Basting or tacking Stitch (even and uneven)
Diagonal stitch
And Tailors Tacking
They are basting stitches which can easily be taken out at a later time. they are longer than the normal stitches
They are loose, long stitches that are designed to hold the fabric in place until you can put in the real stitches - they're also called basting stitches.
The most basic temporary hand stitch is call basting. It is a long, straight stitch to hold the fabrics together in place until the permanent stitches are placed.
a permanent stitch is when you are sure what you want to so you permanent stitch it which should hold there for a very long time
Temporary stitches are to hold the fabric while you sew and the permanent ones are to have the fabric held while you use it.
running stitches
Temporary stitches, or dissolvable stitches, are put in place by a doctor to fix a cut or surgical incision. Three uses for them are after a vaginal delivery if the woman tore during childbirth, to close up a cut on an internal organ, and in many veterinary surgeries.
Pictures of different kinds of stitches can be found in embroidery books as well as knitting and crocheting books. You may find online tutorials as well that have pictures of these stitches.
C4B means "cable four back" and is a cable worked over four stitches. Assuming you knit from right to left you place two stitches on your cable needle (or another temporary stitch holder), hold it behind your work, knit two stitches and then knit the two stitches you placed on the cable needle.
Different doctors use different methods. The staples or stitches used can either dissolve or be removed after the penis is healed.
There are several different types of Indian stitches. Some of the stitches that are often used is the running stitch that is used in Kantha embroidery, the chain stitch used in Zardozi embroidery, and the buttonhole stitch used in Chikankari embroidery.
There are many different types of sewing, and each has different stitches. When sewing fabrics together for clothing, you would use Straight Stitch, Overcast Stitch, Hem Stitch, Zig Zag Stitch, and Overlock Stitch. There are several variations on these also. For cross stitch projects, the main stitch is Cross Stitch, but there are also Half Cross, Vertical Cross, quarter cross, and some others. For needlepoint there are hundreds of stitches. some of the main ones include outline stitch, continental stitch, satin stitch, and enough other stitches to fill a complete stitch dictionary: http://www.needlepointers.com/ShowArticles.aspx?NavID=825 Here is a list of some of the more common types of embroidery stitches, with many variations in each category; Straight stitches, back stitches, chain stitches, buttonhole stitches, feather stitches, cross stitches, knotted stitches, and couching stitches. In Knitting there are just two basic stitches - knit and purl - but they can be employed in many different ways, and instructions for knitting also contain many other terms, such as yarn-over. In Crochet there are also just a few basic stitches, but many variations.