No, wool cannot eat your hair away. Wool is a natural fiber derived from sheep and does not have the ability to consume or damage hair. However, if you experience hair breakage or damage while wearing wool garments, it may be due to friction or static rather than any chemical interaction. Proper care and conditioning can help minimize hair damage when wearing wool.
They lie to hide in the folds and eat wool, silk, carpet, natural fibers, mostly any type of fabric.
Wool is not known for its nutritive value. Wool is fleece grown on the skins of animals -- much like humans grow hair. Before you eat wool, envision how your cat behaves from ingesting too much of its fur.
Your question is unclear. The 'hair' of sheep is wool.
Moths eat wool, natural naturals such as hair, feathers, fur, fabrics, carpet, even juices.
Wool has air trapped in the hair fibers. This acts as insulation. The wool also absorbs water so it wicks the water away from the skin.
Wool has air trapped in the hair fibers. This acts as insulation. The wool also absorbs water so it wicks the water away from the skin.
That is the correct spelling of "wool" (sheep's hair).
One could surmise that wool is the 'hair' of the fleece-bearing animal that grows it. Hair, however, is not made from wool or fleece, unless of course, you're asking about a Raggedy Ann or Raggedy Andy doll. Their hair may be made from wool.
The hair of a sheep is referred to as wool. Fleece is the wool of a lamb.
most wool comes from goats. It is their hair.
Siamese cats are not supposed to eat wool
Wool, But there is one breed that has hair