Continental, American or Both?
Feb. 7th, 2012 08:58 pmJust out of curiousity, how does everyone knit?
I am continental knitting a super bulky queen-king sized blanket.
I am American knitting two different sport scarves.
For me:
Continental Style = loose, relaxed and quick.
American Style = Tight, tense and slooooow.
The super bulky blanket looks great but when I tried the sport weighted scarves, they ended up looking sloppy so I started over with the American style. Just a quick comparison, I casted on 12 when I started with continental but when I switched to American I had to cast on 26.
I've been knitting off and on for years but I still consider myself to be a novice. Fingers-crossed, with more practice my continental will shape up so I can ditch the American style. Over all I prefer continental because of speed, ease to switch from knitting/purling, and it feels more comfortable in my hands. :)
I am continental knitting a super bulky queen-king sized blanket.
I am American knitting two different sport scarves.
For me:
Continental Style = loose, relaxed and quick.
American Style = Tight, tense and slooooow.
The super bulky blanket looks great but when I tried the sport weighted scarves, they ended up looking sloppy so I started over with the American style. Just a quick comparison, I casted on 12 when I started with continental but when I switched to American I had to cast on 26.
I've been knitting off and on for years but I still consider myself to be a novice. Fingers-crossed, with more practice my continental will shape up so I can ditch the American style. Over all I prefer continental because of speed, ease to switch from knitting/purling, and it feels more comfortable in my hands. :)
(no subject)
Date: 2012-02-08 03:39 am (UTC)(the main trick, if you want avoid your legs crossing in stockinette, is to knit through the back loop of the knit stitch when you come to it -- it may make more sense if you can find a tutorial with illustrations!)
(no subject)
Date: 2012-02-08 05:05 am (UTC)I'm still relatively new to knitting, and I'm not particularly fast by any method, so it's not much skin off my back to play around with different styles, fortunately. It would be fun to just knit in different ways depending on the needs of the project, but alas I suspect that conflicting muscle memories would eventually catch up with me.
(no subject)
Date: 2012-02-10 08:04 am (UTC)And yeah, it does seem that there are tradeoffs with every technique. And sometimes the same technique makes, say, back and forth easy, but circular knitting a bit more fiddly. (Or SSK easy, but k2tog fiddlier, etc...)