How many ways can I say "thank you!!". Finally. For someone who is just learning, the neckline is extremely intimidating. And most do not take the time to explain and break it down so it makes sense. For the first time I feel like I am starting to understand the basics and what is needed and how to achieve that. And you explain it so well. I am not left saying to myself "huh?!". I hope you do more of these. You're a great teacher. I'm so excited to have found you. Thank you!!
This has been the sweetest comment I’ve received in a long time, thank you so, so much! I’m glad to hear someone found the videos helpful. Thank you!! 😊
Great video. However, when doing the increase (let’s say the first one). Are you stopping at stitch #8? (Front panel) and also doing the increase at #8? My work is off by one stitch in that my front panel (9sts total) has 8 sts before the increase but the other side only has 7? It’s uneven. Thank you so much!!
Thank you! Yes, stopping and increasing in that stitch. Ok, first crochet the rest of the row and check those stitches as well. Count the number of stitches you’re off by, and add those to your initial chain. The main point is to set up your foundation. Once you’ve got that, the rest is cake if you use stitch markers to keep track of where you increase.
I really struggle to work in the round and i find this easier but I want to use it to make a sweater. Would it be really obvious if I stitched the opening up at the end to make it a sweater or would I have to do it in the round? ◡̈ would you be able to tell it wasn’t made seamlessly?
Short answer: yes. I recommend watching knitting tutorials, specifically the part where they stitch the side of sweaters together. I’m not sure what the stitch is called that they use, as I’m not a knitter myself, but from my understanding, many sweater patterns are constructed in the flat and hand-sewn closed (if that makes sense?) So, for example, the sleeve would lay flat, they would then join the fabric along the bottom of the sleeve seamlessly. I’m still trying to wrap my head around it, it once I get it, I’ll gladly post the crochet version of it :)
The hook size depends on what you want your fabric to look like, based on the yarn you use. There isn’t a science to it, so it comes down to making a swatch and using 3-4 different hooks and seeing which one you like best. 🤷🏻♀️
En fin Un beau pull pour enfant au tricot tunisien je vous remercie pour cette vidéo mais svp essayer de mettre un sous-titres en français pour les ceux qui ne comprennent pas l'anglais comme moi je vous serais très reconnaissante . Bonne continuation 👍♥️
To add subtitles on my iPad anyway, I click the little settings icon top right corner of screen. Then choose captions, then choose auto translate for French or which ever language you want
It doesn't make sense to me that you add 15 stitches to the foundation chain for any size baby cardigan. Your foundation chain was 46 but mine (because I used finer yarn) is 70. Surely I should therefore add around 23, which is about a third of my chain, just as 15 is a third of yours?
This is a great point to bring up, thank you! Those extra stitches are simply padding to compensate for changes in tension as you work. If you are an experienced crocheter and can keep your tension steady, you don’t need them.
@@ModeBespoke Thank you so much for replying! I am a beginner, and struggling a bit with the knit stitch, and getting my increases in the right space - is it possible to follow along with your video but use tunisian simple stitch? I"m not sure how I could work that central increase in the raglan?
Yaaaaaaaaaaaaay! Finally a raglan in Tunisian video! I was looking for a video like this for such a long time! Thank you! 😚
😂 glad to be of service!
How many ways can I say "thank you!!". Finally. For someone who is just learning, the neckline is extremely intimidating. And most do not take the time to explain and break it down so it makes sense. For the first time I feel like I am starting to understand the basics and what is needed and how to achieve that. And you explain it so well. I am not left saying to myself "huh?!". I hope you do more of these. You're a great teacher. I'm so excited to have found you. Thank you!!
This has been the sweetest comment I’ve received in a long time, thank you so, so much! I’m glad to hear someone found the videos helpful. Thank you!! 😊
Wonderfully clear instructions, this is my first time trying Tunisian crochet and so far, I am able to follow. Thank you!
Thank you for breaking down the design and maths for the pattern. Made so much sense. Bx
Can I say I love you now for this series!! 🧶🙋🏻♀️💕
🥰 thank you!
Not even telling you how long I have been doing tunisian and had no clue how to calculate my size! Thank youuuuuuu!!!
😊 glad you found it useful! 🥰
I love the Math! 👌😍 Thanks for such a detailed video. Love it!! 🙌🏾❤️❤️
Thank YOU 😊
Thanks so much! Whoop whoop! 🎉❤️ Was hoping someone would show how to decrease Tunisian crochet corners on sweaters.
Thanks! 😊
Wow. This looks very interesting. Thank you.
Thank you! Excellent instructions. 😊
Thank you! 😊
I love anything raglan!! Thank you!
Thank YOU 😊
This SPOKE to me. Thank you! Truly. Thank you.
My pleasure! 😊
Thanks for explaining this that great!
Great video. However, when doing the increase (let’s say the first one). Are you stopping at stitch #8? (Front panel) and also doing the increase at #8? My work is off by one stitch in that my front panel (9sts total) has 8 sts before the increase but the other side only has 7? It’s uneven. Thank you so much!!
Thank you! Yes, stopping and increasing in that stitch. Ok, first crochet the rest of the row and check those stitches as well. Count the number of stitches you’re off by, and add those to your initial chain.
The main point is to set up your foundation. Once you’ve got that, the rest is cake if you use stitch markers to keep track of where you increase.
Awesome!! Great tutorial, Love it. Thank you so much ❤️
Thank you! 😊
Excellent!
Thank you!
I really struggle to work in the round and i find this easier but I want to use it to make a sweater. Would it be really obvious if I stitched the opening up at the end to make it a sweater or would I have to do it in the round? ◡̈ would you be able to tell it wasn’t made seamlessly?
Short answer: yes.
I recommend watching knitting tutorials, specifically the part where they stitch the side of sweaters together. I’m not sure what the stitch is called that they use, as I’m not a knitter myself, but from my understanding, many sweater patterns are constructed in the flat and hand-sewn closed (if that makes sense?) So, for example, the sleeve would lay flat, they would then join the fabric along the bottom of the sleeve seamlessly.
I’m still trying to wrap my head around it, it once I get it, I’ll gladly post the crochet version of it :)
@@ModeBespoke thanks so much! I’ve actually been working on it for a week and it’s looking amazing so far, so thank you ◡̈
thanks for the tutorial! what kind of yarn did you use in the video?
Medium weight acrylic blend, size 4
@@ModeBespoke thank you! did you start with a chain of 60 stitches for the 6 month old size?
I don’t remember love, sorry.
Omg great video
Is the formula work for the simple st?
Thank you! Yes, unless you are working with multiples, it works for most stitches.
Thank You 👌🏻👌🏻
Thank you!
Is there a second video?
th-cam.com/video/LklCHl4LoVk/w-d-xo.html
Could I just sew together the front opening and then continue doing the front side and the back side separately?
I think that could totally work. I’d give it a shot!
What are you making?
thanks a lot very helpful
Hello again. Most videos about Tunisian crochet uses a bigger size hook and you use the recommended hook. Is there a reason for that?
The hook size depends on what you want your fabric to look like, based on the yarn you use. There isn’t a science to it, so it comes down to making a swatch and using 3-4 different hooks and seeing which one you like best. 🤷🏻♀️
Hola ,me puede mandar los puntos ,que utilizó ,Gracias
Maria
España
Hola! Puntos derechos, y puntos Tunecino básico
En fin Un beau pull pour enfant au tricot tunisien je vous remercie pour cette vidéo mais svp essayer de mettre un sous-titres en français pour les ceux qui ne comprennent pas l'anglais comme moi je vous serais très reconnaissante . Bonne continuation 👍♥️
Merci! Il faut que je trouve la façon de mettre des sous-titre en français pq je ne sais pas comme le faire 🤷🏻♀️
@@ModeBespoke je vous prie, rien ne me fera plus plaisir que de vous voir réussir à le faire, bonne réussite dans tous ce vous faites.🌹🌹🌹🌹
To add subtitles on my iPad anyway, I click the little settings icon top right corner of screen. Then choose captions, then choose auto translate for French or which ever language you want
It doesn't make sense to me that you add 15 stitches to the foundation chain for any size baby cardigan. Your foundation chain was 46 but mine (because I used finer yarn) is 70. Surely I should therefore add around 23, which is about a third of my chain, just as 15 is a third of yours?
This is a great point to bring up, thank you! Those extra stitches are simply padding to compensate for changes in tension as you work. If you are an experienced crocheter and can keep your tension steady, you don’t need them.
@@ModeBespoke Thank you so much for replying! I am a beginner, and struggling a bit with the knit stitch, and getting my increases in the right space - is it possible to follow along with your video but use tunisian simple stitch? I"m not sure how I could work that central increase in the raglan?
Does anyone know where part 2 is?
th-cam.com/video/LklCHl4LoVk/w-d-xo.html&si=N7unZ4RLATF3EucB
th-cam.com/video/LklCHl4LoVk/w-d-xo.html&si=N7unZ4RLATF3EucB
Here you go :)
Knit Stitch Raglan Cardigan, Tunisian Crochet
th-cam.com/video/LklCHl4LoVk/w-d-xo.html
Where is the chart
The link is in the video description, but I’ll also post it below:
modebespoke.com/basic-tunisian-crochet-raglan-yoke/
👍👍👍👍👍❤