Weaving in ends in garter stitch
Apr. 17th, 2009 08:09 pmHey, how do you all weave in your ends when working in garter stitch, when there's no right or wrong side? In stocking stitch, I just work on the bumpy side, and nothing shows on the smooth side. In garter stitch, I'm not so sure what to do.
ETA: while we're at it, how about lace?
ETA: while we're at it, how about lace?
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Date: 2009-04-18 03:56 am (UTC)Can't help with lace. I think I'd just knit with both yarns together for a few, but I've not tried it. I know that's what I did when I crocheted a shell stitch shawl back when dinosaurs roamed the earth.
(no subject)
Date: 2009-04-18 04:52 am (UTC)When knitting lace (or anything, for that matter), if I'm working in an animal fiber, I usually just spit-splice (a great tutorial, if you've never tried it). So much easier and neater than weaving in ends - and I find it feels sturdier, too. When working with silk or superwash wool or something non-spliceable in lace, I just weave in along the wrong side of a somewhat-solid area of the lace pattern, and just try my best to avoid running the end being woven across a lot of yarn-overs.
(no subject)
Date: 2009-04-18 05:17 am (UTC)also, if it's a non-animal fiber, but plied, i split the end in two and weave them in different directions.
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Date: 2009-04-18 05:46 am (UTC)It doesn't look 100% camouflaged, but it's better than weaving ends in.
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Date: 2009-05-06 01:22 am (UTC)I start at the beginning of the tail and follow along as best I can, with the duplicate work tending to wander from row to row -- and from one side of the work to the other -- at random, when I'm unable to stick to a single row, or when the wandering helps hide what I'm doing better.
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This is probably entirely unhelpful without photo illustrations. I had a migraine today, and the happy headache pills tend to interfere with the bit of my brain that allows me to communicate my insanity through the art of Wordifying. :D
Just... follow the thread. Up behind one bump, over and down behind the bump next to it, sew through to the other side of the work between the two, and go down behind one bump, over and up behind the next, through and to the first side again...
There has to be a photo/video tutorial for this out there somewhere, right? If not... I know what I'm doing, tomorrow. :D
With lace, I just wing it, and hope for the best. Or go up the sides, when possible.