Monthly Archives: March 2016

Green Diaper Cover / Soaker, NB (knitting)

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Used a 100g ball of Knit Picks WoTA almost EXACTLY. I was really pushing it with the leg cuffs, but I just barely made it. Next time I will use a complementary color on the waistband and leg cuffs – which also means I can get longer legs too.

04-18-2016

It has been lanolized, and repels water (even with what looked like it was a too-loose weave with the pattern gauge)!

Now to sew on a button for the umbilical snap-down >.<

04-19-2016

Button has been sewn, and it’s officially done!

04-29-2016

After finishing my purple diaper cover – I think I have to add that using needles one size smaller than suggested in the pattern and actually using 16” circulars seemed to help tremendously in keeping the ribbing stretchy and the stitches tight.

Stitchionary – Stockinette Stitch 3 ways (loom knitting)

Stitchionary - Stockinette Stitch 3 ways (loom knitting)

Stockinette stitch done using 3 different knit methods: true knit, u-wrap, and flat stitch.

Please see my note below the pattern to understand why the e-wrap does not produce the knit stitch – it works just fine as a pattern modification, but makes a different stitch called the twisted knit stitch.

See all my loom-knit Stitchionary swatch projects here.

Loom Knitting Pattern:

This pattern works for both flat panels and round circular tubes

Knit methods: true knit, u-wrap, or flat stitch

  • Cast on desired number of pegs
  • Row 1: knit every peg using chosen method
  • Repeat Row 1 until desired length reached
  • Bind off

Please note: The e-wrap does NOT make the knit stitch, it produces a different stitch called the twisted knit stitch!

While there is nothing wrong with using the e-wrap to replace knit stitches in your work with twisted knit stitches, your end result will look different than an actual knit stitch – it will produce a twisted stockinette stitch pattern instead.

Due to ease-of-use, many loom knitters prefer using the twisted knit stitch / e-wrap as their default knit stitch. This is fine to do, but the problem is they often write patterns calling this stitch a “knit stitch” when it’s actually a different stitch. Please check your patterns carefully and look for the twist in the finished product image to determine whether they intend to mean “twisted knit”/”e-wrap” when they call for “knit” stitches.

True knit, u-wrap, and flat stitch all produce the actual “knit” stitch – they just use different methods that often produce different tensions. This is much like people who needle knit continental style vs english style – they use two different ways to produce the same stitch, but one knitter might prefer one or the other due to comfort, convenience, or more consistent tension.

Because these methods produce the same knitting stitch, you can not tell who used continental needle knitting, english needle knitting, portuguese needle knitting, true knit loom knitting, u-wrap loom knitting, or flat stitch loom knitting — because the end product is always the same stitch. Not true with the e-wrap/twisted knit, because it produces a new stitch that looks different than the actual knit stitch.

Stitchionary – Twisted Stockinette Stitch (loom knitting)

Stitchionary - Twisted Stockinette Stitch (loom knitting)

See all my loom-knit Stitchionary swatch projects here.

Loom Knitting Pattern:

This pattern works for both flat panels and round circular tubes

  • Cast on desired number of pegs
  • Row 1: ewrap every peg
  • Repeat Row 1 until desired length reached
  • Bind off

Please note: The e-wrap does NOT make the knit stitch, it produces a different stitch called the twisted knit stitch!

While there is nothing wrong with using the e-wrap to replace knit stitches in your work with twisted knit stitches, your end result will look different than an actual knit stockinette stitch.

Due to ease-of-use, many loom knitters prefer using the twisted knit stitch / ewrap as their default knit stitch. This is fine to do, but the problem is they often write patterns calling this stitch a “knit stitch” when it’s actually a different stitch. Please check your patterns carefully and look for the twist in the finished product image to determine whether they intend to mean “twisted knit”/”ewrap” when they call for “knit” stitches.

True knit, u-wrap, and flat stitch all produce the actual “knit” stitch – they just use different methods that often produce different tensions. This is much like people who needle knit continental style vs english style – they use two different ways to produce the same stitch, but one knitter might prefer one or the other due to comfort, convenience, or more consistent tension.

Because these methods produce the same knitting stitch, you can not tell who used continental needle knitting, english needle knitting, portuguese needle knitting, true knit loom knitting, u-wrap loom knitting, or flat stitch loom knitting — because the end product is always the same stitch. Not true with the e-wrap/twisted knit, because it produces a new stitch that looks different than the actual knit stitch.

Stitchionary – Stockinette Stitch, ewrap (loom knitting)

Swatch made on 24 pegs of the AKB 10” knitting board, which is a 3/8” peg spacing loom. You can do this project on any loom, on any number of pegs.

Pattern:

Worked as a flat panel. You will be knitting in opposite directions (left to right and right to left) on each row.

Use a ruler to measure the number of stitches per inch, using the center area of your knitting so you don’t have errors due to curling edges. You may need to pin or weigh down your knitting so it stays flat.

For better accuracy, measure 4 inches of stitches, then divide that number by 4 to get your stitches per inch.

CinDWood Preorder Kiddo Looms

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I had a few March preorders from CinDWood that arrived early on Friday! 🙂 These were all Child and Baby looms – a baby hat, child hat, and infant-toddler sock looms in both 1/4″ and 3/8″ gauges. This rounds up my CinDWood fine gauge looms to sizes for Adult Hats, Adult Small Hats, Child Hats, and Baby Hats – along… Read more »