Question:

Knitting a hat?

If I wanted to make a hat with the yarn that I have but dont have a pattern for it how would I go about finding the right number of stitches to cast on and what not?

Answer:

Hydrogen and oxygen in water
Lead from the soldering on an electrical boardLead from a fishing weight (if someone in your family fishes)Iron nailAluminum (foil, cans, some electrical wires that have to carry a lot of current, some cookware) Iron (a cast iron radiator, some cookware) copper (pipes for water, electrical wiring) carbon (parts of some electric motors, coal) neon from a signthere really isn't tin in cans anymore, it's aluminum nowthe calcium in an egg shell? it's definitely not pure, if not in a compoundzinc is definitely not alone in a pennymercury in a traditional style thermometer platinum jewelry diamonds are a form of carbon silicon from microchips
Aluminum - Aluminum Foil Titanium - core of a golf ball Carbon - Diamond or coal Silicon - microchip Mercury - in a thermometer Lead - in a fishing weight or a bullet Iron - in a nail Copper - electrical wire Just so you know, a penny is not pure zinc but part of an alloy and a shell is not pure calciumBut a galvanized metal has a zinc coatingGood Luck
Nitrogen in air (N2) Carbon in methane/farts (CH4) Oxygen in air (O2) Hydrogen in air (H2) Copper in your water pipes (Cu.maybe an alloy) Sodium in baking soda (NaHCO3)

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