The majority of sewing machine needles are made of various grades of hardened steel coated with either nickel or chromium, though certain specialty needles are coated with titanium nitride on top of chromium. Titanium nitride is a reflective golden-colored ceramic material which reduces abrasion allowing the needle to stay sharper longer and last many times longer than other varieties. The titanium does not make the needle any stronger in regards to bending, however, and such needles will bend and snap just as easily as any other.
Nickel plating is the least expensive and least durable form of plating. Chrome plating lasts longer and gives better abrasion resistance. Titanium nitride on top of chromium is the most expensive and is superior in performance to both chrome and nickel.
More than a dozen modern conventions exist for numbering the sizes of sewing machine needles, though only two remain in common use: the American (established and propagated by Singer) and the international system (also called the "European", "number metric" or "NM" system). The European designation, established in 1942, corresponds to the diameter of the needle in hundredths of a millimeter at a non-reinforced point above the scarf. In both cases, a larger number corresponds to a larger, heavier needle.
Most sewing machine needles will have packaging that gives both of these numbers in its size description — (e.g. as either 100/16 or 16/100). The length of all sewing machine needles has been standardized and does not require a separate code.
The metric designation is the actual needle diameter in hundredths of a millimeter.3 The following chart gives a comparison of the two systems:4
Most currently manufactured needles are designated according to "type", and fall into the following categories:
Singer colors and numbers its needles with the following system of codes to indicate the needle point type and shaft size:
100
The coloured band on some types of Inspira needles indicates the needle type.
Kenmore colors its needles with a different system of color codes which indicate the needle's size:
The coloured top band on some types of Schmetz needles indicates the needle shank types.5
Schmetz needles with a universal needle (shank) have a colored bottom band indicating the (shaft) sizes:6
Lydia Morgan (November 6, 2008). "Machine-needle know-how". Threads Magazine. No. 94. pp. 59–61. http://www.threadsmagazine.com/item/3751/machine-needle-know-how ↩
Classification of Sewing Machine Needles https://www.singersewinginfo.co.uk/needle_classification ↩
Sizes.com - needles https://www.sizes.com/tools/needles.htm ↩
Needle Size Conversion Chart https://www.thethreadexchange.com/miva/merchant.mvc?Screen=CTGY&Category_Code=needle_size_conversion_chart ↩
Schmetz Needle Chart http://www.schmetzneedles.com/learning/pdf/schmetz-needle-chart.pdf ↩