Category Archives: Tutorials

Let’s talk about blocking handknits

Home and reunited with my favorite blocking tools, I finally gave my Stripe Study Shawl (rav link) a good soak and spread it out to block.  While it was drying, it occurred to me that I’ve never really talked with you about my blocking process. So that’s what I’m going to do today. I’ve found blocking to be a simple and inexpensive way to make my finished knits look dramatically better.  You see: yarn has a lot of twist in it already, and knitting it just kinks it up even more. Wetting it down and smoothing it out lets all the twist relax and settle in, resulting in a much neater finished garment for you.

Some of this likely won’t be all that illuminating to those yarnbenders among you who have been at this craft awhile and many of you probably have your own methods. The methods and tools featured here are just the ones I’ve personally found to be easiest and most useful so far. Of course, your mileage may vary. Let’s get started.

The first step is to finish knitting. In most cases, I like to weave in any ends before blocking. Once that’s done, out comes the wool wash and my trusty dishtub.

I’m currently using Eucalan wool wash, which is a gentle, no-rinse soap that I purchased at a yarn store. I currently like Eucalan because it smells like lavender (I’m obsessed with lavender), but any other nice wool wash (Soak, Kookaburra) would work just as well. You can also use other kinds of gentle soap, or even just plain water if you like, but I highly recommend taking the plunge and treating yourself to a bottle of nice wool wash. Even the most premium brand costs a mere fraction of the yarn you are likely using for your project and each bottle is likely to last a really long time. You use the stuff a spoonful or two at a time.

I take about a generous spoonful of the wool wash and put it in the bottom of this plastic dishpan I purchased for less than $5 at my local discount store—look for them in the dishrack aisle. I like having the dishpan for blocking because then I don’t tie up the sink (nor do I have to clean out the sink to block…bonus!).

I fill the dishpan about half full of lukewarm water and then add the knits. It’s a good idea not to use hot water for blocking and if your knits are wool, DO NOT put the knits in first and let the water run on top of them, unless you want to end up with felt.

After the knits soak awhile, I gently and carefully lift them out of the water with both hands and squeeze to get as much water as possible out.

Next I spread the knits on a clean towel that I don’t care about (in case dye comes out of the yarn) and I roll the whole thing up together. Next the fun part: I stomp all over the towel in my bare feet so the water moves out of the knitwear and into the towel.

Finally, it’s time for the blocking boards.

My blocking boards are these obnoxious green children’s playmats that I scored at a discount store long before yarn stores got smart and started selling them in less eyeball-searing colors. I like them because I can hook them together based on the shape I need for my garment.

I use blocking wires and t-pins for almost every project that is flat or has flat pieces. Blocking wires are heavy gauge stainless steel wires cut into pieces of various lengths. I like to run the wire through the stitches at the very edge of my knitting first. I then make sure the edges of the piece are nice and straight and all the corners look nice as I pin it down.

Any pins will work for this purpose, but T-pins are great because they are so easy to grab onto and to see. If you are stretching out a lace shawl, the big knit stitches also can’t accidentally lift over the pinheads. T-pins are often available at the yarn store, but you may find them cheaper at a chain fabric store (ie. Joann’s, Hobby Lobby) if you have one near you. I found mine with the quilting stuff.

Blocking wires are also available at the yarn store, which is where I got mine. I got a whole set for around $20 and they were worth every penny. There are tutorials out there for making your own, but I suspect it might not be that cost effective if you don’t have the right tools already.  If you get or make new blocking wires, make sure to clean them carefully with a paper towel before you get them near your knits; they can have grease/oil on them from the factory. Another DIY option: temporarily thread smooth cotton string through the edges of your knit pieces. Pulling the string taut can help you get a nice smooth edge while your piece dries.

That’s all there is to blocking! After that, you just have to wait patiently for your knitted goodness to dry.

A few last words about blocking on a budget, my total cost for all these tools was $50-60, which I spread out over time and I have found to be totally worth it. If you want to get serious about blocking your knits but it isn’t in your budget to buy all of this stuff at once, I recommend putting your money first toward a nice wool wash and some t-pins, followed by wires, followed by blocking boards. In my experience, having a gentle wool wash makes a huge difference in the character of finished knitted fabric. Other soaps can be too harsh for handknits and require lots of rinsing, which can make for fuzzy knits. Knitting on a real shoestring budget? You can always soak your knits in the sink or bathtub and pin your work out on a stack of old blankets if need be.

Here’s to beautiful finished handknits! Happy blocking, everyone!

How to Start Knitting Socks: A Few Tips

I was quite flattered the other day to find a comment on my latest sock knitting post from Nikki, who you may know from her fabulous blog, stitch.tac.sew. If you aren’t already reading stitch.tac.sew, you really should stop by (and while you’re there, don’t forget to grab a free copy of what may be the most adorable crochet slipper pattern ever from Nikki’s patterns page).  Nikki mentioned that she is interested in knitting her first pair of socks and wondered if I had pattern suggestions.

It struck me that “first socks” is a topic that may appeal to others in the Wool Durham audience, so I’ve gathered my thoughts and suggestions on getting started with socks into this post. This could be a long post, friends. You may want to go grab a beverage. I’ll wait.

Handknits from my sock drawer: a baker's dozen!

OK, then. Let’s get started.

In the past few years, there has been a complete explosion of sock knitting patterns, books, techniques, and materials.  For those of us who caught the sock bug a long time ago, this explosion is heavenly. For people just getting started with socks, on the other hand, I bet it is rather overwhelming.  I’m going to try to list the info I’d want to know if I were in your shoes.

Socks are not especially difficult to knit but they are probably not an ideal first knitting project. You should know how to knit, purl, increase, decrease, pick up stitches and work in the round. The vast majority of sock patterns call for knitting a narrow tube in the round, with a “turned” heel in the middle, and a toe on one end.  This process can be accomplished in a surprising variety of ways, depending on the pattern you are using and how you prefer to work.  You won’t know how you prefer to work until you try out a bunch of different ways for yourself. This can be part of the fun, if you let it.

I recommend working your first socks at a large gauge with big yarn.  Because you will have less time invested in the knitting, you won’t be as disappointed if you have to re-do part to get it right. Trust me, the emotional stakes are higher at 10+ stitches per inch (ask me how I know. . .). Look for a yarn in at least sport weight. DK, worsted, or aran is even better. Once you get the hang of things, then switch to the skinny fingering weights.

My ideal sock yarn is always a superwash wool/nylon blend. Superwash is a chemical treatment that renders wool machine washable, which is good for socks unless you are in the habit of handwashing and air-drying all the socks in your life (and if this is the case, you have my total admiration). Wool is good because it is elastic and forgiving (and warm and lots of other good things).  Nylon adds strength, which isn’t so important in sweaters and scarves, but is important in socks, which are constantly coping with friction from the floor/your feet/your shoes.  Two of my favorite heavier sock yarns: Cherry Tree Hill Supersock DK and Knitpicks Stroll Sport.

Your next choice will be needles. Because of the stress that the aforementioned friction will put on your socks, you will want to knit them at a tighter gauge than you would normally use for your yarn.  Going two or three sizes smaller than the recommended size from your yarn label is a good starting point. For example, I knit my latest pair of Cherry Tree Hill Supersock DK socks on 3mm needles (US2.5).

In addition, you will want to consider what type of needles to use, double pointed needles (often abbreviated DPNs) or circulars. This is a matter of personal preference. I strongly prefer double pointed needles. Plenty of other knitters prefer using one or two long flexible circular needles (see videos of these methods here).  You’ll just have to try both ways and make up your own mind on that one.

Still with me? You’ve now got your yarn and needles picked out. All that’s left is the pattern. Here’s where the fun begins. There are *tons* of great sock patterns out there. Many of them are even free. Once you get going, you’ll find that socks are a great way to try out new stitch patterns. In the meantime though, you should learn to walk before you run. I suggest you stick to a basic pattern worked cuff-to-toe with a traditional gusset heel (not short-rows) and focus on what I think is the trickiest part of the whole business: turning the heel.

Before you get all freaked out about it, keep in mind that turning the heel is also the really fun part! I really do think it is one of my all time favorite knitting tricks. It’s like magic! If you can work knit stitches and read directions, you can turn a sock heel. A few tips to keep in mind for turning your first heel:

  • Follow the directions. Even if they don’t seem like they will work.
  • It may seem strange because you are working in the round for the leg, but at the heel you will have to turn the piece over and work back the opposite direction. Yes, it will technically be in the middle of a row. Just go with it. Take a deep breath and re-read my first bullet point if you must.
  • When your pattern tells you to pick up stitches along the heel flap, don’t be afraid to pick up a few extra on the sides if you need to in order to avoid holes. You can always work extra decreases in the first few rows.
  • Still freaking out?  Set your sock aside and get some waste yarn and whatever other needles you can find. Cast on the number of stitches your pattern indicates for the heel. Work just a heel on the waste yarn first and then go back to your sock.

Last but not least, the toe. By the time you get here, you’re good to go. Take the time to carefully graft your toes closed using the Kitchener stitch.

Ready to get started?  Here are links to some free sock patterns that I think would make good Starter Socks:

  • For plain stockinette, try the 56 stitch 56 row sock (rav link)
  • For plain kids’ socks, great for charity knitting, try the Wool Aid pattern (rav link)
  • For a simple rib pattern, try Thuja (rav link) Note: this pattern is designed to fit men, but you can easily size it down by using smaller needles and making the cuff and foot shorter.
  • If you are a pretty experienced knitter and stockinette stitch bores you, try Duckies (rav link) Note: The simple lace pattern involves yarn overs.

So that’s it then!  Go forth and warm the feet of all your friends and family.  Comments are open if anyone has questions (or if those sock knitting ninjas out there have other tips to share).

http://www.ravelry.com/patterns/library/ww-socks

Five for Friday: Online Tutorials for Knitting Techniques

This week I went hunting on the web for some information on how to bind off sweater shoulders without those annoying (and hard to sew) stair steps.  I was amazed at all of the tutorials out there on Google.  I eventually found what I needed, but I realized that searching for tutorials in your search engine can be downright intimidating these days!  I usually save myself some time by bookmarking excellent tutorials for knitting techniques as I encounter them so I will always know where to find them when I actually need them.

Along these lines, I thought some of you might appreciate seeing my list of most useful tutorial links. There are many great tutorials out there, but these are a few I keep coming back to over and over.

1. Lucy Neatby’s Explanation of the Crochet Provisional Cast On

Raise your hand if you have ever tried a crochet provisional cast on, intending to zip out the crochet waste-yarn chain to expose your new stitches in one quick motion, but ending up picking them out one by one with embroidery scissors? I know I am not alone in this. Fortunately, Lucy Neatby has saved all of us from this depressing fate. This tutorial is the ONLY such explanation that has ever worked for me. If I can get it to work, trust me: you can too!

2. Cirilia Rose Demonstrating Picking Up Stitches, via Berroco.com

Watching this video helped the idea of picking up stitches “click” for me.  Ever since, there are no more of those terrible ruffly ribbing edges along my sweater necks and cardigan fronts. Or at least that is what I like to tell myself. . .  Berroco has a bunch of other helpful tutorial videos that are worth a look on their website as well.

3. The Purl Bee’s Photo Tutorial on Kitchener Stitch

There are many, many tutorials out there on Kitchener Stitch and not all presentations are effective for every knitter.  This photo tutorial from the Purl Bee is my go-to helper when I get jammed up on grafting. The big, clear photos and logical explanations make this slightly counter-intuitive stitch crystal clear to me.

4. Jeny’s Surprisingly Stretchy Bind Off

This deceptively simple technique can really rescue toe-up socks and top down hats. Without this, many such creations of mine likely would have been unwearable.

5. Grumperina’s Explanation of Jogless Stripes in the Round

If you are like me, you may have to read through this a time or two before it falls into place, but if you want to make striped hats/socks/mittens/EZ raglan sweaters, this will change your life by helping you overcome those annoying columns where the stripes don’t line up.

Last but not least, the Wool Durham Lifetime Achievement Award in this category definitely goes to TECHKnitting, a blog with so many helpful technique explanations that it will blow your mind. If you don’t have this one bookmarked, what are you waiting for?

Have any tutorials you love that are not on my list? Please don’t be shy! Share them with me and other readers in the comments.  Have a great weekend, everyone!

Five for Friday is a series of (mostly) weekly posts to highlight five favorite fiber-related links or items I’d like to share with my readers. Got an idea/request for a future feature? Email me or post to the comments.

Tutorial: Top down sewn hem

More and more knitting designers are publishing sweater patterns worked from the top down, often in the round. In terms of finishing and fit, these patterns offer some advantages over more traditional ways to work sweaters (in separate pieces sewn together or in the round from the bottom up).  Finishing top down sweaters tends to be easy, but it does require some different techniques and thoughtfulness about cast on and bind off techniques.

I was pleasantly surprised to discover a new love for the sewn hem as a neat finishing technique for top down sweater edges while finishing my Buttercup tee. As long as you aren’t afraid of your yarn needle, I think these hems are even easier than their bottom-up counterpart. And no fiddly provisional cast on technique is required (I can’t be the only one who loathes provisional cast ons, right?).

How to Work a Sewn Hem from the Top Down

* Note: My swatch uses two colors so it is easier for you to see what is going on and to demonstrate how invisible it is from the right side.  You are welcome to work your hem in all one color.

These hems only really have five simple steps.

1. Finish knitting the garment exactly to the point where you want the hem to lie.

2. Make your hem turn point: Work one row so it will appear as a purl row on the right side of the garment. Working in the round, this will always be a purl row. Knitting in pieces? Pay attention because if you finish step one on a knit row, this turn row will be another knit row as you work on the wrong side!

3. Work in stockinette stitch for the length that you want your hem to be. This length will depend on the garment, but will likely range between 1/2 inch for sleeves or delicate/light sweaters and up to 2 inches for a heavier sweater.  Make sure that the right (knit) side of your hem stitches is the same as the right side of your garment, like so:

4. Bind off in knit.

5. Fold the hem along the purl row (it will want to fold naturally) and sew it down. This is the trickiest step so let me go into a little more detail on what worked for me.

  • It may help if you either block or press (or best, both!) the garment before sewing the hem.
  • If you are using a plied yarn, you may have a neater hem if you use only one or two plies to sew.  To separate, simply cut a short length of your yarn, pull apart the plies at one end, and untwist the yarn. If this step confuses you, don’t worry about it. I sewed this sample swatch with all four plies of worsted weight yarn and it looked fine.
  • Insert your needle under one knit stitch on your bound off edge and under one purl loop from the knitted garment body.  Pictures should help illustrate how I did this.

I start by inserting my needle under the knit stitch on the bound off edge and then I catch one purl loop from the row above where the hem will be.  Catching the purl loop this way makes your sewing invisible on the right side.  I then pull the yarn through to tighten the stitch. Do not tighten it so much that your hem gathers!

Second, I catch the purl loop next to the one my yarn is coming out of (I’m working left to right, but you could go the other way) and push the needle down through the knit stitch on the bound off edge just next to the one I just sewed.

Repeat these stitches across your hem and then turn it over and admire your work:

That’s all there is to it! Questions?

Update: Five for Friday, my (mostly) weekly top-five list feature, will be back next week with a list of five great knitting podcasts for you to check out.