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The exercise of sewing, as in using thread and needle to attach respective kinds of material, has been dated to at least 20,000 years ago. Sewing is practically a universal occurrence, and the actual beginnings of it stretch back to the beginnings of history. It predates the weaving of cloth by numerous centuries, and was used to stitch together hides, furs, and bark for costume and other uses. Early sewing needles were made from bone, wood, or natural needles taken from plants as Native Americans did with the agave plant. The earliest verified sewing needles made from iron date back to the third century B.C.E. and were found in what is now Germany. Chinese archaeologists report finding a finish set of iron sewing needles and thimbles in a tomb dating from the Han Dynasty (202 BC-AD 220) in China. This is the earliest known example of a thimble in history. The thimble was developed to aid early sewers to push needles through thick hides and furs, and was introductory made from bone, wood, leather, now and again glass and porcelain. Later thimbles begun to be made from metal, and before the 18th century dimples in a thimble had to be punched into it by hand. The thimble likewise became an object of beauty with thimbles made from precious and semi-precious stones, and precious metals. The primary thread was made from plant fibers and animal sinew, which was used to sew together hides and furs for clothing, blankets and shelter. Later it was found that fibers from plants and animals could be spun together to make thread. The ancient Egyptians made thread by spinning these fibers together, and formulated methods of dying the thread using berries and plant matter. In China and Japan, silk fibers taken from the cocoon of the silk worm was spun to make very fine thread. For most of the history of sewing, it was done by hand. From the simplest stitches to ornate ornamental work was done with a needle, thread and a steady hand. It remained so until the firstborn patent for a machine that “emulated hand sewing” in 1790 in England. It is not known whether there ever was a machine built from the 1790 patent. The basi functioning sewing machine was issued a patent to Barthelemy Thimonnier in France in 1830. It employed a single thread and a hooked needle to make a chain stitch similar to the one employed in hand embroidery. The inventor was closely killed when enraged French tailors rioted and burned down his garment factory because they dire the machine would cause unemployment. In 1846 the American Elias Howe was issued a patent for his machine, but the mass production of the machines did not occur until the 1850′s when Isaac Singer built the firstborn genuinely successful sewing machine. With needle, thread, thimble and machine, the art and craft of it has not only formed items for our use and comfort. Sewing has helped form civilization itself.
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