Knitting inside out
| 10 months ago :: Feb 15, 2008 - 03:59PM #1 | |
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I am making a capelet. You start at the top and work back and forth for several inches, increasing over a bunch of rows, then join the circle to knit in the round. Somehow, when I got to the row where I had to join it, I was on a purl row. So I have been purling every row to make stockinette stitch. Basically, I am making it inside out.My question: now I'm about to start increasing again. The increase it calls for is knit into the front and back of the stitch. If I do some sort of equivalent of this in purl, will it make any difference? Or, can I break the yarn, turn the thing right side out, and start knitting every row?If anyone can follow what I'm trying to describe, and has a clue for me, I'd appreciate any help!Meg
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| 10 months ago :: Feb 26, 2008 - 12:29PM #2 | |
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Well, I ended up breaking the yarn, flipping the capelet right side out, and joining the yarn again. So now I am working on the "right side," knitting around and around.I forgot how boring stockinette can be -- though I do like the clean look of it.Meg
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