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#1
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Fair Isle project
Hi Nyssa!
As I live in Norway, I often knit with more than one color at a time; I knit Norwegian pattern more often than than Fair Isle I make it as a rule(learned from my mother!LOL!) that the yarn must not float more than three stitches. Then you have to "wind it around"/"cross around" the thread you are knitting with. This makes a even backside. But if one color is much darker than the other, you should be aware of the "right side". If you wind the yarns at same place several rows after eachother, you will get a "row" of darker/lighter vertical shade. Therefor you should shift a bit between the different rows. It is a bit difficult to explain in English, but I hope you understand! AUD ;-)) alrefsnesathotmaildotcom http://community.webshots.com/user/dual44 |
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#2
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On 23 May 2004 07:31:21 -0700, Aud wrote:
~gently snipped, just to make an observation: It is a bit difficult to explain in English, but I hope you understand! AUD ;-)) alrefsnesathotmaildotcom http://community.webshots.com/user/dual44 Aud, you did a fantastic job of explaining it in English! How many of us English speakers could explain it in Norwegien, eh? Love, Noreen -- http://noreensknitche.weblogs.us/ http://noreensknitche.ceejaycee.net http://www.mblog.com/noreens_knitche ~ ~ ~ http://mail2office.tripod.com/noreensknitche ~ ~ ~ change n e t to c o m to email me. |
#3
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Aud wrote:
that the yarn must not float more than three stitches. Then you have to "wind it around"/"cross around" the thread you are knitting with. This makes a even backside. But if one color is much darker than the other, you should be aware of the "right side". If you wind the yarns at same place several rows after eachother, you will get a "row" of darker/lighter vertical shade. Therefor you should shift a bit between the different rows. It is a bit difficult to explain in English, but I hope you understand! AUD ;-)) Thanks Aud. I understand you quite well. No translation problems at all. LOL! I'm doing the wrap thing only on the rows where the float is more than 3 stitches. My problems are more in the line of the way I'm wrapping the float; it keeps getting looped around the working yarn, so I have to stick the left needle under it and pull it around and back. The other problem I'm having is twists in the balls of working yarn. I have to stop halfway through the row and untangle/untwist the trailing yarns. It would be great if I were making cording, but it's really annoying to have to stop and untwist constantly. Any more tips? Nyssa, untwisting and wrapping |
#4
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Hi Nyssa,
I loved Auds explanation to you as that is how I was taught to do it. I loved knitting with more than one color, the more the merrier for me. I once made a Mary Maxim kit with the train on the front and at one time there were more than twenty colors being used. Now, I would wind the yarn on bobbins instead of letting them hang down. I always had bobbins in use. Hugs, Nora |
#5
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Thank you, Noreen! LOL! I never have thought about it THAT way!
AUD ;-)) Noreen's Knit*che wrote in message . .. On 23 May 2004 07:31:21 -0700, Aud wrote: ~gently snipped, just to make an observation: It is a bit difficult to explain in English, but I hope you understand! AUD ;-)) alrefsnesathotmaildotcom http://community.webshots.com/user/dual44 Aud, you did a fantastic job of explaining it in English! How many of us English speakers could explain it in Norwegien, eh? Love, Noreen |
#6
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Nyssa wrote in message ...
Aud wrote: that the yarn must not float more than three stitches. Then you have to "wind it around"/"cross around" the thread you are knitting with. This makes a even backside. But if one color is much darker than the other, you should be aware of the "right side". If you wind the yarns at same place several rows after eachother, you will get a "row" of darker/lighter vertical shade. Therefor you should shift a bit between the different rows. It is a bit difficult to explain in English, but I hope you understand! AUD ;-)) Thanks Aud. I understand you quite well. No translation problems at all. LOL! I'm doing the wrap thing only on the rows where the float is more than 3 stitches. My problems are more in the line of the way I'm wrapping the float; it keeps getting looped around the working yarn, so I have to stick the left needle under it and pull it around and back. The other problem I'm having is twists in the balls of working yarn. I have to stop halfway through the row and untangle/untwist the trailing yarns. It would be great if I were making cording, but it's really annoying to have to stop and untwist constantly. Any more tips? Nyssa, untwisting and wrapping Nysa, I knit the continental way, with the yarn over left hands fingers: OVER forefinger, UNDER next, OVER ringfinger and UNDER the little finger. If I have TWO colores, the second yarn starts OVER THE TWO first fingers, and is woven under and over the "rest" of the fingers. This way *the yarns (after a little practice :-)keeps their individual tension. * The yarns lies parallell ower the fingers all the time, and If you have to wrap/ weave /cross it often, you can vary if you cross "over" or under".That makes less fuss,(but NEVER prevent it!LOL!) If I work with THREE colores, prefer to find a way similar to this, but many prefer to have the third one in right hand side, and knit that color the american way! I do THAT if I have a FOURTH color!!! If you knit like I have told you, you have to put attention to the yarn tension, but that comes with practice. Earlier we always made our yarn balls ourselves, and they were balls, rolling along, accross and made a lot of trouble, a lot more than with ready made balls :-) We had many different "more or less good" solutins: Put the different yarns in its own "bowl", and it will be where you place it. OR put them in one "plastc bag(?)" and you tie it almost together so the ball will not fall out, but the yarn comes easily out. After a round or so, you "UN-BREAD" it. I just place them in different direction, and enough separated from eachother, so they do NOT roll around eachother. I do NOT think there are any good solutions that prevent all fuss.Then have to adopt solutions from weaving/knitting factories. Just now I am WEAVING "hundreds" of loose ends (small stripe pattern with many colores), because I did not take the job to do it as I worked! This is the charme of hand knitting, I think. AND a lesson ; "How can I do this better nect time." Good luck! AUD ;-)) |
#7
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Nyssa wrote in message ...
Aud wrote: that the yarn must not float more than three stitches. Then you have to "wind it around"/"cross around" the thread you are knitting with. This makes a even backside. But if one color is much darker than the other, you should be aware of the "right side". If you wind the yarns at same place several rows after eachother, you will get a "row" of darker/lighter vertical shade. Therefor you should shift a bit between the different rows. It is a bit difficult to explain in English, but I hope you understand! AUD ;-)) Thanks Aud. I understand you quite well. No translation problems at all. LOL! I'm doing the wrap thing only on the rows where the float is more than 3 stitches. My problems are more in the line of the way I'm wrapping the float; it keeps getting looped around the working yarn, so I have to stick the left needle under it and pull it around and back. The other problem I'm having is twists in the balls of working yarn. I have to stop halfway through the row and untangle/untwist the trailing yarns. It would be great if I were making cording, but it's really annoying to have to stop and untwist constantly. Any more tips? Nyssa, untwisting and wrapping Nysa, I knit the continental way, with the yarn over left hands fingers: OVER forefinger, UNDER next, OVER ringfinger and UNDER the little finger. If I have TWO colores, the second yarn starts OVER THE TWO first fingers, and is woven under and over the "rest" of the fingers. This way *the yarns (after a little practice :-)keeps their individual tension. * The yarns lies parallell ower the fingers all the time, and If you have to wrap/ weave /cross it often, you can vary if you cross "over" or under".That makes less fuss,(but NEVER prevent it!LOL!) If I work with THREE colores, prefer to find a way similar to this, but many prefer to have the third one in right hand side, and knit that color the american way! I do THAT if I have a FOURTH color!!! If you knit like I have told you, you have to put attention to the yarn tension, but that comes with practice. Earlier we always made our yarn balls ourselves, and they were balls, rolling along, accross and made a lot of trouble, a lot more than with ready made balls :-) We had many different "more or less good" solutins: Put the different yarns in its own "bowl", and it will be where you place it. OR put them in one "plastc bag(?)" and you tie it almost together so the ball will not fall out, but the yarn comes easily out. After a round or so, you "UN-BREAD" it. I just place them in different direction, and enough separated from eachother, so they do NOT roll around eachother. I do NOT think there are any good solutions that prevent all fuss.Then have to adopt solutions from weaving/knitting factories. Just now I am WEAVING "hundreds" of loose ends (small stripe pattern with many colores), because I did not take the job to do it as I worked! This is the charme of hand knitting, I think. AND a lesson ; "How can I do this better nect time." Good luck! AUD ;-)) |
#8
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Nyssa wrote in message ...
Aud wrote: that the yarn must not float more than three stitches. Then you have to "wind it around"/"cross around" the thread you are knitting with. This makes a even backside. But if one color is much darker than the other, you should be aware of the "right side". If you wind the yarns at same place several rows after eachother, you will get a "row" of darker/lighter vertical shade. Therefor you should shift a bit between the different rows. It is a bit difficult to explain in English, but I hope you understand! AUD ;-)) Thanks Aud. I understand you quite well. No translation problems at all. LOL! I'm doing the wrap thing only on the rows where the float is more than 3 stitches. My problems are more in the line of the way I'm wrapping the float; it keeps getting looped around the working yarn, so I have to stick the left needle under it and pull it around and back. The other problem I'm having is twists in the balls of working yarn. I have to stop halfway through the row and untangle/untwist the trailing yarns. It would be great if I were making cording, but it's really annoying to have to stop and untwist constantly. Any more tips? Nyssa, untwisting and wrapping Nysa, I knit the continental way, with the yarn over left hands fingers: OVER forefinger, UNDER next, OVER ringfinger and UNDER the little finger. If I have TWO colores, the second yarn starts OVER THE TWO first fingers, and is woven under and over the "rest" of the fingers. This way *the yarns (after a little practice :-)keeps their individual tension. * The yarns lies parallell ower the fingers all the time, and If you have to wrap/ weave /cross it often, you can vary if you cross "over" or under".That makes less fuss,(but NEVER prevent it!LOL!) If I work with THREE colores, prefer to find a way similar to this, but many prefer to have the third one in right hand side, and knit that color the american way! I do THAT if I have a FOURTH color!!! If you knit like I have told you, you have to put attention to the yarn tension, but that comes with practice. Earlier we always made our yarn balls ourselves, and they were balls, rolling along, accross and made a lot of trouble, a lot more than with ready made balls :-) We had many different "more or less good" solutins: Put the different yarns in its own "bowl", and it will be where you place it. OR put them in one "plastc bag(?)" and you tie it almost together so the ball will not fall out, but the yarn comes easily out. After a round or so, you "UN-BREAD" it. I just place them in different direction, and enough separated from eachother, so they do NOT roll around eachother. I do NOT think there are any good solutions that prevent all fuss.Then have to adopt solutions from weaving/knitting factories. Just now I am WEAVING "hundreds" of loose ends (small stripe pattern with many colores), because I did not take the job to do it as I worked! This is the charme of hand knitting, I think. AND a lesson ; "How can I do this better nect time." Good luck! AUD ;-)) |
#9
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Nyssa wrote in message ...
Aud wrote: that the yarn must not float more than three stitches. Then you have to "wind it around"/"cross around" the thread you are knitting with. This makes a even backside. But if one color is much darker than the other, you should be aware of the "right side". If you wind the yarns at same place several rows after eachother, you will get a "row" of darker/lighter vertical shade. Therefor you should shift a bit between the different rows. It is a bit difficult to explain in English, but I hope you understand! AUD ;-)) Thanks Aud. I understand you quite well. No translation problems at all. LOL! I'm doing the wrap thing only on the rows where the float is more than 3 stitches. My problems are more in the line of the way I'm wrapping the float; it keeps getting looped around the working yarn, so I have to stick the left needle under it and pull it around and back. The other problem I'm having is twists in the balls of working yarn. I have to stop halfway through the row and untangle/untwist the trailing yarns. It would be great if I were making cording, but it's really annoying to have to stop and untwist constantly. Any more tips? Nyssa, untwisting and wrapping Nysa, I knit the continental way, with the yarn over left hands fingers: OVER forefinger, UNDER next, OVER ringfinger and UNDER the little finger. If I have TWO colores, the second yarn starts OVER THE TWO first fingers, and is woven under and over the "rest" of the fingers. This way *the yarns (after a little practice :-)keeps their individual tension. * The yarns lies parallell ower the fingers all the time, and If you have to wrap/ weave /cross it often, you can vary if you cross "over" or under".That makes less fuss,(but NEVER prevent it!LOL!) If I work with THREE colores, prefer to find a way similar to this, but many prefer to have the third one in right hand side, and knit that color the american way! I do THAT if I have a FOURTH color!!! If you knit like I have told you, you have to put attention to the yarn tension, but that comes with practice. Earlier we always made our yarn balls ourselves, and they were balls, rolling along, accross and made a lot of trouble, a lot more than with ready made balls :-) We had many different "more or less good" solutins: Put the different yarns in its own "bowl", and it will be where you place it. OR put them in one "plastc bag(?)" and you tie it almost together so the ball will not fall out, but the yarn comes easily out. After a round or so, you "UN-BREAD" it. I just place them in different direction, and enough separated from eachother, so they do NOT roll around eachother. I do NOT think there are any good solutions that prevent all fuss.Then have to adopt solutions from weaving/knitting factories. Just now I am WEAVING "hundreds" of loose ends (small stripe pattern with many colores), because I did not take the job to do it as I worked! This is the charme of hand knitting, I think. AND a lesson ; "How can I do this better nect time." Good luck! AUD ;-)) |
#10
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Nyssa wrote in message ...
Aud wrote: that the yarn must not float more than three stitches. Then you have to "wind it around"/"cross around" the thread you are knitting with. This makes a even backside. But if one color is much darker than the other, you should be aware of the "right side". If you wind the yarns at same place several rows after eachother, you will get a "row" of darker/lighter vertical shade. Therefor you should shift a bit between the different rows. It is a bit difficult to explain in English, but I hope you understand! AUD ;-)) Thanks Aud. I understand you quite well. No translation problems at all. LOL! I'm doing the wrap thing only on the rows where the float is more than 3 stitches. My problems are more in the line of the way I'm wrapping the float; it keeps getting looped around the working yarn, so I have to stick the left needle under it and pull it around and back. The other problem I'm having is twists in the balls of working yarn. I have to stop halfway through the row and untangle/untwist the trailing yarns. It would be great if I were making cording, but it's really annoying to have to stop and untwist constantly. Any more tips? Nyssa, untwisting and wrapping Nysa, I knit the continental way, with the yarn over left hands fingers: OVER forefinger, UNDER next, OVER ringfinger and UNDER the little finger. If I have TWO colores, the second yarn starts OVER THE TWO first fingers, and is woven under and over the "rest" of the fingers. This way *the yarns (after a little practice :-)keeps their individual tension. * The yarns lies parallell ower the fingers all the time, and If you have to wrap/ weave /cross it often, you can vary if you cross "over" or under".That makes less fuss,(but NEVER prevent it!LOL!) If I work with THREE colores, prefer to find a way similar to this, but many prefer to have the third one in right hand side, and knit that color the american way! I do THAT if I have a FOURTH color!!! If you knit like I have told you, you have to put attention to the yarn tension, but that comes with practice. Earlier we always made our yarn balls ourselves, and they were balls, rolling along, accross and made a lot of trouble, a lot more than with ready made balls :-) We had many different "more or less good" solutins: Put the different yarns in its own "bowl", and it will be where you place it. OR put them in one "plastc bag(?)" and you tie it almost together so the ball will not fall out, but the yarn comes easily out. After a round or so, you "UN-BREAD" it. I just place them in different direction, and enough separated from eachother, so they do NOT roll around eachother. I do NOT think there are any good solutions that prevent all fuss.Then have to adopt solutions from weaving/knitting factories. Just now I am WEAVING "hundreds" of loose ends (small stripe pattern with many colores), because I did not take the job to do it as I worked! This is the charme of hand knitting, I think. AND a lesson ; "How can I do this better nect time." Good luck! AUD ;-)) |
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