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A guide to knitting (kbin.melroy.org)
submitted 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago) by Emotional_Series7814@kbin.melroy.org to c/knitting@lemmy.world

Seems to be put together with images from The 4-H Knitting Handbook.

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[-] Emotional_Series7814@kbin.melroy.org 2 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago)

Ouch. As someone trying to learn continental, who found this online and posted here thinking it was a good tutorial, thanks for letting me know I gave people misinformation. Would this actually be English style or is Western style something different? (In honesty, when people use words like "front of stitch" and "back of stitch" and "leading leg" I just flat out do not understand.) If so, I'll retitle my posts.

[-] Soku@lemmy.world 4 points 7 months ago

First off, sorry I confused you even more because I used a wrong word in one sentence, edited it now.

Two distinct styles are continental knitting (yarn coming from the left) and English knitting (yarn coming from the right). Both have slight variations with their own names but it kinda makes sense. The schematics you provided don't demonstrate how the yarn is held or hooked behind the needle so it's not specifically continental. However, the way the needle is inserted to the stitch and the direction the yarn is wrapped, that's western mount. Good thing is, most infomaterials in English are based on western mount so the long descriptions of complicated stitches and decreases and all are based on it regardless of your continental vs English style so all that makes sense.

If you want some good visual for continental knitting, check out Nimble Needles or Roxanne Richardson in YouTube, both very proficient teachers. For Norwegian knitting check out Arne and Carlos, that's a subgroup of continental.

If you want me to ramble about mounts or find good visuals, lmk, otherwise I feel like I'm dumping too much stuff on people who haven't asked for any of it.

[-] Emotional_Series7814@kbin.melroy.org 3 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago)

Aghhhh I despise watching videos to learn and was specifically seeking out static visual guides to learn continental, which is why I'm definitely not happy that my guide isn't for continental. Thanks again for correcting my mistakes. Still not 100% sure what western mount is (a specific way to knit all on its own, like English and Continental? A foundation upon which those two build?) but I did retitle this to get rid of the claim it would teach Continental.

And this is the Fediverse, not a private conversation—feel free to post information! I personally feel the more useful information, the better, and would like more information. But even if I did not, someone else browsing the thread might appreciate it :)

Hope this guide is not incorrect.

[-] Soku@lemmy.world 4 points 7 months ago

Sorry for the videos! I don't hate them but I can definitely see the attraction of images. Sometimes I need help with just one little step and a 30min video is really an overkill.

The last guide is very good for continental knit stitch. It shows the left hand with the yarn and where the fingers are in every step.

As for the mount. The gist is: you enter the needle the certain way and wrap the yarn the certain way. If done correctly, you'll end up with a nice fabric. If you mix techniques without knowing, it'll go haywire. This article has plenty of visuals and explanations.

[-] venite@mastodon.nl 1 points 7 months ago

@Emotional_Series7814 the book says “wrap the yarn”, that’s English. Continental would be picking the yarn with your right needle.

this post was submitted on 16 May 2024
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