The adjective "hand-painted" uses the hyphenated form.
Yes. The Collins English dictionary hyphenates the word "hand-painted."
You should hyphenate "hand-painted" when it precedes the word it is modifying, as in "a hand-painted tray". However, if it is a predicate adjective, as in "All the signs were hand painted", you would not hyphenate it.
No, "hand carved" is not hyphenated. It is typically written as two separate words when used as a verb phrase or when it follows a noun, such as in "a hand carved statue." However, when used as a compound adjective directly before a noun, it can be hyphenated as "hand-carved."
No
"Hand-knitted" is hyphenated. The hyphen is used to connect the two words "hand" and "knitted" to indicate that they work together as a single adjective to describe something that has been knitted by hand.
Depending on usage it might or might not be.
The adjective is usually one word "handcrafted" or otherwise hyphenated hand-crafted (made by hand).
No, "hand crafted" is not typically hyphenated. It can be written as two separate words, "hand crafted," or as one word, "handcrafted." The choice often depends on the style guide being followed, but the unhyphenated forms are generally more common.
In this case is it hyphenated. "Hand-rolled" is hyphened because it's acting as a compound modifier, since both words are joined to describe the cigarette.
Any hyphenated word(s) or phrase does so without the use of spaces. So, hand-in-hand would be the result.
"Handmade" is one "compound word", sometimes hyphenated as "hand-made"; not to be confused with handmaid, which is NOT hyphenated.
Depending on usage it might or might not be.