KNITTING IS HARD
Dec. 6th, 2010 10:18 pmI swear, I used to know how to do it! Kid has a Gryffindor scarf I made all by myself. And I know I made a baby bonnet for my niece.
I'm out of practice, though, because the last time I was knitting regularly, I tended to overgrip and aggravate my ulnar nerve, something I can also do by rolling out too much croissant dough or playing too much Guitar Hero. But I figure if I'm careful, I can probably manage it.
I taught myself out of a book, too. A book I still have. So I went downstairs and fished it out of the bins of sewing room stuff. (Couldn't find the needles and things -- suspect I gave that entire tote bag over to the kid, who prefers to crochet.) And tried to refresh my memory.
The diagram in the book for casting on didn't work the way it LOOKED like it should, but I eventually remembered the twining motion I'd used before, and re-established the knack of it. I think with some more practice, I'll be able to cast on without having the stitches spiral around the needle.
Then I tried to knit again. AUGH. I could have sworn that I taught myself ambidextrously last time. Well, if I did, it's not working now. I CANNOT enact the basic knit motion "right-handed." Screwing it up enough times let me remember how it FELT to get it right, so once I ditched the diagrams and started doing it left-handed, I got it.
This was AFTER switching from a nice sport-weight cotton/acrylic baby yarn (my project yarn) to a worsted-weight crappy acrylic that I'd picked up years ago with the intent of making a Slytherin sweater. If I'd had bigger needles to practice on, I would have switched to those, too.
But once I did all that, I even got the hang of moving the yarn from back to front and vice versa for rib knit, which is a thing I'll need.
And if I remember the reversals, I'll be able to consult the diagrams for the other important stuff like yarnovers and increases and decreases.
I have two nice long train rides tomorrow, so I ought to be able to get a nice start on the whole business.
I'm out of practice, though, because the last time I was knitting regularly, I tended to overgrip and aggravate my ulnar nerve, something I can also do by rolling out too much croissant dough or playing too much Guitar Hero. But I figure if I'm careful, I can probably manage it.
I taught myself out of a book, too. A book I still have. So I went downstairs and fished it out of the bins of sewing room stuff. (Couldn't find the needles and things -- suspect I gave that entire tote bag over to the kid, who prefers to crochet.) And tried to refresh my memory.
The diagram in the book for casting on didn't work the way it LOOKED like it should, but I eventually remembered the twining motion I'd used before, and re-established the knack of it. I think with some more practice, I'll be able to cast on without having the stitches spiral around the needle.
Then I tried to knit again. AUGH. I could have sworn that I taught myself ambidextrously last time. Well, if I did, it's not working now. I CANNOT enact the basic knit motion "right-handed." Screwing it up enough times let me remember how it FELT to get it right, so once I ditched the diagrams and started doing it left-handed, I got it.
This was AFTER switching from a nice sport-weight cotton/acrylic baby yarn (my project yarn) to a worsted-weight crappy acrylic that I'd picked up years ago with the intent of making a Slytherin sweater. If I'd had bigger needles to practice on, I would have switched to those, too.
But once I did all that, I even got the hang of moving the yarn from back to front and vice versa for rib knit, which is a thing I'll need.
And if I remember the reversals, I'll be able to consult the diagrams for the other important stuff like yarnovers and increases and decreases.
I have two nice long train rides tomorrow, so I ought to be able to get a nice start on the whole business.
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Date: 2010-12-07 03:22 am (UTC)(Also, stitches will spiral on cast-on. They just like to. It's okay, they'll straighten out as you go.)
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Date: 2010-12-07 03:31 am (UTC)That's good to know about the spiraling, and that it won't affect the finished product.
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Date: 2010-12-07 03:48 am (UTC)(superwash wool is often nicer for a baby than non washable, and much nicer for the laundry-washer. but acrylic has its place)
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Date: 2010-12-07 03:51 am (UTC)And some of the most treasured handmade things I got for my kid were acrylic, and I was really happy that they were, because it meant it was easy to wash them. Babies are MESSY, yo.
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Date: 2010-12-07 03:52 am (UTC)My mother told me I always had sensitive skin (she said the neonatal staff told her it's common for redheads), so I don't blame wool. I'd like a better idea of what's going on, to make it easier to order wool. Right now, I have to press it against my neck and see how I react in order to know. All I've figured out so far is that neck seems to have expensive tastes. ;(
As for the spiral thing, I seem to recall that, too. The sampler scarf I'm working on right now started off all twisty but straightened out as I went along and now is fine (except for the parts where I keep screwing up, but that's unrelated).
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Date: 2010-12-07 04:03 am (UTC)Since that sort of thing isn't labeled, testing against your neck is pretty much the only way, alas.
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Date: 2010-12-09 02:30 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-12-09 02:44 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-12-09 02:48 pm (UTC)Early = afternoon; Elayna's winter concert is 6:30pm. (Hence me maybe being a touch late to karaoke.)
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Date: 2010-12-09 03:04 pm (UTC)The Cotton-Ease is probably getting repurposed for a nice, easy-wash blanket, if I knit fast enough to have time to work on that. Prioritized list is hat, booties, sweater, blanket.
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Date: 2010-12-09 03:06 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-12-09 03:08 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-12-09 03:11 pm (UTC)I have some gorgeous copper sportweight silk I've been saving; I think I know what I want to do with it now...
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Date: 2010-12-09 03:15 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-12-09 03:21 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-12-09 03:22 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-12-07 03:46 am (UTC)But I figure I can overcome it, because I've always managed to before when I really wanted to. I have no sense of direction or distance either (I like to joke that I can take three right turns and be lost, but it's actually happened), which makes it hard to navigate. But I really like to travel, so as soon as I started driving I learned to read maps and all the other compensatory skills, and it worked. I get around pretty well, I think, for someone who by all rights should have great difficulty with it.
Anyway, I get coaching from a very wise and patient crone here (a Scottish Buddhist, if you can believe it), someone other knitters look up to who just happens to be a good friend. Lucky for me.)
I've got the two primary stitches -- knit and purl -- down, more or less, meaning that I know how to do them right. But I keep picking up stitches, and while I can often make sense of how I did it, I can't seem to stop myself from doing it, and don't notice until I count out the row at the end. I also don't know yet how to fix it without pulling out the row and starting over, but I've developed a stoic attitude about that: it's all work, so a little more can only be good for me. I do need to learn how to fix them, though -- and how not to do it in the first place. I also grip too tightly most of the time, and often have that fumbly feeling where I'm not sure what to be holding or how, or I don't have enough hands, or I'm about to drop something. The usual beginner's follies, I suppose.
You're clearly way ahead of me if you've finished anything, so I am in awe. Here's hoping I reach vaguely competent sometime. I think what I need right now is tons and tons of supervised practice. I thought of joining a circle, and there's two or three near me, including one with some people I know, but I don't want to burden them with my incompetence. I'd like to wait until I can more or less hold my own, and contribute something instead of just taking. (Perhaps if I bought rounds? Hmm..)
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Date: 2010-12-07 03:52 am (UTC)without looking at your knitting I can't figure...
are you adding stitches just on rows where you knit and purl both in the same row, or also on rows where you just knit or just purl?
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Date: 2010-12-07 03:59 am (UTC)It doesn't matter which stitch or combination of stitches I'm using. I will say that it happens more often in the middle of a run of the same stitch, so I think it probably starts with me being inattentive out of a mistaken sense of comfort when I'm doing the same stitch over and over. Put another way, I'm probably just careless and inattentive when I get going. I'm like a teenage driver on a straightaway.
I'm actually less bothered by the fact that I do it (except for split threads, ugh!) than with the fact that I have a lot of trouble figuring it out after, and don't know how to fix it without pulling out the row.
But I'm very much a beginner still, so I'm not upset about it. I figure (hope!) I'll get better as I go.
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Date: 2010-12-07 04:17 am (UTC)and if it doesn't happen primarily when you're changing from knit to purl or back again, then you're remembering to move the yarn correctly, which is basically the only one I can diagnose without looking at it.
My feeling is that generally knitters who knit in groups *love* to talk to beginners about how to do things. Sometimes also Solitary Knitters, like me.
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Date: 2010-12-07 04:20 am (UTC)Don't feel bad about bugging people. That's how most of us learned, after all. If you don't click with the first group you try, keep going to different ones. Also, yarn shops all have their own personalities.
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Date: 2010-12-07 04:22 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-12-07 04:24 am (UTC)Although actually what we need to do is get Anne to come up here and knit with us.
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Date: 2010-12-07 04:29 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-12-07 05:08 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-12-07 03:15 pm (UTC)Assuming they don't live out in the Berkshires and a storm doesn't hit while you're up, not too much of a pain.
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Date: 2010-12-07 04:30 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-12-07 05:03 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-12-07 06:50 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-12-07 03:13 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-12-07 04:17 pm (UTC)Yeah, that's about where I am now. It's all yarn in my fingers, and that's what counts.
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Date: 2010-12-07 04:00 am (UTC)This project is more ambitious than my previous ones, as it's largely eyelet, and there are booties as well, which involve turning a heel, I think. But I have confidence that now that I've got the hang of knitting and purling again, and moving the yarn from front to back, I'll be able to sort it out from a few diagrams and written pattern notes. It's all just elaborations on the basics, right? And it's not as if I'm trying stranded work like Fair Isle.
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Date: 2010-12-07 04:24 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-12-07 04:23 am (UTC)I gave myself galloping tendinitis in my elbow because I used cotton yarn on slippery needles. OOPS. Tennis-elbow braces help a lot. So does not using yarn with no give, like 100% plant fibers. Some acrylics have bounce, some don't--if you start having trouble, try a different yarn, or switch to bamboo needles. (I *love* my bamboo and wood needles. The biggest splurge I ever splurged was ebony circulars. OH MAH GAWD, when I get a job I'm buying more.)
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Date: 2010-12-07 04:28 am (UTC)Right now I've got metal straight needles (which seem only to be used for starting the rib knit edgings of this layette) and bamboo circulars. It was also hard to tell if my issue was more wrist or elbow, but I'll tuck the braces in with the knitting, because I have both.
Going to stake out my username on Ravelry now -- shouldn't be hard, because I think I'm the only one on the net.
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Date: 2010-12-07 04:33 am (UTC)You can use circs for flat knitting. That's all I ever do--that way the weight of the knitting stays in my lap instead of weighing down my poor sore elbow. Plus if you only buy one kind of needle, you have more left over for yarn. (knitpicks.com; elann.com; yarn.com; asciikitty works at Mind's Eye Yarn in, uh, Cambridge? I think?)
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Date: 2010-12-07 04:41 am (UTC)I'm not sure how much knitting I'll actually do now that I'm starting up again, although the idea of armwarmers for my chilly house seems pretty appealing.
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Date: 2010-12-07 06:05 am (UTC)If you need some less-slippery needles, if you place another KP order, get a couple of sets of their wooden needles, or else the clear acrylic (which are slicker). I swear by their nickel-plated ones, but I knit VERY quickly, and textured needles slow me down. I also use circs for everything to take some strain off my arms (though I'm intrigued with a technique of knitting socks in the round on straight needles).
If you need a different perspective than what your book gives, try http://www.knittinghelp.com. Free streaming videos! Awesome stuff!
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Date: 2010-12-07 06:42 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-12-07 06:51 am (UTC)Different strokes, I guess. :)
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Date: 2010-12-07 03:55 pm (UTC)And I'm seconding the Ravelry thing. I have not done anything up there, but need to now that I'm back trying to knit again.
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Date: 2010-12-07 09:49 pm (UTC)I've wanted to learn to knit for years now, but I just don't think I have the patience. Mom (sort of) taught me when I was in HS, since I was threatening to take her quilt with me to college. She said I would have to knit my own, but she would "help." It took me the same time to complete one square as it took her to complete all the rest of the squares and the edging.
*is pathetic*
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Date: 2010-12-07 09:55 pm (UTC)I find it a really nice thing to do while watching TV (provided there aren't subtitles or something highly visual) or when on a plane. I will admit that since I picked up reading again (last year), knitting has suffered a lot. I've been working on a sweater for K that I swear I'll be working on til he's dead or I'm dead. He picked this totally complicated pattern that is beautiful but GAHHHH! Takes me like 10 mis to finish one ROW.
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Date: 2010-12-07 01:45 pm (UTC)Kidlet appears to be firmly in the camp of the crocheters - I suspect mostly because it's faster and she's not very patient.
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Date: 2010-12-07 01:48 pm (UTC)