dies.
With a thin round file.
How long is a piece of string? - twice as long as half its length.
You fasten material with needle and thread by sewing the material. In most cases, you will place one piece of material on top of another and then stitch the material together with the needle and thread.
A length of thread is often referred to as a "strand" or a "piece" of thread.
No. Wait until your skin is in one piece again.
It is a piece of cake