Re: knitting help
Dear Clark:
I don't know if this will help, but I'll try to walk you through the knit stitch on line and through words.
First, some orientation. You shared that you've gotten through casting on, so I'm assuming you've got a number of sitches on your left hand needle and are looking to knit them on to your right hand needle.
Again, I'm holding my yarn in my left hand -- if you've got it in your right, someone else is going to be more helpful.
1. Look at the first stitch on the needle. Holding the needle for a minute as though it were a gun pointing directly at your eye, look at the first stitch. Think of it as a little face, with the "knot" at the bottom as the "throat."
2. Take your right hand needle, and hold the point BEHIND where the left ear would be if the stitch had a left ear.
3. Insert the needle so that the trajectory is a) going in under the left ear, coming out under the chin and above the throat of the little face.
4. Your needles at this point should form an "X" shape. Lay the yarn down the middle of the "X", from back to front, so that the yarn is now flowing down in front of the stitch.
5. Keeping your needles crossed, think of you needles as the hands of a clock. Move the right hand needle so that it is pointing at 12 and the bottom is pointing at 6. Now, swing the bottom of your right hand needle so that it is pointing at 3. The tip of your right hand needle should now be pointing at 9.
6. Keeping the bottom pointing at 3, start to pull the bottom with your right hand away from you. As you are doing this, the yarn that you placed in the "crotch" of the X above, should now be under neath your right needle. As a beginner, you can also sort of hold it there with your left thumb as you are pulling the right needle's bottom away from you (keeping it aimed at the 3).
7. When the tip of your right needle is almost about to slide off the left needle, here is where the tricky part comes in.
8. Do not let the tip of your right needle lose contact with the left needle. You are going to use it as a "finger" to trace from the "right ear" of your original stitch down the "side of the face, until you get to the place where the "chin and throat" were on the original stitch.
9. When you get to this point, right under the old chin of the original stitch, start to push the end of your needle toward you, so that it is now "crossing" under the left hand needle". It may be a bit easier to let the bottom of the needle fall a little so that it is pointing at the 4 on the clock face.
10. When the right hand needle has about an inch of the point on your side of the needle, pointing at 10 on the clock face, stop sliding the point of the needle forward. Now stop for a minute, holding the needles in this position.
11. The next step is easier if the original stitch is within an inch of the point of your left needle. Keeping both needles in the same relationship, if this entire operation isn't within an inch of the end of your left needle, move it down so that it's now located there, keeping the same relationship between the needles and the yarn.
12. Keeping the needles in the same position, hold your left needle and hand completely stationary, and grasping the right needle firmly, gently pull your hands apart, which will pull the old stitch off the left hand needle. I find that it's also helpful to swing the bottom of my right hand needle to the left, which causes the point of my left hand needle to slant to the right as I'm sliding the stitch off the left hand needle.
You now have knit a stitch!
Hope that works, try it and report back. If you can only follow it to a certain point and then it gets bolloxed up, let me know what step it works to, and I can try and walk you through from that point.
Hope it's helpful,
Karin Timour
Period Knitting -- Socks, Hats, Balaclavas
Atlantic Guard Soldiers' Aid Society
Email: Ktimour@aol.com
Dear Clark:
I don't know if this will help, but I'll try to walk you through the knit stitch on line and through words.
First, some orientation. You shared that you've gotten through casting on, so I'm assuming you've got a number of sitches on your left hand needle and are looking to knit them on to your right hand needle.
Again, I'm holding my yarn in my left hand -- if you've got it in your right, someone else is going to be more helpful.
1. Look at the first stitch on the needle. Holding the needle for a minute as though it were a gun pointing directly at your eye, look at the first stitch. Think of it as a little face, with the "knot" at the bottom as the "throat."
2. Take your right hand needle, and hold the point BEHIND where the left ear would be if the stitch had a left ear.
3. Insert the needle so that the trajectory is a) going in under the left ear, coming out under the chin and above the throat of the little face.
4. Your needles at this point should form an "X" shape. Lay the yarn down the middle of the "X", from back to front, so that the yarn is now flowing down in front of the stitch.
5. Keeping your needles crossed, think of you needles as the hands of a clock. Move the right hand needle so that it is pointing at 12 and the bottom is pointing at 6. Now, swing the bottom of your right hand needle so that it is pointing at 3. The tip of your right hand needle should now be pointing at 9.
6. Keeping the bottom pointing at 3, start to pull the bottom with your right hand away from you. As you are doing this, the yarn that you placed in the "crotch" of the X above, should now be under neath your right needle. As a beginner, you can also sort of hold it there with your left thumb as you are pulling the right needle's bottom away from you (keeping it aimed at the 3).
7. When the tip of your right needle is almost about to slide off the left needle, here is where the tricky part comes in.
8. Do not let the tip of your right needle lose contact with the left needle. You are going to use it as a "finger" to trace from the "right ear" of your original stitch down the "side of the face, until you get to the place where the "chin and throat" were on the original stitch.
9. When you get to this point, right under the old chin of the original stitch, start to push the end of your needle toward you, so that it is now "crossing" under the left hand needle". It may be a bit easier to let the bottom of the needle fall a little so that it is pointing at the 4 on the clock face.
10. When the right hand needle has about an inch of the point on your side of the needle, pointing at 10 on the clock face, stop sliding the point of the needle forward. Now stop for a minute, holding the needles in this position.
11. The next step is easier if the original stitch is within an inch of the point of your left needle. Keeping both needles in the same relationship, if this entire operation isn't within an inch of the end of your left needle, move it down so that it's now located there, keeping the same relationship between the needles and the yarn.
12. Keeping the needles in the same position, hold your left needle and hand completely stationary, and grasping the right needle firmly, gently pull your hands apart, which will pull the old stitch off the left hand needle. I find that it's also helpful to swing the bottom of my right hand needle to the left, which causes the point of my left hand needle to slant to the right as I'm sliding the stitch off the left hand needle.
You now have knit a stitch!
Hope that works, try it and report back. If you can only follow it to a certain point and then it gets bolloxed up, let me know what step it works to, and I can try and walk you through from that point.
Hope it's helpful,
Karin Timour
Period Knitting -- Socks, Hats, Balaclavas
Atlantic Guard Soldiers' Aid Society
Email: Ktimour@aol.com
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