Friday, December 01, 2006

A quickie today.

There have been a few times when I've wanted to work I-cord (or a knit edging) onto the perimeter of something, completely encircling it, and ending up by grafting the final live stitches onto the original cast-on row with the hope of creating as near seamless a join as possible. Here's an example:

sofa-1.jpg

To date when I've needed to do this, I've either knit several rows extra of the I-cord "free" prior to beginning to apply it to the edging, or I've used a provisional cast-on with waste yarn for wider knit trims. Working several rows of extra I-cord gives me a snip zone I can cut and then ravel back to produce the cast-on edge live loops I need for grafting. I suppose for narrow trims, I could do a similar thing - knitting several rows of plain garter or stockinette prior to beginning simultaneous application to the thing being trimmed and commencement of my trim pattern. A judicious snip and ravel back will reveal those live loops just as nicely as working sacrificial to-be-cut I-cord does.

But I had a "doh!" moment last night. Why not just cast those few first stitches directly onto a large safety pin or small stitch holder? Unclasp, transfer stitches onto a live needle, and go! To do this, I'd use the simplest of provisional cast-ons, starting out by holding my strand behind my stitch holder and picking one stitch up knitwise, then I'd shunt the yarn to the front of the holder and with my needle tip in back of it, pick up one stitch purlwise, and so on.

Here are seven stitches picked up on a stitch holder:


i-cordtrix2.jpg

It looks kind of like the figure-8 cast-on I favor for toe-up socks:

EXCEPT that by picking up the stitches instead of winding the yarn around the needles I've managed to mount every other stitch with the leading leg in back. Not a problem. I'd work one corrective row of purls back before beginning my edging, and on that row, I'd purl into that back leading leg to eliminate any inadvertently twisted stitches. Or I could reverse the direction of the stitch holder and wind the yarn on exactly the same way as I do for my fig-8 cast-on, eliminating the problem entirely.

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Friday, December 01, 2006 12:45:52 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [3]  | 
Friday, December 01, 2006 10:48:44 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
You are a bl**dy genius! Why didn't I think of that? I hate trying to work those sts off the spare thread and onto the needle. Mwa! Mwa!
Saturday, December 02, 2006 1:03:28 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
Thank goodness for people like you who have brains wired to 'see' such things. I am, quite comfortably, part of the group who wait for your group to write out such things for us to copy. Who would have thought of that provisional cast on???? Not my group!
Wednesday, December 06, 2006 11:40:36 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
I think Cat Bordhi's Magical Knitting book (knitting moebius bands) does the same kind of thing for casting on. She also has you knit through the front and back loops alternately to fix the stitch mount problem. (In her case, instead of using a stitch holder you use the cable from the middle of your needle...)
delf
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