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Life Skills in a Minute: Threading a Needle

Heather Janney

Threading a needle may sound simple, but is it? A lot of people don't know how. Does the needle scare them? Did they never learn? Can they not see well enough to thread it? So many questions! There are a few different ways to thread a needle, all of which are appropriate.

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The Old-Fashioned Way

Supplies

  • Needle
  • Spool of thread
  • Scissors

The old-fashioned way is the easiest and can simplify things so much. You will need a spool of thread and a needle. Cut a piece of thread large enough to loop it through the needle and back. Sixteen inches of thread makes for a manageable size. Once you have pulled the thread out and cut it, put the end still attached to the spool into the notch on the side to keep it from unraveling. Take the piece of thread you cut and push it through the eye of the needle. You may also choose to trim the end of the thread so that it is angled and no errant “fuzz” hinders threading.

All you need is thread and a needle.
Figure 1. All you need is thread and a needle.
Credit: Heather Janney, UF/IFAS

Using a Needle Threader

A needle threader is included in most sewing kits. It resembles a flattened coin. Cut the thread the same as described earlier.

Push the little metal loop of the threader through the eye of the needle. Insert the thread through the loop, and pull the needle threader back out of the eye of the needle. The thread will come with the needle threader, and your needle is now threaded.

A needle threader.
Figure 2. A needle threader.
Credit: Heather Janney, UF/IFAS

A Newer, Less-Known Way That Helps Those with Impaired Vision

Cut your piece of thread as previously instructed. Drape the thread across your palm with the ends hanging off your palm and just below your pointer finger. Pick up your needle and lay it across the thread so that the eye of the needle is facing up. Begin moving the needle across the thread, and eventually it will bunch up through the eye of the needle. The thread pulls through leaving the needle threaded.

This can take a lot of practice.

Experiment with threading a needle to decide which way is your favorite.

Drape the thread across your palm.
Figure 3. Drape the thread across your palm.
Credit: Heather Janney, UF/IFAS

Source

Baker, M. (2004). Hand stitches. University of Kentucky Cooperative Extension: CT-MMB.002. Available at https://fcs-hes.ca.uky.edu/sites/fcs-hes.ca.uky.edu/files/ct-mmb-002.pdf

Peer Reviewed

Publication #4H413

Release Date:August 3, 2021

Related Experts

Janney, Heather M.

County agent

University of Florida

Fact Sheet
General Public
4-H/Youth

About this Publication

This document is 4H413, one of a series of the 4-H Youth Development Department, UF/IFAS Extension. Original publication date August 2021. Visit the EDIS website at https://edis.ifas.ufl.edu for the currently supported version of this publication.

About the Authors

Heather M. Janney, county Extension director and Extension agent II, MS, UF/IFAS Extension Columbia County, Lake City, FL 32055.

Contacts

  • Heather Janney