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  2. YouTube Kids - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/YouTube_Kids

    YouTube has also presented advocacy campaigns through special playlists featured on YouTube Kids, including "#ReadAlong" (a series of videos, primarily featuring kinetic typography) to promote literacy, [12] "#TodayILearned" (which featured a playlist of STEM-oriented programs and videos), [13] and "Make it Healthy, Make it Fun" (a ...

  3. Fiber art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fiber_art

    The most common use of yarn to make cloth is weaving. In weaving, the yarn is wrapped on a frame called a loom and pulled taut vertically. This is known as the warp. Then another strand of yarn is worked back and forth wrapping over and under the warp. This wrapped yarn is called the weft. Most art and commercial textiles are made by this ...

  4. Huichol art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Huichol_art

    These modern yarn paintings quickly proved popular and were imitated. They have also developed into complex designs which can take weeks to complete. [3] [5] The yarn paintings led to experimentation with other commercially produced materials such as beads, which have taken the place of yarn for many Huichol artisans. This beading has been ...

  5. Extra Yarn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extra_Yarn

    Extra Yarn is a 2012 picture book written by Mac Barnett and illustrated by Jon Klassen. The book tells the story of a girl named Annabelle who knits for everyone in her town with a supply of yarn, until an archduke wants the yarn for himself. The book was a recipient of the 2013 Caldecott Honor for its illustrations. [1]

  6. Textile arts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Textile_arts

    The yarn was best used on warping boards or warping reels to create large pieces of cloth that could be dyed and woven into different patterns to create elaborate tapestries and embroideries. [10] One example of how linen was used is in the picture of a bandage that a mummy was wrapped in, dated between 305 and 30 B.C.

  7. Hand spinning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hand_spinning

    A tightly spun wool yarn made from fibre with a long staple length in it is called worsted. It is hand spun from combed top, and the fibres all lie in the same direction as the yarn. A woollen yarn, in contrast, is hand spun from a rolag or other carded fibre (roving, batts), where the fibres are not as strictly aligned to the yarn created. The ...

  8. Yarn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yarn

    Spun yarn is made by twisting staple fibres together to make a cohesive thread, or "single". [17] Twisting fibres into yarn in the process called spinning can be dated back to the Upper Paleolithic, [18] and yarn spinning was one of the first processes to be industrialized. Spun yarns are produced by placing a series of individual fibres or ...

  9. Spindle (textiles) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spindle_(textiles)

    Spindle with cotton yarn, without whorl, representing the "spindle-shape". A modern Turkish spindle is an example of a low-whorl suspended spindle where the whorl is made up of interlocking arms. Here the cop is wound around the arms to form a ball. Spinning with a suspended spindle (below) and distaff (above).