jackandahat: A brown otter, no text. (Default)
[personal profile] jackandahat posting in [community profile] knitting
(Forgive me, this is going to be a stupid question)

I'm trying to join some other pieces together by picking up a side from each and knitting a square in the middle, decreasing towards the centre.

But I'm struggling with the "How many and how often?" part of decreasing. Doing sl1 k2tog psso at each corner still gets me a lump in the middle.

How would you decrease to make a flat square?

Second, hopefully less daft question - how do you go about joining pieces using knitting? I'd like to make an afghan out of blocks, but I'd rather not do that amount of sewing if possible. Which is where I ended up on the problem above. All the patterns I've found so far are either log-cabin type where it gets bigger and bigger, rather than something you can work on in small pieces, or they're pieces sewn together after.

(no subject)

Date: 2011-03-14 09:08 am (UTC)
pinesandmaples: Text only; reads "Not everything will be okay, but some things will." (theme: peek up)
From: [personal profile] pinesandmaples
Based on the questions you've been asking, I'm going to recommend you borrow or buy a knitting technique book. I think seeing the techniques and their common names (and some techniques have about 8 names!) presented would help you a lot in knowing how to tackle your problems. A lot of knitters panic in the face of the unknown; it's much easier to keep calm if you know that the problem can be solved by something called the Gargle-Leaped Twirl, even if you don't know how to do a Gargle-Leaped Twirl.

The Knitter's Companion by Vicki Square is a good start. And make sure to check your local library for their knitting selection, because every pattern book as a technique section that will explain the basics. Actually, the Stitch and Bitch series might also be a resource here...

You are decreasing too slowly. Rip and re-knit. Or why not just knit another square and seam them together using one of the above methods? Or heck, go all out and make the bottom piece a mitered square.

(no subject)

Date: 2011-03-14 09:15 am (UTC)
pinesandmaples: Text only; reads "Not everything will be okay, but some things will." (theme: au naturel)
From: [personal profile] pinesandmaples
Yes, you are just asking questions. But why not arm yourself with knowledge before you get to the questions? You seem to be reaching for technique names, and I'm suggesting that you could learn those things instead of asking us vague questions every time you come upon something. Make your knitting more triumphant with less commentary from the peanut gallery. Empowering the knitter, etc.

If you are using the internet, I recommend TECHknitting as someone who Knows Thingsā„¢.

(no subject)

Date: 2011-03-14 09:20 am (UTC)
pinesandmaples: Text only; reads "Not everything will be okay, but some things will." (Stockholm: jump)
From: [personal profile] pinesandmaples
Whatever. You want to ask vague questions that no one understands, please ask away. Sick of this.

(no subject)

Date: 2011-03-14 11:45 pm (UTC)
nitoda: sparkly running deer, one of which has exploded into stars (Default)
From: [personal profile] nitoda
oooh - idea! If you are trying to fill a square hole in the middle of other squares, could you start in one corner and knit like you would a triangular scarf, starting with one stitch and increasing and picking up at ends as you go making a diagonally knit square in the middle? Could make for an interesting texture?

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