what they actually mean and what is usage is two different things .. a bundle is one skein or one hank .. some people will put one very large hank and call it a bundle .. others will put many skeins tied together and call it a bundle .. the one thing the usually have in common is you have to wind them .. they are not pull skeins .. if someone says they have a bundle you will have to ask what exactly they are offering you .. but be prepared to wind ..
It's a skein of yarn.
hank
A skein.
IT IS CALLED A CLEW.
A skein is the small bundle one would buy at a craft store.A hank is a bundle of skeins. Defined as follows:a traditional measure of length for yarn. The length of yarn in a hank varies with the market and the material; for example, a hank of cotton yarn traditionally included 840 yards (768 meters) of yarn, while a hank of wool yarn was 560 yards (512 meters). For both cotton and wool, these traditional hanks are equal to 7 leas or to 12 cuts. In the U.S., however, a hank of woolen yarn is generally 1600 yards (1463 meters). In retail trade, a hank is often equal to 6 or 7 skeins of varying size.(http://www.unc.edu/~rowlett/units/dictH.html#hank)
depends on how far it is, you could get a pack of 2 meters or 12 meters
Michaels.com and the blogger pinkwhen.com have videos that helped me learn how to arm knit. As a tip, your "working yarn" (the yarn pulled from the yarn bundle) is the yarn thread that you wrap around your thumb and the tail of your yarn is the yarn thread that goes over your wrist (this will make sense if you watch the videos). You will need at least 2 separate balls of thick yarn (I used a 6oz weight) but I actually wondering myself if 5oz is chunky enough. This is due to the loose nature of the knit because your arms and hands are replacing what would normally be the needle(s) in traditional knitting.
The noun bundle is a collective noun for:a bundle of asparagusa bundle of banknotesa bundle of firewooda bundle of joya bundle of newspapersa bundle of ragsa bundle of papersa bundle of sticksa bundle of trouble
Yes, the noun 'bundle' is a standard collective noun for:a bundle of asparagusa bundle of firewooda bundle of joya bundle of ragsa bundle of papersa bundle of sticksa bundle of trouble
Yarn is an irregular plural so plural for yarn is yarn. It can be singular or plural.
difference between spun yarn and filament yarn
* yarn elongation is stretching of yarn before breakage of yarn and it is related with workability of machine and process * yarn elongation is nothing but the the fibre strength
$20 = $500/bundle; $10 = $250/bundle; $5 = $100/bundle; $1 = $25/bundle $100 = ?/bundle
Bundle is a noun (a bundle of something) and a verb (to bundle something).
The word bundle is both a noun and a verb. Bundle as a verb: Please bundle those sticks for me. Bundle as a noun: Thank you for the bundle of sticks.