MAGAZINE

This "magazine" pretends to be a compilation of the best articles in knitting and crochet.
It is a virtual "note book" for the avid knitter and crochetter ... always needing to learn more.
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Showing posts with label Knitting Articles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Knitting Articles. Show all posts

Sunday, 30 August 2015

How To Attach Yarn Using the Russian Join

READ ORIGINAL POST HERE

from Crochet Nirvana





It's Easy - Really!!
Let's face it. Attaching new yarn is a pain. When I started crocheting I did my best to avoid it. Unfortunately that lead to some small, plain projects. Eventually I faced my fear and made a striped hat. It's not real pretty, but it helped me get the hang of adding color to my world. The hardest part was having faith that I didn't need to tie a knot. I worried that everything was too loose. I realized that after working a few rows the join tightened up on its own. Hooray! It took practice, but now I don't panic when I get to the end of a ball of yarn, or avoid patterns that have more than one color. Then I started knitting. Now I have to learn how to attach new yarn all over again! There are different techniques depending on what kind of needles you use. It's challenging because it's new, but I'm sure that with practice it will get easier. There is one thing that's the same - the loose ends. No matter what you do or how you do it there are going to be ends that need to be woven in. This is my least favorite part of knitting and crochet. I procrastinate and leave it until the end, and I always worry that it's going to come undone and my hard work will unravel right before my eyes. I don't think I'm alone in this - am I?

Then I heard about the Russian Join. It sounded really difficult, like it involved weaving and grafting and maybe even a little magic. It also seemed too good to be true. A clean join with no ends to weave in? Nonsense! So for a long time I steered clear. Until a few months ago when I stumbled across this post and decided to give it a try. It was so easy, the results were beautiful and you know the best part - no ends to weave in!! It's not appropriate in every situation, but now whenever possible this is my go to method. Even if you don't think you'll like it, I encourage you to give this a try. Just once, and see if it doesn't become a favorite in your bag of tricks!

Here's how you do it:

























Once your yarns are joined and stitched into the fabric it's nearly impossible to tell where the breaks are.
Take a look at this fingerless mitt. I actually had to mark where the join was after I did it because I was afraid if I didn't by the time I was ready to take the picture I wouldn't be able to find it again! Once the join is made, it feels really secure when you tug on it and I'm not concerned at all about it coming undone.
For me the best part is no ends!
Yesterday I was working on a pair of socks and I used the Russian Join to add a new ball of yarn. Not more than a yard into it I came to a knot. (I just hate that, don't you?)
Anyway, I wasn't about to let that knot ruin the sole of the sock so I clipped it out and fashioned myself another Russian Join.
It took a few extra minutes, but in the end I was able to knit straight through. Now there are no lumps in the bottom of the sock and the only ends that need to be woven in are from when I cast on and after I bind off.

Monday, 17 August 2015

Instructions for Knitting Short Rows

How to Work Short Rows in Knitting: Instructions for Knitting Short Rows
by Véronik Avery, from Interweave Knits Winter 2004

Short rows, also known as partial or turning rows, appear daunting to some knitters but are in reality very simple: work extra rows across a portion of the stitches on the needles, thereby lengthening the fabric in the area where the short rows are worked. Short rows can be used to shape shoulders, custom fit the bust area, and impart design elements such as staggered stripes. In this detailed article you’ll learn step by step how to knit short rows including:

Read the ARTICLE HERE

Learn the wrap-and-turn method.
Explore method 2, the yarnover method.
Explore method 3, the Japanese method.
Explore method 4, the catch method.
Learn about how to use short rows in knitting patterns.

Many knitters shy away from knitting short rows—it isn’t that they have trouble working just some of the stitches on the needle, it’s the fact that doing so always seems to produce a hole in the knitting. Although in some cases the holes can be design elements, in most cases, they distract from the purpose of the short rows—invisibly adding length to a particular area of a piece. However, there are several ways to eliminate (or hide) the holes so that the short rows become nearly invisible. This article focuses on a variety of ways for short row knitting in stockinette stitch (knit on right-side rows; purl on wrong-side rows).

Before beginning, you should be familiar with a few terms.

The turning point is the place where the knitting changes direction between one row and the next (much like making a U-turn when driving). Unless you do something to prevent it, a hole will form at the turning point. The turning yarn is the section of working yarn that marks the turning point. The turning yarn is used to hide or mask the hole on a subsequent row. The stitch mount is the direction that the stitches lie on the needle. For the purposes of this article, we’ll assume that the “correct” stitch mount has the right (leading) leg of the stitch on the front of the needle.

Short Rows Method #1: Wrap-and-Turn Method

In this common method of short rows knitting, the turning yarn is wrapped around the first unworked stitch (the stitch that immediately follows the last worked stitch). The way that the stitch is wrapped depends on whether the knit or purl side is facing.

Knit side facing: Knit the required number of stitches to the turning point, slip the next stitch purlwise to the right needle (Figure 1), bring the yarn to the front between the needles, return the slipped stitch to the left needle (Figure 2), bring the working yarn to the back between the needles, and turn the work so that the purl side is facing—one stitch has been wrapped and the yarn is correctly positioned to purl the next stitch. Eventually, you will knit across the wrapped stitch—maybe on the next row or maybe several short rows later. When you do, hide the wrap (the horizontal bar of yarn across the wrapped stitch) on a knit row as follows: knit to the wrapped stitch, insert the tip of the right needle into both wrap and the wrapped stitch (Figure 3), and knit them together. This forces the turning yarn (the “wrap”) to the back (wrong-side) of the fabric.

Purl side facing: Purl to the turning point, slip the next stitch purlwise to the right needle, bring the yarn to the back of the work (Figure 1), return the slipped stitch to the left needle, bring the yarn to the front between the needles (Figure 2), and turn the work so that the knit side is facing—one stitch has been wrapped and the yarn is correctly positioned to knit the next stitch.

To hide the wrap on a subsequent purl row, work to the wrapped stitch, use the tip of the right needle to pick up the turning yarn from the back, place it on the left needle (Figure 3), then purl it together with the wrapped stitch.


Short Rows Method #2: Yarnover Method

In the yarnover method for knit short rows, the turning yarn is positioned on the needle when the work is turned, and is in place to work together with the next stitch (and hide the hole) on the next row.

The turning yarn may be loose for some knitters, but the resulting hole is much easier to eliminate.

Work the required number of stitches to the turning point (knit if a right-side row; purl if a wrong-side row), turn the work, and make a yarnover. To account for the fact that the amount of yarn required to make a yarnover depends on the type of stitch that follows it, work a typical yarnover if the knit side is facing; work a yarn forward if the purl side is facing as follows:

Knit side facing: Bring the yarn forward, over the top of the needle, then to the back of the work (Figure 1).

Purl side facing: Hold the yarn in back, insert the tip of the right needle into the next stitch, bring the yarn over the top of the right needle (yarn forward), and purl the first stitch (Figure 2). The stitch mount of the yarn forward will be backward (leading leg in back of the needle) and will need to be corrected before it is worked on a subsequent row.

When it comes time to close the gap on a subsequent row, work the yarnover together with the nearest unworked stitch, depending on whether the knit or purl side is facing as follows:

Knit stitch follows: Correct the mount of the yarnover (leading leg on front of needle), then knit the yarnover together with the unworked stitch (k2tog).

Purl stitch follows: Slip the yarnover knitwise, slip the unworked stitch knitwise, return both stitches to the left needle (leading legs in back of the needle), and purl them together through their back loops (ssp).

Note that these instructions are for working stockinette stitch back and forth in rows. If you want to use the yarnover method of working short rows in texture patterns or in pieces worked in the round, see your pattern for details.



Short Rows Method #3: Japanese Method—Mark the Turning Yarn

Executed in a way similar to the yarnover, this short row knitting method marks the turning yarn with a removable marker such as a split-ring marker, safety pin, or waste yarn. As it uses less yarn than the preceding methods, it is ideal for working short-row heels and toes on socks. Work the required number of stitches to the turning point, then turn the work. Place a removable marker on the turning yarn (Figure 1). When it’s time to close the gap on a subsequent row, slip the stitch immediately before the turning yarn, pull up on the marker and place the turning yarn on the needle, then transfer the slipped stitch back onto the left needle (Figure 2), and work the turning yarn together with the next stitch as described for the yarnover method.


Short Rows Method #4: Catch Method

There are two ways for knitting short rows using this method. While it is easier to close the gap with the second method (because the yarn is already in position to work together with the slipped stitch), it does use more yarn. For both methods, work the required number of stitches to the turning point, then turn the work.

Method 1: If the purl side is facing, slip the first stitch purlwise with the yarn in front (Figure 1); if the knit side is facing, slip the stitch with the yarn in back. When it’s time to close the gap, pick up the stand of yarn below the slipped stitch (Figure 2), and work it together with the slipped stitch as for the yarnover method.

Method 2: Slip the first stitch purlwise while holding the working yarn over the needle (instead of in front or back of the needle), effectively executing a yarnover (Figure 3). Close the gap as for the yarnover method.


Using Short Rows in Your Knitting

A useful way to incorporate short rows into your knitting is to add bust ease. In sewing patterns, extra fabric is allotted to the bust area by sewing darts, which in effect take away fabric below (or above) the bust. Knitting works the opposite way by adding extra fabric in the bust area, but the result is the same: more fabric (a “pouch”) at the bust where it is needed, and less fabric above or below the bust where it isn’t.

The number and length of short rows to work will depend on your gauge and the amount of bust shaping you want to add. In general, work until the sweater front measures about 1″ or 2″ (2.5 or 5 cm) below the beginning of the armhole shaping.

Starting with a right-side row, work short rows across the center front as follows: Knit about three-quarters of the way across the row (in line with where the center of your right breast would be), wrap the next stitch, turn the work, and work to about one-quarter of the way from the end of the row (in line with where the center of your left breast would be), wrap the next stitch, and turn the work. Work a few more short rows back and forth, working about 1″ (2.5 cm) of stitches beyond the previous wrapped stitch (hide the wrap when you come to it), wrapping the next stitch, and turning the work to work in the opposite direction. Then reverse the shaping by wrapping and turning when you are about 1″ (2.5 cm) of stitches before the previous wrapped stitch, for the same number of short rows as worked previously. (For a less exaggerated pouch, work a couple of regular rows—working from selvedge to selvedge—between the short rows.) The result will be additional rows (length) in the center of the piece (Figure 1).

Article: Incorporating Short Rows In Knitting: A Continuation of How to Knit Short Rows

by Véronik Avery, originally appeared in Interweave Knits, Winter 2005.


In this continuation of the short row tutorials, we go into ways short rows are incorporated into knitting. Knitwear designers rely often on this technique to maximize shaping options, now you can learn how to do the same. Download this guide to continue what you’ve learned here on this page.

Read the ARTICLE HERE

Short Rows - The Sequel


Knitting beyond the basics

from KnittingDaily

Read the ARTICLE HERE

Patterns from the author HERE and HERE and HERE

Sunday, 16 August 2015

Saturday, 15 August 2015

Knitting in the Round: Hand-Knitted Textiles and the Economies of Craft in Scotland

Knitting in the Round: Hand-Knitted Textiles and the Economies of Craft in Scotland

‌This network will develop collaborations between a range of sectors: business, heritage, education, tourism and culture and arts; and will explore how historical understandings of knit as an economic, creative and cultural practice inform modern and contemporary uses of this textile practice. Knit is the pin-up craft for sustainability, creativity and authenticity.

Read the POST HERE

19th Century Manuals OnLine

19th Century Manuals OnLine

Library Digitisation Unit: LDU

The Library Digitisation Unit provides a digitisation and scanning service to the University of Southampton. We are currently focusing on making School and Library resources available online.

Website HERE

Website HERE

Website HERE


In the Loop: the renewal of knitting

In the Loop: the renewal of knitting
1 January 2009

Newington, Linda (2009) In the Loop: the renewal of knitting. University of Southampton Special Collections Newsletter., 2009, (7), 16-17.

With knitting once again enjoying a huge surge in popularity, the relevance and renewal of this craft was celebrated with an exhibition and conference in summer 2008.
The source of inspiration for these two events was the Knitting Collections held by the University of Southampton Library.

Read the article HERE


Examples of some of the vintage knitting patterns

Inspiring the Generations:

The Knitting Reference Library On The Left: Examples of some of the vintage knitting patterns.

Words by Linda Newington

Read the Pdf  article HERE



A knitting legacy: Linda Newington opens up the doors to the University of Southampton’s fascinating knitting collections.
1 January 2011

Written by Linda Newington, Head Librarian at Winchester School of Art campus, this article focusses on the three main collections held in the Knitting Reference Library.

Newington, Linda (2011) A knitting legacy: Linda Newington opens up the doors to the University of Southampton’s fascinating knitting collections. The Knitter, 32, 38-39.

Written by Linda Newington, Head Librarian at Winchester School of Art campus, this article focusses on the three main collections held in the Knitting Reference Library.