Cotton was used to make flour sacks.
Jute is often used to make sacking.
corn flour
the awns3r is fib3r
No. Flour is made from grain.
they worked as millers to make flour and used the flour to make bread to feed their families.
bamboo
Windmills grind grain such as wheat into flour, the flour is used by a bakery to make bread.
Strong flour is used for bread making to create a frame and not let it collapse.
It can sometimes be used.
The noun 'biscuit' is a common noun, a general word for a variety of baked, flour-based food products; a general word for a light brown color.The noun 'biscuit' is not a material noun. A material noun is a word for a thing used to make other things, for example, flour, shortening, salt, etc. (all common nouns).
No. They used regular flour.
These vintage sacks are all 50 to 60 years old--so be careful how you treat them. Flour and feed sacks were made for the dye to stay in, to make dresses and aprons, and they can be washed with fabric detergent. Seed sacks , on the other hand, can not be washed or dry cleaned as the color will come out. It was made to come out in one washing, so the sack was nice and white and could be used to make dish towels and underwear. A dirty seed sack is of more value then a faded sack. I have over 300 vintage seed sacks of many colors and would never wash them. They are for display only.