Prehistoric sewing needles { "type": "ExternalData", "service": "page", "title": "ROCEEH/Eyed_needle.map" } The first form of sewing was probably tying together animal skins using shards of bone as needles, with animal sinew or plant material as thread. The early limitation was the ability to produce a small enough hole in a needle matrix, such as a bone sliver, not to damage the material. Traces of this survive in the use of awls to make eyelet holes in fabric by separating rather than cutting the threads. Bone awls have been found in southern Africa at
Blombos Cave dated to 73,000-70,000 years ago. A point that might be from a bone needle dates to 61,000 years ago and was discovered in
Sibudu Cave,
South Africa. A needle made from bird bone and attributed to archaic humans,
the Denisovans, estimated to be around 50,000 years-old, and was found in
Denisova Cave. A bone needle, dated to the
Aurignacian age (47,000 to 41,000 years ago), was discovered in
Potok Cave () in the Eastern
Karawanks, Slovenia. Bone and ivory needles found in the Xiaogushan prehistoric site in
Liaoning province date between 30,000 and 23,000 years old. Ivory needles were also found dated to 30,000 years ago at the
Kostenki site in Russia. 8,600-year-old Neolithic needle bones were discovered at Ekşi Höyük, western Anatolia, in present-day
Denizli Province.
Flinders Petrie found copper sewing needles at
Naqada,
Egypt, ranging from 4400 BC to 3000 BC. Iron sewing needles were found at the
Oppidum of Manching, dating to the third century BC.
Ancient sewing needles A form of needle lace named
nålebinding seems to generally predate knitting and crochet by thousands of years, partly because it can use far shorter rough-graded threads than knitting does.
Native Americans were known to use sewing needles from natural sources. One such source, the
agave plant, provided both the needle and the "thread." The agave leaf would be soaked for an extended period of time, leaving a pulp, long, stringy fibres, and a sharp tip connecting the ends of the fibres. The "needle" is essentially what was the tip end of the leaf. Once the fibres dried, the fibres and "needle" could then be used to sew items together. Sewing needles are an application of wire-making technology, which started to appear in the second millennium B.C. Some fine examples of Bronze Age gold toques are made of very consistent gold wire, which is more malleable than bronze. However, copper and bronze needles do not need to be as long, as the eye can be made by turning the wire back on itself and
redrawing it through the
die.
Later sewing needles collection The next major break-through in needle-making was the arrival of high-quality
steel-making technology from China in the tenth century, principally in Spain in the form of the
Catalan furnace, which soon extended to produce reasonably high quality steel in significant volumes. This technology later extended to Germany and France, although not significantly in England. England began creating needles in 1639 at
Redditch, creating the drawn-wire technique still in common use today. About 1655, needle manufacturers were sufficiently independent to establish a Guild of Needlemakers in London, although Redditch remained the principal place of manufacture. In Japan,
Hari-Kuyo, the Festival of Broken Needles, dates back to the 1600s. == See also ==