it becomes straight
To 'iron on' letters you must first insert a piece of paper behind the piece of material where the letters are going to be and then you arrange the letters to spell the wording that you have decided upon taking care to space them out evenly,finally you must cover the 'iron on letters' with a sheet of greeseproof paper and with a hot iron (not a steam iron) you iron over it keeping the iron moving and pressing down on it a little for a few minutes allowing the letters to adhere to the item which you can test by carefully lifting a corner of the greeseproof paper up,if the words stay on the cloth then you have ironed it enough but if the words lift you should reiron it for another minute or so and test again,by now it should be fixed onto the garment,leave it to cool for a minute and then carefully remove the paper and voila! your letters are 'fixed where you wanted them to be .
Yes once it is cleaned and primed
They usually have to do with care instructions, like whether or not it's okay to iron the fabric, or machine wash/dry it. There is often something on the yarn as well for what weight the yarn is and what gauge and needle size it will be when knit/crocheted.
rays, nays, yarn, zany, nary, ryan
A magnet will cause the iron to adhere and separate. Or adding water will dissolve the sugar and the iron can be filtered out and then the water evaporated from the sugar.
cry, nor, on, con, an, ran, can, car, corn, yarn,ray
Jury, raja, yarn, nary, rana
IRON
Iron :)
You can make several different words out of those letters. Some of these words are ray, ran, no, yarn, arc, on, and can.
When you unscramble the letters mmanrya you get rammy, mayan and amman. There is not a single word that uses all seven letters that were given. Additional words that can be made from those letters include ray, yarn, Mary, and ran.