Thank you! I have seen so many videos for dufferent trchniques, abd none if the other te hnigues have given me that truly seamless join! Tgere were a few, and I commebted on tgem, thinking I's finslly found one. But, sadke, as my rounds in reased, the seam brcame more visible, even if a littke bit. I just finished round 4 of the project I'm rying to di, using your join te hnique, and so far, i can't see aseam at all. I've been cricheting for years, and never knew any of these seamless joins. I will continue wirh this one! Thank you again!
@thecozyknot I am a beginner, so forgive me if these are not good questions... 1 - When you start this invisible join, I noticed that you are yarning over before inserting your hook into that first stitch, making two (and then three) loops on your hook. Is this because you are doing a larger stitch? Would you also do the same if you were working with just single crochet stitches? And 2 - Is this "invisible join" the same as "reverse slip stitch"? Because on tutorials they look the same to me, but... I don't know for sure if there's a subtle difference. Any help would be appreciated! 🧶Jen
I’m not sure if I’m understanding you correctly, but I believe you are referring to the turning chs? These are often used to begin a row or rnd. However, before I insert my hk into the first st, there is only 1 lp on my hk. If you are doing a shorter st (like a sc), you’ll typically only start with 1 turning ch. A standard rnd join is typically a sl st. This would be considered a rslst since you are working back-to-front instead of front-to-back. Hope this helps!
Thank you so much. Your video makes it so easy to understand and follow through
Most other video about this topic is so complicated
I am so very glad you found this helpful! ❤️
Simply demonstrated and lovely. Thank you 💝
Thank you so very much! I’m glad it was helpful!
Thank you! I have seen so many videos for dufferent trchniques, abd none if the other te hnigues have given me that truly seamless join! Tgere were a few, and I commebted on tgem, thinking I's finslly found one. But, sadke, as my rounds in reased, the seam brcame more visible, even if a littke bit. I just finished round 4 of the project I'm rying to di, using your join te hnique, and so far, i can't see aseam at all. I've been cricheting for years, and never knew any of these seamless joins. I will continue wirh this one! Thank you again!
Is the technique also good for SC and HDC, except you would yarn over after pulling stitch to the back of work ? Very nice !!
Thank you!
Thank you thank you ! 😊
Çok güzel oldu, hemen abone oldum🎉
@thecozyknot I am a beginner, so forgive me if these are not good questions... 1 - When you start this invisible join, I noticed that you are yarning over before inserting your hook into that first stitch, making two (and then three) loops on your hook. Is this because you are doing a larger stitch? Would you also do the same if you were working with just single crochet stitches? And 2 - Is this "invisible join" the same as "reverse slip stitch"? Because on tutorials they look the same to me, but... I don't know for sure if there's a subtle difference.
Any help would be appreciated! 🧶Jen
I’m not sure if I’m understanding you correctly, but I believe you are referring to the turning chs? These are often used to begin a row or rnd. However, before I insert my hk into the first st, there is only 1 lp on my hk. If you are doing a shorter st (like a sc), you’ll typically only start with 1 turning ch. A standard rnd join is typically a sl st. This would be considered a rslst since you are working back-to-front instead of front-to-back. Hope this helps!
Nao tem o início este trabalho?
That's amazing thank you
What stitch
Is this
Please
Just a dc!