How To Knit: Single Color Flat Brioche
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 6 ก.พ. 2025
- Learn the basics of brioche with this Brooklyn Tweed knitting tutorial!
Deepen your knitting repertoire with the stretchy and stunning brioche stitch worked in a single color. It isn’t as hard as you think! This traditional technique consists of slipped stitches, work 2-togethers and yarn overs to create a springy double-sided fabric that is fully reversible. Learn how to work this deceptively simple stitch with this straight-forward method. This step-by-step tutorial will teach you how to use one color of yarn to work brioche, opening up a world of possibilities in your knitting.
Related videos:
How To Knit: Brioche Shaping: • How To Knit: Shaping i...
How To Knit: One-Color Brioche in the Round: • How To Knit: One Color...
How To Knit: Circular Two-Color Brioche: • How To Knit: Circular ...
See our How-To playlist for more technique videos: bit.ly/3ipXq4g
Visit our Resources page for more knitting tips: brooklyntweed....
If you found this tutorial helpful, we’d love your support! Shop our breed-specific American wool yarns & thoughtfully designed patterns at BrooklynTweed.com.
Steps:
Brioche Row 1 (RS): *BRK, Yf-Sl1-YO; repeat from *
Brioche Row 2 (WS): *Yf-Sl1-YO, BRK; repeat from *
3:20 BRK - Brioche Knit: Knit the next stitch together with its corresponding YO from the previous row.
3:37 Yf-Sl1-YO - Yarn Forward, Slip 1, Yarn Over: Bring the working yarn under the needle to the front of the work, slip the next stitch purlwise, then bring the yarn over the needle to the back (creating a YO on top of the slipped stitch), in position to knit the following stitch. This slipped stitch/yarn over pair is considered one stitch.
8:19 Setting up for brioche stitch
Setup Row 1 (RS): *knit 1, Yf-Sl1-YO; repeat from *
Setup Row 2 (WS): *Yf-Sl1-YO, BRK; repeat from *
Featured Yarn: Arbor in Tincture
Shop: brooklyntweed....
Featured Pattern: Douro
Shop: brooklyntweed....
Featured Pattern: Skipp
Shop: brooklyntweed....
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
At Brooklyn Tweed we are passionate about wool, knitting and design.
We develop and manufacture breed-specific wool yarns that support domestic textile production. This means designing, sourcing, dyeing and spinning our yarns 100% within the USA.
We craft our knitwear designs with the same commitment to timeless quality that we apply to our yarns. Every pattern is meticulously drafted and edited to provide clear instructions that empower knitters to build new skills. Our design team explores the intersection of knitting traditions and contemporary style, to produce patterns that are a pleasure to knit and wear.
Learn more at: @BrooklynTweed_Official
Visit us at: brooklyntweed.com
Browse free tutorials, luscious yarns and modern patterns on BrooklynTweed.com
Join our Newsletter and be the first to learn about fresh patterns and yarn launches - brooklyntweed....
Follow us on Instagram to immerse yourself in the rich colors and compelling textures of our wooly community - / brooklyntweed
I have tried to learn this stitch for a month now. I have picked up little things from all videos viewed (many) and finally- thank you- you made sense of it! Really helps to have a first and last knit stitch to keep my stitches centered. So to speak-
Glad we could help! Figuring out what's going on with the yarn overs in brioche can definitely be a challenge!
great explanation! two bits of info I found CRUCIAL that you included - needing to work a bit of length in order to see the stitch (I definitely had a moment where I thought I wasn't working it right for the first few rows, but stuck with it!) and the need to size down on your needles! thank youuuu ⭐
Glad it was helpful! Yes, definitely gotta push through that first bit of "aaaah this all looks terrible" and keep going, then the magic happens! Happy knitting!
I really appreciate how you take the time to explain the anatomy of the stitches; it makes the final technique very logical.
We're glad you found this helpful! Happy knitting!
Excellent video! First time I've understood brioche 🙂
Thanks so much, Lauren! Glad it was helpful!
Thank you. That’s a great tutorial.
Glad it was helpful!
thank you, thank you, thank you...i finally get it!
Glad it helped! Happy brioching!
Thanks so much for sharing 💛
Thank you for watching!
Really helpful, thank you!
Thanks for watching, Catharine! Glad you found this helpful - happy brioche-ing!
So brp is needed only for 2 colour brioche? Thanks
Hello! BRP is needed for brioche in the round - since the work is not turned, circular brioche uses alternating rounds of BRK and BRP to create the stitch pattern. Check out our Brioche 102 tutorial on our website for a full explanation! brooklyntweed.com/pages/brioche-102
Nice tutorial
Thank you Gayle! Happy knitting!
Very clear instructions. However, as a continental knitter I find that yarn over technique somewhat awkward. Any tips?
@@dianelakata1308 thanks for watching! The continental knitters on our team say that they find knitting brioche continental even easier than English style - give the yarn a bump forward with your right needle tip, slip your stitch, and the yarn over makes itself. Let us know if you come up with your own method that feels smoother!
Thanks for the cool video! I have one question though - how do you count the rows in brioche sticking? Do you count the vertical Vs, or does it work differently?
Hello! It depends on the pattern, but yes, typically you can count your rows by the knit stitches - each visible "row" will actually be two rows of brioche, since you work each row twice. Happy knitting!
Can you explain the garter edging stitch. I thought you said it's just a k but its looking all kinds of weird for me.
Hi Jennifer! Jared is working garter selvedges on his swatch here by knitting the first and last stitch of each row - it's a nice way to keep swatches looking tidy, so you'll see us do that with our swatches in many of our tutorials. If you're knitting a brioche pattern, it may have you do something different on your edge stitches or you may just go right into your brioche stitches. Happy knitting!
@@BrooklynTweed_Official Thank you for reaching out. 👍🏻 I thought it was K at beginning and K at end edge but it was looking so knotty it didn't look good. I guess I was doing something wrong. So I switched to doing a slip stitch first, doing all the brk & yo then ending with a k. Its looking good now, not sure what its called though. Lol
@@jenniferturner7293 that's another great way to work your edge stitches!
How do we start, though. How do we get to where you began??
Hello! The set-up row instructions start at 8:19 in the video - or check out our Brioche 101 page: brooklyntweed.com/pages/brioche-101
Bummer I cannot see it well enough to learn😢
Oh no! We're working on making our tutorials bigger & brighter so they're easier to see!