Added: 4 years ago
From: catbordhi
Views: 14,465
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  • Hey I know that stocking! Charlie is my little brother!

  • Hi Jordan! That is so funny that it is you! Anytime you want to knit, just let me know.

  • That's really cool! I don't really like knitting, too slow at it, but I love to crochet. I like the idea so much I may try it out in crochet and see what happens!

  • Can you make more videos of projects? Love this!  deb

  • this gave me an idea. instead of doing a full knit row a full purl row an increase row and then sliding the stitches back would this work: on the first waste yarn row if you were to knit a stitch and do a yarnover and knit a stitch and yarn over and knit a stitch for the correct number of stitches ending with a knit stitch, of course,then purling back and THEN sliding the stitches back. again, would this work and if not what would make it not work?

  • Very clever . . . and it may work just fine. The key is to make the real yarn sts easy to identify and pick up afterwards. This is why I have a plain row in between the first row and the increase row - to give the outer rows a stable foundation that isn't confusing later. Possibly the yo's would work that way, possibly not - you'd have to try! I love the way you are thinking about it . . .

  • Very cool, Cat! Of course, I would need to do that top-down, but I don't think that would be an issue. :-)

  • The stocking is worked too down.

  • Ack! I meant I would need to do it toe-up. But it should work both ways -- i.e. decrease instead of increase.

  • Yes - you've got the idea, wonderful! Disproportionate waste yarn can be worked in either direction.

    However, keep in mind that the pouches actually shape the sock. Toe-up, you also want to increase the arch (if you are following my architecture in NEW PATHWAYS FOR SOCK KNITTERS, BOOK ONE). In that case, I think you'd want to work the waste yarn as I have - larger on the bottom and smaller on the top. Have fun figuring it all out!

  • Okay Cat this is another BRILLIANT thing from your brain, but after you increase with the waste yarn, why don't you just purl back across the waste yarn with more waste yarn so as not to risk dropping a stitch by putting them back on the left needle?

  • That's a great idea - to just purl back, I hadn't thought of that. However, it's probably just as fast to slide all the waste yarn stitches to the left needle, and then you have less waste yarn bulk in the fabric.

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