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As far as possible, thread type should be matched to the fabric being used. Therefore, use cotton thread for cotton fabrics, silk thread for silk fabrics and polyester thread for any heavier and/or manmade fabrics.
To use a needle and thread could be called sewing.To use a needle and thread could be called quilting. To use a needle and thread could be called embroidery. To use a needle and thread could be called suturing.
No but the sewing machines thread the needle for you will help.
The polyester material is made into threads, and the thread is then woven into cloth.
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.
Polyester is a synthetic material it tends to slide when you want to sew it. You can not keep the tension tight, on your machine, and once you do get it's hard to keep it. The material is thin so it dose not seem to pull the thread through the needle as well as cotton for example.
A hypodermic needle. a record player needle
It depends. If your sewing thread is 100% cotton, yes. If youre sewing thread is 100% or any% polyester, no. Cotton is a natural material where polyester is a man-made, synthetic material.
It's dyed I think
I am having a bit of difficulty with putting this thread through the eye of the needle. You haven't a thread of evidence!
A needle.
The thread moves from the spool through the needle to make stitches on a sewing machine. The thread take-up lever is what feeds the thread from the spool to the needle as it moves up and down.