Quizzes & Puzzles10 mins ago
Intarsia Knitting - Colour Change Point Varied/random
5 Answers
I am knitting this pattern:
http:// www.kni ttingon thenet. com/pat terns/s weoddba ll.htm
I understand the basis of intarsia knitting, but I can't find any videos or text to show me what to do with the wool/yarn where the colour change point is 5-10 stitches further over compared with the previous row.
The only videos/text I can find show tutorials for knitting perhaps a square of different colour - where the change point is always within 1 stitch.
However, I want to create fluid, random changes of colour as shown in the image provided by the pattern writer.
Should I just have a section of yarn/wool on the back of my work covering the 5-10 stitch distance each time? Surely it cannot be that messy as would catch?
http://
I understand the basis of intarsia knitting, but I can't find any videos or text to show me what to do with the wool/yarn where the colour change point is 5-10 stitches further over compared with the previous row.
The only videos/text I can find show tutorials for knitting perhaps a square of different colour - where the change point is always within 1 stitch.
However, I want to create fluid, random changes of colour as shown in the image provided by the pattern writer.
Should I just have a section of yarn/wool on the back of my work covering the 5-10 stitch distance each time? Surely it cannot be that messy as would catch?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by LittleSquidge. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Many years since I knitted something using intarsia but I had the wool in´" bobbins" on the wrong side of the work .Hard for me to explain but someone else can:)
Scroll down to preparation .
http:// www.the yarnloo p.com/2 010/10/ 28/inta rsia-kn itting
Scroll down to preparation .
http://
Ever come across the Sanquhar knitting pattern? My Mum learnt it while working in a school evacuated to the Scottish borders during the war, and I still have a couple of pairs of the gloves she knitted, as in the link below. Seriously impressive:
https:/ /tomofh olland. com/201 4/11/20 /a-shor t-histo ry-of-k nitting -in-san quhar/
https:/
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