And now I remember where I recognize you from, Chris. Rav. I’m
oh-so-imaginitively MarjorieW.
==Marjorie Wilser (wandering a bit off topic)
> On Aug 19, 2016, at 7:46 AM, Chris Laning wrote:
>
> If the reason you need to know is to figure out how to wash it, you could
>
If the reason you need to know is to figure out how to wash it, you could
simply plan to hand wash it to be on the safe side. Baby things are small and
usually don't take forever to wash or dry.
If there are other concerns (such as potential allergy), the smell and feel
tests should give you a
If you know somebody who is allergic to wool - and they are willing - they
could hold it and see if it triggers a reaction.
Otherwise, microscope. You can buy pretty good microscopes these days,
including some that plug into a computer via USB so you can capture images.
Wool is scaly like hair,
destructive testing for wool/synthetic
Hi everyone,
This is not directly historical but I knew this list would be my best chance
of an answer.
My uncle sent my 2 month old son a gift of a hand knitted cardigan which he
bought from a charity stall. without a label I have no way to know if they
have used
Super fast way: wool is a natural fibre and has scales. So this means that
like human hair you have a smooth direction and a not smooth direction.
If you take a lock of hair, hold it tight you can easily run another finger
down the length but it catches on the way up.
Wool I think is less scaly,
Hi everyone,
This is not directly historical but I knew this list would be my best
chance of an answer.
My uncle sent my 2 month old son a gift of a hand knitted cardigan which he
bought from a charity stall. without a label I have no way to know if they
have used wool or acrylic yarn.
I know I