It's always best to join at the end of a row, even if that seems wasteful. Leave a few inches length of both old and new yarn to work into the edge later, and that way your knot can be very small.
Meat, wool, milk, lamb chops! and a neatly mown lawn.
have a look at knittinghelp.com to learn to knit and join ravelry.com for help and patterns
get some wool and then stich it all together and then welar
Wool comes from sheep, the farmers shave it off and weave it together.
wool that has become tangled, matted or felted together on the sheep's back
Shapes when tessellated fit neatly together with no overlaps or gaps
To join picture frame corners effectively, you can use a miter saw to cut the corners at a 45-degree angle, ensuring they fit together neatly. Apply wood glue to the mitered edges before securing them with clamps until the glue dries. For added strength, you can also use corner braces or nails to reinforce the joints.
Rubbing two pieces of wool together creates static electricity. When placed close together, the opposite charges on the wool pieces attract each other, causing them to stick together momentarily due to the static force.
To dovetail is to fit neatly together. Her plans dovetail with my own.
No, "compact" is not a prefix. It is an adjective that means closely and neatly packed together.
to join (as in to participate) = hitstaref (?????) to join (as in to connect to pieces together) = khiber (????)
No, not in the same way that wool felts. Cotton lacks the 'hooks' that wool contains, so cotton doesn't 'stick together' as well as does wool.