Showing posts with label techniques. Show all posts
Showing posts with label techniques. Show all posts

Trying New Things & Photos of Bubbles

One of the best things about knitting is that you could be doing it for a lifetime and still learn new tricks. We were studying these ancient Persian silk colorwork socks on the Stranded forum and I was wondering if back then they had some special tricks for adding additional colors (as seen on the foot) or doing intarsia in the round that knitters of today haven't discovered yet.

Here are a few new things I've tried recently.

1. PICKING UP HEEL STITCHES - Deb from the Sock Knitter's Anonymous Ravelry group posted this video of how to pick up gusset stitches on a sock. I already do the trick to avoid the hole at the gusset (occasionally - sometimes in a stranded sock it can make things look worse) but the way he picked up the heel stitches in the video was completely new to me. He did it from the reverse side of the heel and after trying it, I decided it does look neater than my previous method.

2. SOCK BLOCKING - I mentioned it before but blocking socks inside out on a sock blocker really does get rid of that crease you get when blocking them right side out. I think stranded socks might also dry a little faster because all the floats are front and center.

3. KNIT FRONT AND BACK INCREASE - From Neen on Ravelry I learned that you can do the knit in the front and back of a stitch increase without getting that noticeable and ugly purl bump. Start by knitting the stitch in the front then after you insert the right needle into the back of the stitch, DON'T WRAP the yarn around the needle, instead just pull the left needle out. Essentially you're not really knitting the back of the stitch but you're grabbing the back of the stitch instead. Her version of this increase looks so much better! Grab whatever you are currently knitting to try it and see.



Kollage Size 3.0 mm square dpns

4. SQUARE DPNS - I finally bought a set of Kollage square dpns. After spending half my life retrieving dpns that have rolled off a table, I was eager to buy a pair to test out. The most amazing thing about these needles is that stitches do not fall off the needles. I am using very slippery yarn for my current project and the stitches stay put. These are quite possibly the best needles for glove fingers ever invented! I wonder if they're hollow inside because they are lighter weight than I expected which is also a plus. On the down side, I don't find them as comfortable on my hands as my usual dpns (Inox/Prym dpns), I tend to knit even tighter with them if such a thing is possible, and I paid $12.50 a set at Webs which is pretty pricey. Still I will be buying a few more sizes though for occasional use with slippery yarns such as alpaca and for all future glove projects.

Bubbles and one of her 10 million beds
I just took some new photos of Bubbles. Speaking of really cute bunnies, check out the bunny in this story from the Santa Fe New Mexican. His name is Ruby and he has the most spectacular ears! Like the girl in the article, I'm also committed to adopting only white bunnies from now on due to their ridiculous lack of popularity. (One pet rabbit rescue even offers free veterinary care for life if you adopt a white bunny with the equally unpopular ruby-eyes.)  As it turns out Bubbles has one of the best personalities of any rabbit I've ever had and she's also the softest.


Bubbles couldn't wait until Easter to get started on her Easter basket full of basil. HAPPY EASTER!

ALL ABOUT FLOATS, PART ONE

I'm beginning a multi-part series about floats in stranded color knitting. I've discussed them before HERE but apparently I have more to say. A lot more! I'm going to show you four ways to deal with floats and you'll be able to see how the front and the back of the work looks.

Floats happen when you knit with two colors. If you knit three stitches in a row in one color, you'll have a float (or strand) across the back of your work in the other color three stitches long. A float is considered long when it is about an inch or so long, about  5-7 sts long depending on yarn weight.

Today I want to talk about how you can determine if a pattern has long floats. Time and time again I see beginners choose patterns with really long floats without knowing what they are getting into. Basically short, geometric patterns have short floats and patterns with asymmetrical larger patterns such as animals or robots often have larger floats.


These Bunnies and Carrots Hats have really long 15-20 st long floats between the bunny's ears.

No long floats in this rainbow mitten design I abandoned.

A really popular pattern during the Olympics was this cute reindeer hat. It has long floats between each reindeer and the original pattern used high contrast colors - white and dark blue - for the design. What this means is that if the floats were woven, the dark color could possibly show through to the front of the work. The Ravelry project photos for the hat are interesting to read - some knitters used intarsia in the round or duplicate stitch for the reindeer to avoid the long floats.


Traditional Fair Isle designs from the Shetland Isles pride themselves on not using floats longer than five stitches. Scandinavian designs do use longer floats but some savvy designers use single stitches or small designs in more complex motifs to help break up long floats. In the famous Dale of Norway polar bear sweater by Mette Handberg, check out the geometric patterning inside the polar bear. That was done to keep the floats from being excessively long.

I always consider the length of the floats when deciding on a pattern. A few long floats here and there won't deter me but if I see a pattern with many long floats I know it will take me longer to knit (whatever method you use for floats can interrupt the flow of your color knitting) and could possibly cause tension problems. Of course, long floats can also give you a spectacular looking hand knit so they are often worth the trouble.

Here are a few stranded patterns from my Ravelry queue. 

Long floats -  Nightingale Socks, Running Horse Hat (section of horses), Dancing Stars Hat

Short floats -  La Gran Fair Isle Pillow, Quo Vadis Mittens, October Fair Isle Pillow

Fixing Mistakes in Colorwork

There are two ways to fix mistakes in colorwork other than frogging back until the mistake and starting to knit over again.

The first way is knit to the exact column where you see the error and purposely drop stitches until you get to the mistake. That's the easy part - the hard part is making sure you pick up THE RIGHT FLOAT as you are picking up the dropped yarns again. For instance if your mistake is 4 rows down and you're knitting with 2 colors per row there will be 8 strands of yarn and you'll only use 4 of them when picking up the stitches again. I'll get photos of this process soon - it really is a challenge to get it right.

I use basic duplicate stitch to fix colorwork mistakes that I notice long after the possibility of dropping stitches is over. That's what happened with the Christmas Bells mittens - I actually didn't even notice the mistakes until I looked at a photograph of the mittens.



So here I goofed and knit a "U" instead of an "O".



I never anchor the yarn by weaving in the ends before I start duplicate stitching - instead I wait until after I'm done to secure both ends. Usually to start I just thread the needle and insert it from the outside several inches from the spot I'm fixing. That way I can use both ends to adjust the tension after I'm done with the duplicate stitch so it looks its best.



The yarn starts from under the stitch to be fixed and goes around just like the original knit stitch. I always do duplicate stitch from right to left, from bottom to top. It looks much neater when you always do it in the same direction.



Fixed.

The Mysteries of Yarn Dominance

There are many differences of opinion in the world of stranded color knitting - how to hold the yarns, what to do about floats, and what the term Fair Isle even means. There is one debated issue, however, that is experienced differently by each knitter - yarn dominance.

Here are four general yarn dominance "rules". These rules are usually the case but not always.

1. If you carry two colors per row, one color will appear more prominent or dominant.

2. If you are a two-handed color knitter, the yarn held in your LEFT hand will be dominant.

3. No matter how you hold the two yarns (even if you hold two yarns in one hand) the color that strands BELOW the other color will be more prominent. (Look at the floats on the reverse of your work and you'll see that one color's floats will strand above or below the other.)

4. You should never switch how you are holding the yarns in the middle of a chart or motif.

Look closely at something stranded you've knit and try to determine if the stitches with each yarn are exactly the same size. Often when you knit with two colors, one color will be carried more loosely and thus the stitches will be larger. I've even heard a theory that the stitches made with one color look a bit larger because the float above is pushing the stitch out a bit. However if you knit with two colors for a really long time, you'll probably notice both colors even out over time. Knitters who are new to stranded color knitting will probably see the most significant difference in the size of their stitches with each color. 




I knit the above swatches to show yarn dominance but I wasn't able to create as much of a visible difference as I'd hoped.  Anyway, in the top swatch I held the black yarn in my LEFT hand (where I usually put foreground yarns) and switched it for the bottom swatch. You can see that the black stitches in the top swatch appear a bit larger and the white stitches appear larger in the bottom swatch. HERE is another source that shows front and reverse photos of yarn dominance.

I think the first time I read that the yarn held in the left hand is NOT always more prominent for every single knitter was in Joyce Williams' book Latvian Dreams. I've heard from dozens of knitters on Ravelry who agree that these rules do not apply to them. Some insist they have no dominant yarn at all and some have told me that after a good blocking they could no longer tell which yarn was dominant.

Meg Swansen, Amy Detjen, and Joyce Williams state in the Fair Isle book Sweaters from Camp,"Which color in which hand? For the sake of sanity, we proclaim there is no right or wrong method, since results and desired appearance vary so greatly. The strand carried in the right hand may be prominent for one knitter; another may find the left-hand wool to be dominant and a third knitter may have perfect balance between hands."


In my Stranded Color Knitting booklet I advise new color knitters not to switch how they're holding the two yarns through a project but alas there are even exceptions to this as well. In the Dale of Norway Lake Louise headband shown above I held the white yarn in my right hand so it would be a background yarn. It looks good EXCEPT in the very center of the design. Those white stitches appear to recede. I didn't even notice this until later (the headband was a rush job) but I wish I'd switched and held the white yarn in my left hand (where for me at least the stitches look more prominent) just for those few center rows.

How do you determine what colors in a chart to make dominant? That is totally up to you and if you are one of the knitters who experiences yarn dominance you can use it to your advantage to make part of a design stand out more. If you're doing a design with no particular design focal point (like a checkerboard design) or a project with a zillion color changes, make it easier on yourself by choosing ahead of time to just make the light or darker colors dominant.

I'd really love to hear other knitter's comments on this issue, especially from those of you who experience things differently than the usual "rules". What are your experiences with yarn dominance?

Chasing Rainbows Cap

INTARSIA IN THE ROUND

The one and only time I did intarsia in the round was for this Chasing Rainbows Cap. (No pattern yet but I do hope to knit another cap and offer it as a free blog pattern this fall.) For each color I cut about 2 yards of yarn. I worked in the round with the black background color and each time I got to a new color, I did an interlock (i.e., twisting the yarns) and knit with that new color, then another interlock and back to the black which was stranded.




Here's the inside - this method will only work for narrow stripes though. As it is because the yarn for each color is pulled back to the beginning stitch every time you start a new row, it kind of puffs up the vertical stripes. I believe this is what PGR calls "zigzag intarsia" in the article referenced below. Interestingly she says to weave the background color in EVERY stitch when working the new color which I did not do for this hat. I bet her method will help the stripes from puffing up so much.



Here are some resources I've found for other methods of intarsia in the round. Some of these methods are called festive knitting or motif knitting. Some methods are considered true intarsia and some are a mixture of intarsia and stranding. Most seem to involve some sort of combo of short rows or moving counterclockwise either by purling back to a specific point or by knitting back backwards. If I've missed any good references, please let me know in the comments.

PRINT

"Traditional Techniques for Creating Ethnic Intarsia Designs," Interweave Knits, Fall 2003, Priscilla Gibson-Roberts - She outlines four methods - zigzag intarsia, motif knitting, intarsia with a seam line join, and seamless circular intarsia (which looks seriously complicated). There is also a pattern, the Love Stamp Socks, which uses all four methods. I checked and this back issue is no longer available so Ebay is your best bet.

Ethnic Socks and Stockings, Priscilla Gibson-Roberts, XRX 1995. She includes a section discussing motif knitting and zigzag intarsia.

"About Festive Knitting," Heel and Toes Gazette, Fall 2001, Dawn Brocco. A back issue is available at http://www.dawnbrocco.com/ . The issue includes a pattern for Cushy Socks which use this method.

According to the Dawn Brocco article a few other print resources on festive knitting are: Meg Swansen's Knitting, Anna Zilboorg's Socks for Sandals and Clogs, and Mary Thomas' Knitting Book.

ONLINE

Meredith Davey's free Ravelry pattern for Baseball Socks uses festive knitting.

Knitty's Intarsia Fun Hat is worked in the round.

Moth Heaven has a tutorial on one method of intarsia in the round with photos. There is no direct link - check the sidebar to the left.

Let Me ExplaiKnit discusses some methods of doing intarsia in the round.

Honeybee33 discusses four methods of circular intarsia.




This is Patch the sweetie pie. She's waiting to be adopted at Petco West Side on Old Airport Road in Albuquerque. The woman who grooms the dogs says Patch is very curious and just loves watching the dogs get haircuts. She'd be a great first-time house rabbit!

You can also meet Patch tomorrow, May 9th, at our next HRS Rabbit Adoptathon between 10 am and 2 pm at the Petco Lomas (10700 Lomas NE). Please stop by to meet our adoptable rabbits and talk to our knowledgeable rabbit people. You can also bring your bunnies in to get their claws clipped or to bond with another bunny.

Picking Up Stitches Around a Thumb

Here are my photos on how to pick up stitches around a thumb. I did do a step-by-step photo tutorial on how I do my peasant thumbs in two parts. Check my technique links in the right hand sidebar.

I begin the thumb by putting the stitches on the outside of the thumb back on the needles. I take the waste yarn off after I put the stitches back on the needles. The waste yarn usually pulls right out with no problem and it is even more likely if I've taken the effort to find yarn that is a lighter weight for the waste yarn.

I knit across the front stitches in pattern. Here I'm using a contrast yarn in pink to try to show this process better. BTW, notice the sharp Knitpicks' metal dpns - for picking up stitches, sharper is better. I always use needles to pick up stitches (I insert the dpn through the location where I want to add a stitch, then knit a stitch onto the needle.) but you can use crochet hooks as well.






When I get to the side of the thumb hole I am going to pick up a stitch on the side of the thumb as the pattern states to do. (I never pick up more stitches than the pattern specifies around a thumb or finger hole - I think it is noticeable and I prefer to use the reverse duplicate stitch to fix any loose stitches or holes after I'm done knitting.) On the side of the thumb hole between the stitches knit from the waste yarn and the cast on stitches on the back there are two stitches - a yellow green and a darker green. I pick up a stitch through one of these two stitches. If you look at both side stitches, the yellow green stitch is a bit looser. That is why I decide to pick up the stitch through the dark green stitch. (Picking up stitches through loose or large stitches often seems to make them more noticeable, not less.) I just pick up a stitch through the right side of that darker green stitch.




They're all on the needles now.




Next post - picking up the sts from the cast on edge.

Peasant Thumb

Before I show how to pick up the stitches for the thumb I wanted to talk again about why I do the peasant thumb the way I do. The most common/popular way to do a peasant thumb (also called an invisible thumb or waste thumb) is shown at the top. You knit to the thumb opening, knit across the thumb stitches on waste yarn, and return those stitches to the needles and continue to knit with the regular yarn.




The way I do it is shown in the bottom of the 1st photo. I knit to the thumb opening, put the thumb stitches on waste yarn using a tapestry needle, and cast on the same number of thumb stitches using the backwards loop cast on. (If I'm doing colorwork mittens, I cast on using both yarns in pattern.) I prefer this method for two reason - it allows you to try the mittens on as you go to make sure they're the right length and I think it is easier to pick up stitches in pattern when knitting with 2 colors. While the first method is quite popular with knitters actually the second method of dealing with a mitten thumb is called the traditional method in Lizbeth Upitis' Latvian Mittens book.

If you do your thumb the first way, be forewarned that you will not get as many live stitches on the back of the thumb opening as on the front when you remove the waste yarn. This can screw people up in their stitch counts. The only place I've ever seen this phenomenon mentioned is Nancy Bush's Folk Knitting in Estonia. In the photo below after the waste yarn was removed there are 8 live stitches on the front of the thumb opening but only 7 stitches on the back of the thumb opening. (The missing mystery stitch will be a half stitch on the upper right hand side of the opening in the photo.)



My goal is always to make the colorwork pattern match up on the inside of the thumb as shown below to keep the feeling of a true invisible thumb. Of course this isn't always possible if the pattern itself doesn't give the right number of stitches to keep the colorwork pattern seamless.





I'm off to see if I can get some good photos of how I pick up the stitches.

Knitted Two Color Braid Video, Step Two



STEP TWO - KNITTED 2-COLOR BRAID


STEP TWO: For this row you do the opposite of Step One and thus untwist your yarns. Both yarns remain in FRONT of the work. Take the Color A yarn and put it OVER the Color B yarn and purl one stitch. Then take the Color B yarn and put it OVER the Color A yarn and purl one stitch. Repeat these two stitches across the row as shown in the video below.


That's it! You can also reverse Step One and Step Two if you prefer or work 2 rows of Step One then two of Step Two.
Copyright 2009, Nanette Blanchard

Knitted Two Color Braid Video, Step One






STEP ONE - KNITTED 2-COLOR BRAID
Knitted braids are beautiful and they get easier the more often you do them. They don't curl so they are an excellent alternative to ribbing for a hem. The braid here is just a basic braid but there are many fun alternatives. Check out the excellent book Folk Knitting in Estonia by Nancy Bush (one of my top five favorite knitting books!) for some more advanced braids - I think she even has a 3 color braid.

There's usually a set-up row - in this case I did K1 Color A, K1 Color B, and on across the row.


STEP ONE: You take both yarns and hold them IN FRONT of your work as if to purl. Take the Color A yarn and pull it UNDER the Color B yarn and purl one stitch. Then take the Color B yarn and pull it UNDER the Color A yarn and purl one stitch. Repeat these two steps across the row as shown in the video below.

You are purposely twisting the yarns in Step One. Any time in knitting when you are purposely twisting two or more yarns you need to regularly run your fingers between the two yarns (as seen at the end of the video below) and push the twist as far away from your needles as possible. If the twist gets too close to your needles it gets tough to knit.




Color Knitting Quiz #2

COLOR KNITTING QUIZ #2

Because I'm still bogged down in the mitten booklet it is time for another quiz on working with multiple colors! Play along and see how well you do - I think this quiz is a little easier than my last quiz (HERE).

1.In this photo of the reverse of the Dale of Norway Salt Lake City sweater, the bottoms of the yellow lines are pointing out:




A) Bad Stitch Tension
B) Places where Floats were Woven
C) Locations Where the Knitter Changed Which Yarn was in Which Hand
D) Moth Holes

2. When knitting with two colors it is important to:

A) Have Fun!
B) Make Sure Your Floats (unused yarns on the back of the work) Are Not Too Tight
C) Find the Best Way for Your Hands to Hold Both Yarns
D) All of the Above

3. What is the most accurate term for all types of knitting where two or more colors are carried along the row?

A) Fair Isle Knitting
B) Intarsia
C) Old Lady Knitting
D) Stranded Color Knitting

4. The technique used for the pattern on the back of the hand on the Placitas gloves knit in the round (shown in the glove on the right) is:




A) Intarsia
B) Duplicate Stitch
C) Fair Isle
D) Crochet

5. Ribbing that uses more than one yarn color is:

A) Corrugated Ribbing
B) Less Elastic than Single Color Ribbing
C) More Likely to Curl
D) All of the Above

6. Why does the glove on the right look smoother than the glove on the left?




A) It is a trick of photography.
B) Blocking!
C) The knitter was more relaxed while knitting the glove on the right
D) I can't tell the difference between the two gloves

7. Extra Credit Question - Where exactly is Fair Isle located?

Scroll down for the answers.




x








x






ANSWERS:
1. B Look for the places where the floats look diagonal.
2. D
3. D Fair Isle is a specific type of stranded color knitting.
4. B although technically you could use intarsia in the round.
5. D
6. B Almost every single item of stranded color knitting benefits greatly from good blocking.
7. EXTRA CREDIT: It is the southernmost Shetland Island in Great Britain.


Scores - 0 to 3 - Keep Trying - it really isn't as hard as it seems!
4 to 6 - Very Good - soon you will be knee deep in colorwork charts and yarn.
7 - Excellent - you're a color master!

Twisted German Cast On Variation Video


Please let me know if you can view this video of the cast on I use for two-color/corrugated ribbing. I think I'll call it Twisted German Cast On - Thumb Variation. Sorry it is so dark - I'll do the videos outside in the future.

Twisted German Cast On Variation

I love two-color/corrugated ribbing but it has a tendency to curl and the floats from the second color can peek out below the cast on edge. The Twisted German Cast On is a little thicker than other cast ons which helps with floats showing and best of all it doesn't curl at all. The Twisted German Cast On also is very loose which is handy if you need a really stretchy cast on for socks for wider calves or ankles.

HERE are the great photos I used to learn the Twisted German Cast On.

As you can see from these photos I do it slightly differently using my thumb and left index finger to open up the loop and my right hand for wrapping the yarn around the needle. I recently read on Ravelry that my method is actually called the Maine Cast On but I've analyzed both cast on methods and the results seem the same to me and my method makes a cast on edge that doesn't curl for ribbing. (I also do the long tail cast on with this method using my left thumb for the loop and my right hand to wrap the yarn.)

This cast on is very similar to the long tail cast on. I start with a slip knot on the right needle with a long tail for the first cast on stitch. I wrap the tail end of the yarn around my left thumb, front to back. I use my ring finger and little finger to help tension the yarn.




I insert my left index finger over the outside yarn farthest from me and under the inside yarn closest to me to end up with a large loop as seen below.




I insert the right needle tip under the loop section on the far side of my thumb. This is opposite how I do the long tail cast on - for that I insert the right needle tip under the loop section on the near side of my thumb. I am careful NOT to grab the section of the yarn on the near side of my thumb with the needle.



With my right hand I wrap the yarn from the ball around the needle knitwise and knit one stitch being careful not to let the loop wrap around the needle twice. Then I tighten the loop by pulling the yarn in my left hand (the yarn tail) until the cast on loop is tight enough.



Here's what this cast on looks like up close. It looks like a regular cast on with a row of purl bumps on top.



I'm having trouble uploading my video of this cast on to Blogger but I'll keep trying this week.

Creating Your Own Stranded Patterns, Pt. 2

CREATING YOUR OWN STRANDED PATTERNS, PT. 2
Copyright Nanette Blanchard, 2008, http://cuteknitting.blogspot.com/ Not for reprint on other blogs!

As far as your charted designs, you are best starting with simple geometric shapes rather than trying to chart out complex pictures of woodpeckers or houses or airplanes. You certainly can do woodpeckers but you'll have to remember the ramifications of using long floats (let's say anything over 6-7 stitches of one color). If you look at traditional Norwegian knitted designs you'll notice that in between all those huge snowflakes or stars are a lot of smaller motifs to help avoid really long floats where you're using just one color.

Once you have made your first chart it is time to figure out how to add it to a pattern. Hats are a good choice for a first stranded design project because they usually require less shaping than other knitted accessories and they're usually knit in the round. You can use any plain hat pattern you have and just add in your stranded pattern. However remember that stranded color knitting is a finer gauge than solid color knitting so if you take a plain hat pattern that fits you perfectly and add stranded colorwork all over it your beautiful new hat will most likely be too small.

Gauge swatches are very helpful in this situation. Since you'll likely be knitting colorwork in the round, you should also do your gauge swatch in the round. A simple method of doing this is to use dpns. Knit one or two repeats of your pattern on one dpn then slide the stitches to the right hand side of the dpn. (This action is just like what you do to knit I-Cord.) Take your yarns and pull the strands of yarn to stretch from one side of the dpn to the other and start knitting again. To measure you swatch simply cut the long strands of yarn in the back and flatten in out. That is why most stranded swatches look like they're fringed.

If you're going to do a project with many different stranded designs, make sure you swatch them all. Different stranded charts have different gauges - if you've ever knit something with vertical stripes you'll notice the fabric draws in pretty severely so if you pair vertical stripes with a simple checkerboard design you're going to have a finished project that is different widths on each design.



This first photo shows a chullo I designed with many different stranded patterns. Because every stranded pattern has a different number of chart repeats, it can be annoying to try to fit them all in one design. Because this chullo had decreases all through the hat (done on the plain stockinette rows), I had more leeway in making chart repeats work with the different number of stitches for each row.

You don't actually have to make all your chart repeats match up perfectly at the end of the row. I've seen a few designs where the repeats did not match at the end of the row including the Travelling Socks by Lucy Neatby in the Socks, Socks, Socks book. It is quite a freeing experience to not worry about stitch repeats.

I prefer to try to make everything match up and this is one reason why simpler geometric motifs work better than more complicated ones. It is a lot easier to make a 6 stitch chart repeat fit into a design than a 47 stitch one.

Once you start putting stranded chart designs into your project you'll start collecting what I call "magic numbers." These are numbers divisible by many other numbers so that more color charts will fit into them. I often use 48, 60, 72, and 120 as cast on numbers for projects for this reason.

Make your first project one without gussets. Trying to design gusset increases or decreases (either in the heel of a sock or a thumb gusset in a mitten or glove) while simultaneously doing colorwork can be a pain. Another thing you can do is combine stranded color patterns with solid color knitting for the gussets; for instance you'd do a stranded cuff on a sock then do the rest of the sock (and gusset) a solid color. Just remember that stranded knitting is always a different gauge than solid color knitting with the same yarn and needles so you'll likely need to do some decreasing of stitches as you go from stranded knitting to solid color knitting.

If you do a project that involves increasing or decreasing while simultaneously doing colorwork, figure out in advance what color you want the increased or decreased stitches to be. Most colorwork mitten tops or hats use the same color for the top decreases - I generally go with the darker color for all the decreased stitches but that is a personal choice. I think I've only once done a mitten project that used alternating colors for some decorative top decreases.

There are a few sources out there with info for designing colorwork projects. My blue tam seen below was designed using an excellent article by Alice Starmore. "Designing a Wheel-Pattern Fair Isle Tammy" was initially printed in Threads magazine in December 1988 but is also reprinted in the Threads Knitting Around the World book. The book is out of print but I think it is still easy to locate for a decent price.



If you enjoy doing knitted items for children, the book Style Your Own Kid's Knits by Kate Buller includes detailed information on how to add colorwork to children's sweaters and accessories. Finally, Adrian at Hello Yarn offers a free generic Norwegian mitten and generic Norwegian hat chart grid. Simply add your own pattern to the chart and knit it up.

If you're on Ravelry the Stranded forum is an excellent resource. The forum group pages is the single best Internet reference for knitters who enjoy stranded color knitting. The 17 group pages are full of links to practically every single video and photograph and tutorial of every possible stranded color knitting technique. Check it out!

Creating Your Own Stranded Patterns, Pt. 1

CREATING YOUR OWN STRANDED PATTERNS, PT. 1

Creating your own colorwork knitting projects is really a lot of fun and I encourage everyone to try it. Here's one of my first efforts for a child's garden leaves hat with a picket fence around the cuff.



Before you start I'd recommend knitting a few stranded color knitting patterns so you understand the basics. It is helpful to understand how to deal with long floats, tension issues, and the inevitable color pattern jogs that occur at the end of the row. If you want to design a pattern that uses 3 or more colors per row or is knit flat it is good to know that these colorwork methods are more difficult to knit. Also, it is a good idea to understand the difference between intarsia and stranded color knitting so you understand what will work in a stranded chart pattern and what is better done with intarsia.

The easiest way to make charts is to use graph paper and colored pencils. Most graph paper you buy at the office supply place is square which is okay but generally the knitted stitch is a rectangle. (In stranded color knitting the knitted stitch is actually closer to a square because the floats pull in the stitches but it still depends on the yarn and gauge and pattern, etc. Once I knitted a cross stitch pattern and the end result looked nothing like it did on the chart.)

To get graph paper that is exactly the same size as your stitches, you can use this free online graph paper. You simply add in the calculations from your gauge swatch and then you print out graph paper that is the same size as your knitted stitches.



If you want to share your stranded knitting patterns with others you're probably going to want another method of creating charts. You can use Microsoft Excel; Marnie MacLean wrote an excellent tutorial on how to do this HERE.

Software used specifically to create needlework charts varies in price from free to several hundred dollars. If you don't mind squares, HERE is a free program for counted cross stitch software. Denise's Needleworks (also a great source for Rauma patterns) sells a knitter's chart software for $10. This program also generates only squares and the link includes a free demo you can try.




I personally use Stitch and Motif Maker. I found the best price at Knitpicks and it is drop dead easy to use. There's a little tutorial and when you're done you completely understand the program. There's a free demo of the program HERE.

Two other programs to look into are Knit Visualizer and Stitch Painter. They both have free demos you can download as well.

Once you have the ability to make a chart then you can start creating a design. You can simply start playing around with patterns or you can find some charts. Most Fair Isle and Norwegian books contain lots of charts for color knitting - my two personal favorites are the inexpensive reprints of Sheila McGregor's Traditional Scandinavian Knitting and Traditional Fair Isle Knitting. There are also many knitting charts online - check HERE for a zillion Latvian mitten and glove patterns and HERE for some lovely Scandinavian charts.

Finally I want to provide links to two fun free online programs: KnitPro generates a color chart from any .JPG image and Palette Generator provides a color palette from any photo.

Intarsia, Part Two

INTARSIA, PART TWO

Before I start talking about how to knit intarsia, I want to emphasize that the method I'm showing is from the book Intarsia: A Workshop for Machine and Hand Knitting by Sherry and Keely Stuever. There are actually several ways of doing intarsia; from what I can tell Kaffe Fassett
endorses more of a free spirited approach where sometimes colors are stranded instead of interlocked and the millions of yarn ends are worked more like you would in stranded color knitting. I think the Stuever method produces more even stitches and the reverse of the work is much
neater looking.

It is important to remember that to knit intarsia flat you have to read the chart from two different directions depending on what row you're on. The right side of the knitting is worked by reading the chart from right to left and the wrong side of the knitting is worked by reading the chart from the left to the right. Some knitters do intarsia by knitting back backwards to avoid having to purl and read the chart from both directions but I
actually like working the wrong side as it is easier to see which yarns to grab every time I get to an interlock.

Another important point is that every time you get to a new block of color, you start a new yarn supply. If you are knitting a vertical line in black on white background, you will have two white yarn supplies on each side of the black line. As I said in my last post, I simply cut about 2-3 yards of each color for each yarn supply and let it hang loose on the back of the work and pull each color loose out of the tangle of yarns when I need it.

To start a new color yarn you simply lay the yarn end on the front or right side of the work (whether or not you are working the right or wrong side of the project). Bring the old yarn OVER the new yarn and start knitting with the new yarn. Ignore the tail until you get to the next row.



Here you can see I added the blue yarn on the previous row and I'm to the point where I added the second blue yarn. You can see the tail under my thumb on the right side of the work.



Here on the reverse side of the work I've pulled the blue yarn tail to the back of the work right through the center of the two needles. The blue yarn is now connected to the work and you don't have to worry about holes.



Each and every time in intarsia you get to a color change you have to do an interlock. The new color you're beginning to knit with always comes UNDER and to the RIGHT of the old color. In the photo above I'm about to start purling with the green so the green yarn has been pulled under and to the right of the blue yarn.



After I knit the green I need to find the right blue yarn on the back of the work to interlock with the green. This can be complicated with the yarn tails and more than one section of the same color so I turn the work around to figure it out.

That's pretty much it - I've shown a method to add new yarns and a method to interlock the yarns at every color change. Next week I'll show how to deal with all the yarn ends.

Color Knitting Quiz

COLOR KNITTING QUIZ

I dislike showing progress photos so while I finish up the three pairs of socks I'm knitting I thought I'd post a quiz. Try it out to see how much you know about color knitting. Keep score and scroll down to the bottom of the post for the answers.

1. In the photo below, which color will be dominant or more noticeable?

A. Black
B. Purple
C. Both colors will be dominant.
D. Who cares? Colors shouldn't be dominant; they should be passive.



2. What is this type of colorwork (photo below is of reverse of work) called?

A. Stranded Color Knitting
B. Fair Isle Knitting
C. Intarsia
D. Medieval Eastern Estonian Color Knitting



3. How many different ways are there to hold the yarns for stranded color knitting?

A. THERE IS ONLY ONE RIGHT WAY. The lady at the LYS insists this is true.
B. Two
C. At least three with many more variations on those methods.
D. I'm pretty sure the way I hold the yarns is the wrong way.

4. What is it called when a long loop on the back of stranded color knitting is purposely caught on the back of the work?

A. Floating
B. Spinning
C. Weaving
D. Looping the loop

5. What is the difference between Fair Isle Knitting and Norwegian Knitting?

A. Fair Isle can be any kind of color knitting at all - all the knitting books say so.
B. Norwegian knitting uses a strand of yarn in each hand.
C. Fair Isle only uses two colors per row and doesn't usually have long floats.
D. Norwegian Knitting is much thicker because it is so freaking cold there.

6. What is this wacky gadget seen below called?

A. Scandinavian Cat Toy
B. Strickfingerhut
C. Tvaandstickning
D. Dubbelmossa



7. What is the Philosopher's Wool method of stranded color knitting?

A. It involves thinking deep thoughts about the meaning of life while knitting.
B. It involves using two colors per row in bright colors.
C. It involves catching the floats more frequently on the back of the work.
D. It is exactly the same as any other stranded color knitting.

EXTRA CREDIT QUESTION -

8. Who designed this colorful sweater?



x

x

x

x

x

x

x


ANSWERS:

1. A. Look nearest the needle- the black strand is BELOW the purple which will make it dominant.
2. C
3. C
4. C
5. C. Deduct a point from your score if you guessed A.
6. B
7. C
8. Kaffe Fassett's incredible Foolish Virgins sweater

SCORING - If you scored 1-4 points you're well on your way to being a color knitting addict. If you scored 5-7 points, you know more about color knitting than most knitting magazines. If you scored 8 points - congratulations! You're a color pro!

Knitting Three Colors Per Row

In a perfect world all stranded color knitting patterns would specify just two colors per row. However, there are times you'll see three or even four colors per row (Dale of Norway, I'm looking at you!) in a color pattern chart. So how do you hold all those yarns?

First of all, you don't even have to knit three or four colors per row. Instead you can just knit with two colors and later go back and duplicate stitch the third color. Or you can just knit with two colors, slipping all the stitches that are to be knit with the third color. Then you go back and knit the exact same row again, slipping the stitches you just knit and knitting the third and fourth color stitches you slipped previously.

Still, if you want to knit 3 colors per row there are many, many ways to do this. All are a variety of the methods I've shown last week. You can put all three yarns in your left hand, 3 yarns in your right hand, or 2 yarns in one hand and 1 yarn in the other hand. In knitting with 3 colors a row you don't even have to worry about finding a method that doesn't tangle because they all do as far as I can tell. I generally stop a few times per row to detangle the yarns when knitting 3 color rows.



Here's how I hold the yarns for a 3 color row. The background color is again in my right hand and the other two colors are both stranded over my left index finger.

I knit the yarn in my right hand English/American style and grab the specific yarn I need from my left hand finger and knit continental. This method is slow-going though.

I plan to try the method shown above the next time I have a three color row. I'll put all three colors in my strickfingerhut/knitting thimble and simply use the right hand needle to grab the color I need. I haven't experimented with this method much but I do think it will reduce tangling and the tangles that do occur will be easier to deal with.

Two-Handed Two-Color Stranded Knitting

Occasionally you'll hear someone tell you there is only one right way to knit with two colors. I've heard people say that two-handed knitting is the best method. That is complete nonsense. It is the same as saying only English/American knitters can knit lace or only knitters who use circular needles can achieve beautiful hand-knit socks. I think the right method for you depends on your hands and how you hold the needles. Many incredible and extremely advanced color knitters don't use two hands.

I do use the two-handed method and frankly, I adore it. I actually pout a bit if I have to knit some ribbing or a stripe with just one hand. So I do want to urge all new color knitters to try using two hands on a small project. It only took me one sock project to fall in love with this method and the feeling of flow when using two hands.

To me the benefits of two-handed knitting are the relief the dominant hand gets and the sheer speed. It is much faster for me because I can start one of my hands knitting with the second color before I'm even done knitting with the first color with the other hand. I hold the right hand needle like a pencil but for some reason I don't with the left hand needle.




I tension the yarns through my fingers as shown although the yarn is too low on my left hand in this photo. When knitting I keep the yarns above my middle knuckles. The yarn in my right hand will be the background color and the yarn in my left hand will be the dominant color. In Carol Rasmussen Noble's Fair Isle mitten book, she says the stitches made by the left hand will be slightly larger if you're normally an English/American knitter and after looking closely at my knitting, she is definitely right in my case.

My method of weaving the yarns through my fingers is a pain if you need to get up frequently while knitting but I have at least learned how to keep the yarns woven through my fingers like that while changing from one dpn to the next.



To knit the left hand yarn, you knit Continental and either grab the yarn by going over or under the yarn. I go over.



When I need more yarn I simply lift my index fingers like this and pull more yarn out from the skein.



To knit with the right hand yarn I simply knit English/American and wind the yarn around the right-hand needle.