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A hank of unraveled yarn before unkinking |
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Before unkinking, closeup |
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The same hank after unkinking |
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After, closeup |
The final step: the unkinked hank wound into a cake on a mechanical ball-winder:
Unkinked yarn in a cake |
I believe you can see that this unkinked yarn will knit up so much better than the "before" ramen-noodle yarn.
Unkinking does add delay to the schedule, to allow the yarn to dry. However, wrapping the wet yarn in a thick towel and stomping on it removes an amazing amount of water. Cunningly spreading the hank on drying rack positioned over a radiator or hot-air heating vent can reduce the delay to an overnight, rather than 24 hours. In the summertime, spreading the hank on a drying rack in the shade on a breezy day has a similar speeding effect. (Don't dry yarn directly in the sun--it can become both coarse and faded.)
Best, TK
You have been reading TECHknitting blog on WHY to unkink yarn before reuse