jackandahat: A brown otter, no text. (Default)
Jack ([personal profile] jackandahat) wrote in [community profile] knitting2010-11-02 02:06 pm

Showing my newb/inspired by last post.

I liked this pattern so I turned it into a scarf (picture pre-blocking, it's still drying).

Now, I want to do one in the round so I can have both sides of the scarf looking the same. But I have two questions:

1. What do you do with the ends of a scarf knit in the round? (I've never done one before). Leave them open? Sew them shut? Do a provisional cast on and graft them like sock toes so they're all neat? (Both a general: "What should I do?" and "What do you do?")

2. When making it round - would I just repeat the pattern, side by side, or would it help to add a stitch either side so it will lie flat? (I was thinking a one or two-stitch-wide stockingette strip to be the "fold", if that makes sense?) Of course, I don't know what I'm doing here - never knitted a scarf in the round, just socks and hats and such - so I could be talking out my ear here.
aunty_marion: Damson Mk.1 in green Zauberball (Damson shawl)

[personal profile] aunty_marion 2010-11-02 03:53 pm (UTC)(link)
Stocking stitch on its own will fold OK (think socks?), but when you've got all that pattern, you might need to 'force' a fold, which is why the purl might work a bit better. I'd advise trying a bit though, before you decide.

On the matter of 'counting' (as in other comments) - just use a ring-type stitch marker at the beginning and end of the 'pattern' sections, then you know when you reach that you move from moss-stitch/purl two (or whatever you've decided on) to pattern and then back again. Will you be using four dpns or magic loop?