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#1
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?? Is something knit on a manual knitting machine "hand knit"?
I am seeing items made on knitting frames, i.e., manual knitting machines,
labeled as "hand knit". Is this legal, or fair and proper? And, are there stitches, designs, or patterns that can not be "machine knit" and thus demonstrate to knowledgably people that the object was knit with needle in hand? Aaron |
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#2
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?? Is something knit on a manual knitting machine "hand knit"?
wrote in message . com... I am seeing items made on knitting frames, i.e., manual knitting machines, labeled as "hand knit". Is this legal, or fair and proper? And, are there stitches, designs, or patterns that can not be "machine knit" and thus demonstrate to knowledgably people that the object was knit with needle in hand? Aaron Hand manipulated kntting IS considered hand-knit, Aaron..... JM2C, Hugs, Noreen |
#3
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?? Is something knit on a manual knitting machine "hand knit"?
What stitches or patterns can I do that a knitting frame/machine can not?
Aaron " YarnWright" wrote in message ... wrote in message . com... I am seeing items made on knitting frames, i.e., manual knitting machines, labeled as "hand knit". Is this legal, or fair and proper? And, are there stitches, designs, or patterns that can not be "machine knit" and thus demonstrate to knowledgably people that the object was knit with needle in hand? Aaron Hand manipulated kntting IS considered hand-knit, Aaron..... JM2C, Hugs, Noreen |
#4
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?? Is something knit on a manual knitting machine "hand knit"?
On Sun, 12 Mar 2006 20:53:32 GMT, spewed forth :
I am seeing items made on knitting frames, i.e., manual knitting machines, labeled as "hand knit". Is this legal, or fair and proper? And, are there stitches, designs, or patterns that can not be "machine knit" and thus demonstrate to knowledgably people that the object was knit with needle in hand? Aaron Unless the knitting machine works under its own power, can effect the color changes, increases, decreases, cable crosses, bobbles, purls, etc all by its onesome it is indeed hand knit. I bill my machine-knit socks as hand-cranked. The machine speeds along the knitting process, but it doesn't know how to turn a heel or toe. +++++++++++++ Reply to the list as I do not publish an email address to USENET. This practice has cut my spam by more than 95%. Of course, I did have to abandon a perfectly good email account... |
#5
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?? Is something knit on a manual knitting machine "hand knit"?
YO's,
PSSO's well, actually you CAN do them on a knitting machine or knitting frame, come to think of it! But, you CANT do garter stitch, it's stockinette only, LOL! Noreen -- change n e t to c o m to email/reply to me. wrote in message news What stitches or patterns can I do that a knitting frame/machine can not? Aaron " YarnWright" wrote in message ... wrote in message . com... I am seeing items made on knitting frames, i.e., manual knitting machines, labeled as "hand knit". Is this legal, or fair and proper? And, are there stitches, designs, or patterns that can not be "machine knit" and thus demonstrate to knowledgably people that the object was knit with needle in hand? Aaron Hand manipulated kntting IS considered hand-knit, Aaron..... JM2C, Hugs, Noreen |
#6
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?? Is something knit on a manual knitting machine "hand knit"?
"Wooly" wrote in message ... On Sun, 12 Mar 2006 20:53:32 GMT, spewed forth : I am seeing items made on knitting frames, i.e., manual knitting machines, labeled as "hand knit". Is this legal, or fair and proper? And, are there stitches, designs, or patterns that can not be "machine knit" and thus demonstrate to knowledgably people that the object was knit with needle in hand? Aaron Unless the knitting machine works under its own power, can effect the color changes, increases, decreases, cable crosses, bobbles, purls, etc all by its onesome it is indeed hand knit. I bill my machine-knit socks as hand-cranked. The machine speeds along the knitting process, but it doesn't know how to turn a heel or toe. nod nod nod, eggsacterly. One still has to manipulate, especially lacey things too! JM2C, Noreen |
#7
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?? Is something knit on a manual knitting machine "hand knit"?
On Sun, 12 Mar 2006 15:47:20 -0600, " YarnWright"
spewed forth : YO's, PSSO's well, actually you CAN do them on a knitting machine or knitting frame, come to think of it! But, you CANT do garter stitch, it's stockinette only, LOL! Noreen Oh, you can produce garter stitch on a knitting machine. Its a real PITA though. Its the hand-manipulation that puts me off of doing anything but stockinette yardage on the flatbed knitter or stripes on the CSM. +++++++++++++ Reply to the list as I do not publish an email address to USENET. This practice has cut my spam by more than 95%. Of course, I did have to abandon a perfectly good email account... |
#8
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?? Is something knit on a manual knitting machine "hand knit"?
So, with the proper attachments and skills, any stitch or pattern can be
knit on a machine? Aaron "Wooly" wrote in message ... On Sun, 12 Mar 2006 20:53:32 GMT, spewed forth : I am seeing items made on knitting frames, i.e., manual knitting machines, labeled as "hand knit". Is this legal, or fair and proper? And, are there stitches, designs, or patterns that can not be "machine knit" and thus demonstrate to knowledgably people that the object was knit with needle in hand? Aaron Unless the knitting machine works under its own power, can effect the color changes, increases, decreases, cable crosses, bobbles, purls, etc all by its onesome it is indeed hand knit. I bill my machine-knit socks as hand-cranked. The machine speeds along the knitting process, but it doesn't know how to turn a heel or toe. +++++++++++++ Reply to the list as I do not publish an email address to USENET. This practice has cut my spam by more than 95%. Of course, I did have to abandon a perfectly good email account... |
#9
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?? Is something knit on a manual knitting machine "hand knit"?
Thanks!!
POP! POP! That sound you hear is my eyes opening! Aaron "Wooly" wrote in message ... On Sun, 12 Mar 2006 15:47:20 -0600, " YarnWright" spewed forth : YO's, PSSO's well, actually you CAN do them on a knitting machine or knitting frame, come to think of it! But, you CANT do garter stitch, it's stockinette only, LOL! Noreen Oh, you can produce garter stitch on a knitting machine. Its a real PITA though. Its the hand-manipulation that puts me off of doing anything but stockinette yardage on the flatbed knitter or stripes on the CSM. +++++++++++++ Reply to the list as I do not publish an email address to USENET. This practice has cut my spam by more than 95%. Of course, I did have to abandon a perfectly good email account... |
#10
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?? Is something knit on a manual knitting machine "hand knit"?
At the industrial level, who knows. Anything is possible, but that
doesn't mean it will be cost-efficient. The toes and heels on cheap white athletic socks are sewn to shape, not knitted that way - its because the high-speed knitting machines that know how to make a short row heel (computer driven) have "issues" that make it cheaper and easier for the Chinese sock factories to employ cheap labor to do the toe and heel shapings by hand. High-dollar flatbed knitting machines for home use are capable of producing intarsia and fair isle with the proper attachments, but there's still an awful lot of handwork involved to ensure the color changes happen correctly and the tension remains consistent throughout the work. To the best of my knowledge there's no attachment anywhere that'll let a machine do cable crosses and bobbles and heavy texture without human intervention. Of course, I've been wrong before and I could be wrong now. The average consumer neither knows nor cares if there is a difference between "hand finished" which describes most commercially-produced sweaters and "hand knit" which describes the things we knit by hand. On Sun, 12 Mar 2006 21:53:36 GMT, spewed forth : So, with the proper attachments and skills, any stitch or pattern can be knit on a machine? Aaron "Wooly" wrote in message .. . On Sun, 12 Mar 2006 20:53:32 GMT, spewed forth : I am seeing items made on knitting frames, i.e., manual knitting machines, labeled as "hand knit". Is this legal, or fair and proper? And, are there stitches, designs, or patterns that can not be "machine knit" and thus demonstrate to knowledgably people that the object was knit with needle in hand? Aaron Unless the knitting machine works under its own power, can effect the color changes, increases, decreases, cable crosses, bobbles, purls, etc all by its onesome it is indeed hand knit. I bill my machine-knit socks as hand-cranked. The machine speeds along the knitting process, but it doesn't know how to turn a heel or toe. +++++++++++++ Reply to the list as I do not publish an email address to USENET. This practice has cut my spam by more than 95%. Of course, I did have to abandon a perfectly good email account... +++++++++++++ Reply to the list as I do not publish an email address to USENET. This practice has cut my spam by more than 95%. Of course, I did have to abandon a perfectly good email account... |
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