Hi Roxanne, you may not get this comment due to the age of the video I have watched but I need to thank you. I have been knitting socks for months and knit a heel flap and gusset sock. I have as yet never knitted a sock without a big mistake on the picking up of the stitches. However, I have just finished one sock and picked up the stitches with the method you describe in this video. I nearly cried with joy as it turned out perfectly and I have a sock with no mistakes. I can’t thank you enough. You are my sock hero.
Agreed! Here I am almost a year behind you and singing the praises of this amazing video! I cannot figure out the M1 to close the holes, this tip is waaay easier!
Hear hear! This is without a doubt, the BEST sock flap & gusset technique/modification I have ever seen! I’m off to find a DPN to keep in my sock project bag 🧶😄💖 You are my sock hero too Roxanne! I’m seriously excited about this🤗
Your channel is incredible, and you are a true font of knowledge. I really appreciate the depth that you go to when explaining things, and making them relatable to something else we might understand. You're a great teacher and a very generous person to spend your time teaching us these techniques I imagine could only be picked up from a lifetime of knitting and exploring new ideas. Thank you !
Thank you! Thank you! I taught myself how to knit socks a couple of years ago. Hated cuff down with gussets, so I switched to toe up with short row or FLK heels. I found your video and tried your PU technique on a pair of cuff down shortie socks. Absolute game changer for me. I know exactly what to pick up, how to twist, and how to address corner gaps, all in one easy to follow video. You’re the BEST teacher!
Thank you so much for this video. I hated knitting socks because I struggled and struggled to pick up the stitches to start the gusset. Then, a friend forwarded a link to this. You seriously changed my knitting. I have made three pair of socks since watching it and picked up stitches look perfect. I so appreciate the time you have given to help knitters grow in our passion. I have also linked your video in my Ravelry project pages so others can gain from your knowledge as well.
I use a crochet hook because it's honestly impossible for me otherwise with my tight knitting, and I pick up through both loops to increase durability of the sock, which can make picking up stitches even harder.
By far the best explanations for any problems sock heel flaps. Plus, just watching this fine teacher, she makes a case for learning to knit the European way. She is SO fast and makes it look easy.
Amazing, seriously! You are so full of ideas to be used in a very logical way.... if you know how to make socks. I'm learning and you make this look so very simple. NO ONE I've seen here on line has given me those tips and tricks ! THANK YOU!!!
❤ Thank you, Roxanne I know you did this video a long time ago but I just started to knit socks this April. I wanted to let you know I am so grateful, as a new sock knitter to not have the frustrating holes where the gusset meets the instep right out of the gate of trying to learn. As well as no unsightly holes where the stitches are picked up for the gusset. 🎉
Wildly helpful on my first pair of socks. Thank you so much for a video that gets right to the point. So helpful for a person with ADD. Thank you so much
Thanks so much for all the teaching you do! Thanks for the comments on those with neuropathy in their feet appreciating a no-Ridge pick up in their sock. Thanks for sharing a technique on how to get rid of that ridge. For this reason I like knitting toe up socks with a provisional cast on.
I love your tips. I have made a few pairs of socks and always wondering why there are holes in them. From your video, I have learned the way the stitches orientate in the needle and how they twist when we knit them does make a difference. Thank you!
I've made lots and lots of socks, but this is a first for me about picking up stitches for the heel flap doing one leg for the stitch and also with the no hole gusset. I do no hole gusset a bit different as I combine the two together and pick them up together and pull the yarn through both legs of the stitch. Your way is great too. Thank you so much for the tips on this video. You are very clear.
Excellent & clear demonstration of how to minimize gaps. Before, I always had to 'mend' them to cover the gaps after the sock was knit. This will be such an improvement. Thanks for this.
Wow this tutorial is awesome! It makes pick up the gusset so easy while preventing the gap. For the first time I don't see any sign of the hole in my sock, thank you so much for sharing!
Thanks for this video. I am making my first heel flap socks, and after picking up my stitches I was sure I had made a mistake, because of the ridge on the inside. I know I would feel that ridge, so searched videos to see what I was doing wrong. I discovered I was picking up stitches correctly, but the technique was flawed. Found your video, so now I can make socks without that annoying ridge on the side of the heel. I will definitely also use your tip for eliminating the hole. Thanks so much!
I just tried the paired lifted increases on a raglan sleeve, and it worked beautifully! Thank you for demonstrating that technique! It'll be my new go-to to prevent holes in both my socks and raglan sweaters!
I was looking for this video in the Socks playlist. I recommend adding it to that playlist. I've always knit socks toe-up with a short row heel, but I'm currently using yarn that makes that impossible. While your instructions aren't a how-to tutorial from beginning to end, they have enough information that I can follow your techniques using the heel-flap section of the playlist to wing it.
Just found this video to view. I'm new to knitting socks, and you've given me such a great tutorial for knitting both heel flaps and preventing the holes I had at the heel flap & gusset stitches. Thanks very much.
Thank you! So far I've only knit toe up socks with short row heels, and I've been quite scared of top down with a heel flap. This makes me much more confident and I look forward to starting my first top down / heel flap sock next week!
Thank you so much for this tute. I just tried it and it worked beautifully. It was a pleasure coming across your videos. You have a great voice for them and you're wonderful at explaining. I can't tell you how many tutes I started to watch and had to turn off.
Wow this is brilliant I've been pulling my hair out picking up stitches along a front edge you made me realise I was picking up the cast on or bound off edge.
Just found your video Roxanne What a great suggestion for picking up the stitches, One of the things I have always disliked about the heel flag method is the ridge inside. I am going to try your method on the sock that I am currently working on. Thank you for taking the time to create your video.
Thank you so much for this! I always end up with little holes that have to be mended. You explain things completely and clearly, and that's just what I need. You're a great teacher!
I'm a new sock knitter, and not quite sure where to decrease those extra stitches. Maybe once I do it it will be clear. But, I love this way! I get nervous because I'm not great at undoing my work.... I lose my place or drop a stitch or something. I do like the way you are teaching so maybe sometime soon I will become a more intuitive knitter! Thank you!
Compared to the total number of sts picked up for the gusset, the couple of extra sts at the corners isn't that much extra. I do a decrease immediately on the next round, and then I do the regular every-other-round decreases. If you feel like it, you can always do several rounds decreases, and then switch to every other round.
Thank you for your quick reply! You can be sure that I will be watching the rest of your videos, and subscribing. I am mostly a quilter, but my mom taught me how to knit when I was younger and I have picked it up again. So, I really appreciate all the help on TH-cam. And, It's nice to have someone who knits the way I was taught....is it continental? Anyway, thank you again.t
"Continental" means controlling the yarn in the left hand. There are lots of ways to do this. In general, there are people who extend the index finger, like I do, and those who hold their index finger against the needle, but there are also people who wrap the yarn with their left hand, rather than picking it, and people who tension the yarn around their neck or through a pin attached to their clothing, and then control the yarn with their thumbs (Peruvian, Portuguese, and a couple of other traditions do this, I believe.) "English" means controlling the yarn in the right hand, and again, lots of ways to do this (throwing, lever method, pencil hold, etc.). There are further ways of describing a knitting method, but Continental and English are the two general categories.
@@RoxanneRichardson this is what I needed to know! I am on this part of my first sock and needed clarification on the decreases for the extra stitches and when to do the decreases every other round in the method described in my pattern (which is to knit to the last 3 sts decrease, k1). Thank you for the excellent tutorial.
I am not sure .. do I complete the round picking up the stitches and then the next round do the pick up to avoid the hole? Or do I do the hole pickup same round as when I pick up the stitches for the gusset?
This is an absolutely amazing tutorial, thank you so much. For the longest time I couldn't wrap my head around why the left and right side of the heel looked different. My headache is now long gone. Cheers!
Looked "different" in what way Helena? On my socks, the left heel/gusset always seems to look great, and the right heel has a gap when I pick up heel stitches. So I tried the method above to close the gap - not sure it came out quite right. Roxanne is using a heavier weight yarn. Mine is sock weight and the stitches are a bit harder to see with her method.
Thanks, Roxanne. Your economy of words to explain concepts makes you a natural-born educator. It's obvious how clearly you can see through the eyes of your learners. Brilliant!
Thanks, Grace! I have to admit, there is a fair amount of editing. I always have way more to say than is reasonable to put into a video like this, so I do a LOT of cutting! :-)
Wow, thanks so much for this; super helpful!! I could never figure out why one side of my heel flap always turned out better than the other side, now I know :) Instantly subbed!!
Hi I loveso much you're videos. English is not my first language and I always understand everything because you explaination are so clear. Thank you so much for taking you're time to share with us all your knowledge. xxx
Love these tips. Wondered why I ended up with a "hole" at that junction - thought I'd done something wrong. Now, thanks to your video, I know how to prevent this. Thank you so much Roxanne.
I liked the tips, but wish you had talked about adding the extra stitches to avoid the gap sooner. You talked about picking up stitches along the heel flap, so I did that and kept going. Then I had to go back and undo it when you later talked about avoiding the gap
Hi Roxanne, I am looking forward in trying your method for avoiding the gap on socks. I knit one pair not too long ago- and it was my first - but with a gap as a result. So, I had to fix it after the finishing of the sock. Also, could you tell me if this method works for making gloves when it comes to the finger part. If not, would you have a method for the gloves. Thank you O so much for sharing this video with us.😊
Thank you for this vlog. I am teaching myself to knit socks and this is the area I have so far failed so am looking forward to trying this method and my socks are hopefully going to look much improved 😊
Wonderful hints! This clarifies exactly what I was just guessing at. I had "sorta" done something like this but didn't quite have a handle on it. Thank you.
I love love this video. I'm trying to knit socks again. Tried years ago, 6 or 7 maybe and I got through one with many mistakes and backing out of stitches row by row. I decide last weekend to try again. So this video and your tips and tricks showed up in my youtube feed just in time. :)
Thank you so much. I am a new sock knitter. I have only made one pair so far and they don't fit anyone lol. They are my sample. I'm gathering all the information I can until I make my second pair. I'm not sure when that will happen. I really want to make socks but still not comfortable with all the steps, especially making them fit someone. I will use all that you taught me here in my next pair. :)
Welcome to the wonderful world of sock knitting! There are some great sock knitting groups on Ravelry where you might find some useful information. You can also always ask questions in my Ravelry group, Rox Rocks. :-)
This is utterly brilliant! Wish I'd had this info for all the previous socks I knitted, but will certainly use it for all future ones. Thank you so much. Thordis :)
Hi Rox thanks so much for your tutorials, I'm enjoying them and very much appreciate your teaching style and explanations which are particularly clear. Regarding the lifted increases on the second side of the sock i.e. after you have knitted across the instep, are these 2 stitches placed with the instep stitches or do they form the first two stitches on the 3rd needle that will be used to knit along the gusset stitches? Thanks Janine
The stitch count for the instep remains consistent. The lifted increases are worked together on the following round to become the k1 that is worked at the start or end of each gusset thereafter. That is, on the first round, you work to those two lifted incs, and decrease them together. Work across the instep sts, then decrease the other lifted incs together. Now you begin the actual gusset dec rounds, which are worked by knitting to the last 3 sts, k2tog, k1. Work across the instep sts, k1, ssk. So those lifted incs become the k1 column adjacent to the instep sts.
More picked up sts than the pattern tells you to pick up? Knit the flat to the needed length, regardless of what the pattern states, then pick up 1 st for every slipped selvedge stitch. When you work the gussets, decrease every other round until you have the number of sts needed for the ball of foot. If your ball of foot and ankle measurements are not the same, then you may need a different number of sts for the foot than you needed for the leg. So you can stop decreasing early, if your ball of foot is large, or you can keep decreasing if your ball of foot is smaller than your ankle. You can skip plain rounds and work several decrease rounds in a row, if you want to decrease rapidly, and you can add plain rounds between decrease rounds, if you want to decrease more slowly.
Hi, Roxanne. Great video...many thanks. I will be incorporating this into my next pair of socks. On another sock topic, I saw a video of yours where you discuss a method to avoid cutting the leg yarn when knitting a contrasting heel flap and heel turn. A way to somehow carry the leg yarn up or something when the heel colorway is completed and it's time to resume with the main colorway. I thought I saved this video but of course, I cannot find the link now. Can you please point me there? Many thanks.
Tips & Tricks for Contrast Heels: th-cam.com/video/ZB-UmbtE9TE/w-d-xo.html. If you lose it again in the future, just search TH-cam for "Roxanne Richardson contrast" or "Roxanne Richardson contrast heels" and it'll be at the top of the search results.
Great video, thank you so much. I had good success with the first heel flap edge, but I'm unclear which end to start the second edge after the instep and which way the needle enters the stitch. I managed with a lot of trial and error.
Hi Roxanne, you may not get this comment due to the age of the video I have watched but I need to thank you. I have been knitting socks for months and knit a heel flap and gusset sock. I have as yet never knitted a sock without a big mistake on the picking up of the stitches. However, I have just finished one sock and picked up the stitches with the method you describe in this video. I nearly cried with joy as it turned out perfectly and I have a sock with no mistakes. I can’t thank you enough. You are my sock hero.
Agreed! Here I am almost a year behind you and singing the praises of this amazing video! I cannot figure out the M1 to close the holes, this tip is waaay easier!
Hear hear! This is without a doubt, the BEST sock flap & gusset technique/modification I have ever seen! I’m off to find a DPN to keep in my sock project bag 🧶😄💖 You are my sock hero too Roxanne! I’m seriously excited about this🤗
Your channel is incredible, and you are a true font of knowledge. I really appreciate the depth that you go to when explaining things, and making them relatable to something else we might understand. You're a great teacher and a very generous person to spend your time teaching us these techniques I imagine could only be picked up from a lifetime of knitting and exploring new ideas. Thank you !
Thank you! Thank you! I taught myself how to knit socks a couple of years ago. Hated cuff down with gussets, so I switched to toe up with short row or FLK heels. I found your video and tried your PU technique on a pair of cuff down shortie socks. Absolute game changer for me. I know exactly what to pick up, how to twist, and how to address corner gaps, all in one easy to follow video. You’re the BEST teacher!
Wow, another super helpful video, just when I’m starting my heel flap on my second sock. This is definitely my “learning pair” of socks. Thank you! ❤
First time ever no holes in my knitted sock! Thank you!
Thank you so much for this video. I hated knitting socks because I struggled and struggled to pick up the stitches to start the gusset. Then, a friend forwarded a link to this. You seriously changed my knitting. I have made three pair of socks since watching it and picked up stitches look perfect. I so appreciate the time you have given to help knitters grow in our passion. I have also linked your video in my Ravelry project pages so others can gain from your knowledge as well.
I use a crochet hook because it's honestly impossible for me otherwise with my tight knitting, and I pick up through both loops to increase durability of the sock, which can make picking up stitches even harder.
By far the best explanations for any problems sock heel flaps. Plus, just watching this fine teacher, she makes a case for learning to knit the European way. She is SO fast and makes it look easy.
This is a game changer using the spare DPN. It is so much clearer and reliable IMO. Thank you so much Roxanne for another fantastic tip ❤
Amazing, seriously! You are so full of ideas to be used in a very logical way.... if you know how to make socks. I'm learning and you make this look so very simple. NO ONE I've seen here on line has given me those tips and tricks ! THANK YOU!!!
Although I was skeptical about closing the gap at my sock gusset, I did try and it and it works great! No more gaps or holes at the gusset. Thanks!
OMG a video for us "picking" style knitters! I'm so happy
I've been searching written and video heel flap tutorials for years and NONE compared to this! Thank you Roxanne! This one is perfection!!!
What brilliant technique tips Roxanne! You have taken my sock knitting to a whole new level. Thank you so very much 💖🧶😄
I love your teaching style and I learn so many new techniques, tips and tricks. The lessons you share are timeless! Tk you💕
Thank you thank you thank you!!! This is the best tutorial ever. You have solved my holey gussets and eased my heel flap anxiety!!
Thank you Roxanne. Your video regarding picking up gusset stitches is terrific. Thanks again.
❤ Thank you, Roxanne I know you did this video a long time ago but I just started to knit socks this April. I wanted to let you know I am so grateful, as a new sock knitter to not have the frustrating holes where the gusset meets the instep right out of the gate of trying to learn. As well as no unsightly holes where the stitches are picked up for the gusset. 🎉
this video is a lifesaver!!!! thank you so much for sharing your expertise so clearly and concisely.
Wildly helpful on my first pair of socks. Thank you so much for a video that gets right to the point. So helpful for a person with ADD. Thank you so much
Thanks so much for all the teaching you do!
Thanks for the comments on those with neuropathy in their feet appreciating a no-Ridge pick up in their sock. Thanks for sharing a technique on how to get rid of that ridge. For this reason I like knitting toe up socks with a provisional cast on.
I love your tips. I have made a few pairs of socks and always wondering why there are holes in them. From your video, I have learned the way the stitches orientate in the needle and how they twist when we knit them does make a difference. Thank you!
Thank you for showing me how to fix the holes and gaps Roxanne!
I've made lots and lots of socks, but this is a first for me about picking up stitches for the heel flap doing one leg for the stitch and also with the no hole gusset. I do no hole gusset a bit different as I combine the two together and pick them up together and pull the yarn through both legs of the stitch. Your way is great too. Thank you so much for the tips on this video. You are very clear.
I have been struggling for weeks and avoiding this step, thank you for saving me!
Used the paired lifted increase to prevent hole at intersection...extremely pleased with the result! Thank you!
Excellent & clear demonstration of how to minimize gaps. Before, I always had to 'mend' them to cover the gaps after the sock was knit. This will be such an improvement. Thanks for this.
Oh, this is so helpful!
Whenever I get stuck, I always come back to your videos ❤ master work and knowledge is a treasure, and greatly appreciated!
Wow this tutorial is awesome! It makes pick up the gusset so easy while preventing the gap. For the first time I don't see any sign of the hole in my sock, thank you so much for sharing!
Thanks for this video. I am making my first heel flap socks, and after picking up my stitches I was sure I had made a mistake, because of the ridge on the inside. I know I would feel that ridge, so searched videos to see what I was doing wrong. I discovered I was picking up stitches correctly, but the technique was flawed. Found your video, so now I can make socks without that annoying ridge on the side of the heel. I will definitely also use your tip for eliminating the hole. Thanks so much!
This technique is so amazing. Definitely my new go-to. Thank you! 😊
I just tried the paired lifted increases on a raglan sleeve, and it worked beautifully! Thank you for demonstrating that technique! It'll be my new go-to to prevent holes in both my socks and raglan sweaters!
I was looking for this video in the Socks playlist. I recommend adding it to that playlist. I've always knit socks toe-up with a short row heel, but I'm currently using yarn that makes that impossible. While your instructions aren't a how-to tutorial from beginning to end, they have enough information that I can follow your techniques using the heel-flap section of the playlist to wing it.
Love this technique, Rox. It's even neater than doing a garter border on the heel flap. Thank you!
This is some fine tutorial you’ve made! I just used it and it works like a champ!! Thank you for being so well thought out and clear.
This is perfect! I was always leery of doing a flap for heel because of that didn't want anything rubbing on the skin on the inside.
Thank you! This is the best heel flap tutorial that I have seen and one that will make such a difference in my finished projects.
I'm so happy to hear you found it helpful! :-)
Just found this video to view. I'm new to knitting socks, and you've given me such a great tutorial for knitting both heel flaps and preventing the holes I had at the heel flap & gusset stitches. Thanks very much.
I'm so happy you found it useful! :-)
Okay, I took a deep breath, watched your vid, and now I feel ready to do this part on the socks I’m making! Thank you.
You can do it!
That is a very intelligent, well-thought-out solution to a bumpy line inside the sock. Thank you. This is a keeper. :)
Thank you! So far I've only knit toe up socks with short row heels, and I've been quite scared of top down with a heel flap. This makes me much more confident and I look forward to starting my first top down / heel flap sock next week!
Thank you so much for this tute. I just tried it and it worked beautifully. It was a pleasure coming across your videos. You have a great voice for them and you're wonderful at explaining. I can't tell you how many tutes I started to watch and had to turn off.
Thank you! :-) I'm glad it worked for you (and that you enjoy my videos)!
Immensely helpful! Well explained and good camera work! Thank you!
Wow this is brilliant I've been pulling my hair out picking up stitches along a front edge you made me realise I was picking up the cast on or bound off edge.
Just found your video Roxanne What a great suggestion for picking up the stitches, One of the things I have always disliked about the heel flag method is the ridge inside. I am going to try your method on the sock that I am currently working on. Thank you for taking the time to create your video.
An excellent tutorial with such clear photography.
A fantastic tutorial, actually, the best one I've seen.
Oh, thank you! :-) I'm glad you liked it.
I agree! Best one I have seen!
More tips and tricks! Thank you Roxanne. I am making socks for my grands for Christmas. This is a great help.
Thank you so much for this! I always end up with little holes that have to be mended. You explain things completely and clearly, and that's just what I need. You're a great teacher!
Thank you! I love a good trick like this! :-)
Roxanne Richardson I put in a heel like this last night and it looks great!
Yay! :-)
I was just recommended to watch your tutorial. What a wonderful explanation! Thank you! I subscribed and will be watching more!
This is life-changing info for sock knitters! I love ,"grab a bite of yarn". 😍
Ah, it's actually "bight"! (Who knew, right? I didn't, until a few years ago :-) )
I'm a new sock knitter, and not quite sure where to decrease those extra stitches. Maybe once I do it it will be clear. But, I love this way! I get nervous because I'm not great at undoing my work.... I lose my place or drop a stitch or something. I do like the way you are teaching so maybe sometime soon I will become a more intuitive knitter! Thank you!
Compared to the total number of sts picked up for the gusset, the couple of extra sts at the corners isn't that much extra. I do a decrease immediately on the next round, and then I do the regular every-other-round decreases. If you feel like it, you can always do several rounds decreases, and then switch to every other round.
Thank you for your quick reply! You can be sure that I will be watching the rest of your videos, and subscribing. I am mostly a quilter, but my mom taught me how to knit when I was younger and I have picked it up again. So, I really appreciate all the help on TH-cam. And, It's nice to have someone who knits the way I was taught....is it continental? Anyway, thank you again.t
"Continental" means controlling the yarn in the left hand. There are lots of ways to do this. In general, there are people who extend the index finger, like I do, and those who hold their index finger against the needle, but there are also people who wrap the yarn with their left hand, rather than picking it, and people who tension the yarn around their neck or through a pin attached to their clothing, and then control the yarn with their thumbs (Peruvian, Portuguese, and a couple of other traditions do this, I believe.) "English" means controlling the yarn in the right hand, and again, lots of ways to do this (throwing, lever method, pencil hold, etc.). There are further ways of describing a knitting method, but Continental and English are the two general categories.
@@RoxanneRichardson this is what I needed to know! I am on this part of my first sock and needed clarification on the decreases for the extra stitches and when to do the decreases every other round in the method described in my pattern (which is to knit to the last 3 sts decrease, k1). Thank you for the excellent tutorial.
I am not sure .. do I complete the round picking up the stitches and then the next round do the pick up to avoid the hole? Or do I do the hole pickup same round as when I pick up the stitches for the gusset?
I know this video is old but thank you! First time my sock gussets have ever looked neat!
This is an absolutely amazing tutorial, thank you so much. For the longest time I couldn't wrap my head around why the left and right side of the heel looked different. My headache is now long gone. Cheers!
Looked "different" in what way Helena? On my socks, the left heel/gusset always seems to look great, and the right heel has a gap when I pick up heel stitches. So I tried the method above to close the gap - not sure it came out quite right. Roxanne is using a heavier weight yarn. Mine is sock weight and the stitches are a bit harder to see with her method.
Thank you!! This is golden! Also, thanks for the direct links to the techniques. That was so helpful for my adhd.
Thanks, Roxanne. Your economy of words to explain concepts makes you a natural-born educator. It's obvious how clearly you can see through the eyes of your learners. Brilliant!
Thanks, Grace! I have to admit, there is a fair amount of editing. I always have way more to say than is reasonable to put into a video like this, so I do a LOT of cutting! :-)
Roxanne Richardson as any good teacher would do!
Awesome tip and showing exactly how. Very grateful for this valuable help. 😊❤️❤️
Thank you for the info. This is always the hardest part of socks for me. That’s a beautiful sweater!
Great tutorial! I just started a new pair of socks yesterday so your video could not be more timely. Nice work 😀
Wow, thanks so much for this; super helpful!! I could never figure out why one side of my heel flap always turned out better than the other side, now I know :) Instantly subbed!!
Thank you! Nothing like soaking up time to make a perfect pair of socks and afterwards finding holes. I’ll use your video from now on 😀
Hi I loveso much you're videos. English is not my first language and I always understand everything because you explaination are so clear. Thank you so much for taking you're time to share with us all your knowledge. xxx
I'm so glad you're able to follow along! :-)
Great tips. Even thou I can find your videos again, I specifically saved this one!! Thank you.
THANK YOU!!! This is exactly what I needed. Very clear directions and easy to follow along.
Love this video and so many more you have done!! New to socks and you explain everything so well!
Great tips! Thanks for sharing. I look forward to picking up the heel flap stitches as you demonstrated on my next pair.
WOW! THANK you!!! The 2 worst parts of making heels! Gotta try this!
Thank you Roxanne, this popped up just in time to improve my newest socks on the needles!
Absolutely wonderful, finally can knit a sock I’m proud of, excellent tutorial, thx
Love these tips. Wondered why I ended up with a "hole" at that junction - thought I'd done something wrong. Now, thanks to your video, I know how to prevent this. Thank you so much Roxanne.
I liked the tips, but wish you had talked about adding the extra stitches to avoid the gap sooner. You talked about picking up stitches along the heel flap, so I did that and kept going. Then I had to go back and undo it when you later talked about avoiding the gap
Thank you Roxanne for sharing!! ❤
Awesome tips! I'm going to use these methods on my next pair 😀
Thank you for a different way of doing the hole when working the heel flap to sock.
Your videos are a treasure. Thank you for all of them.
Thank you so much, Roxanne! So glad I found you and what an awesome tutorial :)
Hi Roxanne, I am looking forward in trying your method for avoiding the gap on socks. I knit one pair not too long ago- and it was my first - but with a gap as a result. So, I had to fix it after the finishing of the sock. Also, could you tell me if this method works for making gloves when it comes to the finger part. If not, would you have a method for the gloves. Thank you O so much for sharing this video with us.😊
Thank you for this vlog. I am teaching myself to knit socks and this is the area I have so far failed so am looking forward to trying this method and my socks are hopefully going to look much improved 😊
I am sure they will be improved! :-)
Wonderful hints! This clarifies exactly what I was just guessing at. I had "sorta" done something like this but didn't quite have a handle on it. Thank you.
Glad it was helpful!
Thank you so much for this video. I'm using your tips on my current sock and it is looking fantastic.
Thank you so much for the fabulous tutorial ❤🧶x
I love love this video. I'm trying to knit socks again. Tried years ago, 6 or 7 maybe and I got through one with many mistakes and backing out of stitches row by row. I decide last weekend to try again. So this video and your tips and tricks showed up in my youtube feed just in time. :)
Thank you so much. I am a new sock knitter. I have only made one pair so far and they don't fit anyone lol. They are my sample. I'm gathering all the information I can until I make my second pair. I'm not sure when that will happen. I really want to make socks but still not comfortable with all the steps, especially making them fit someone. I will use all that you taught me here in my next pair. :)
Welcome to the wonderful world of sock knitting! There are some great sock knitting groups on Ravelry where you might find some useful information. You can also always ask questions in my Ravelry group, Rox Rocks. :-)
Thank you so much! :)
This is utterly brilliant! Wish I'd had this info for all the previous socks I knitted, but will certainly use it for all future ones. Thank you so much. Thordis :)
Wonderful video. I fully understand what you have done and why! Thank you. Concise and clear.
I'm glad you liked it! :-)
Nice video!! I've been knitting socks for a few years now--two at a time on two circulars and these tips are really useful. Thank-you!!!!
Seriously 😑 amazing! Thank you, for so much new innovative ways. Perfect 🥰
Thank you so much. This has made such a difference to my sock making.
Thank you so much for sharing this. You made it so clear
Loved video Just wondering if you have a video that explains how to knit gloves
I have one on how to knit fingerless mitts without a pattern, but not one on gloves.
Hi Rox thanks so much for your tutorials, I'm enjoying them and very much appreciate your teaching style and explanations which are particularly clear.
Regarding the lifted increases on the second side of the sock i.e. after you have knitted across the instep, are these 2 stitches placed with the instep stitches or do they form the first two stitches on the 3rd needle that will be used to knit along the gusset stitches?
Thanks
Janine
The stitch count for the instep remains consistent. The lifted increases are worked together on the following round to become the k1 that is worked at the start or end of each gusset thereafter. That is, on the first round, you work to those two lifted incs, and decrease them together. Work across the instep sts, then decrease the other lifted incs together. Now you begin the actual gusset dec rounds, which are worked by knitting to the last 3 sts, k2tog, k1. Work across the instep sts, k1, ssk. So those lifted incs become the k1 column adjacent to the instep sts.
What do you do if you end up with more picked up stitches?
I learned more watching this one video... amazing. Thank you.
More picked up sts than the pattern tells you to pick up? Knit the flat to the needed length, regardless of what the pattern states, then pick up 1 st for every slipped selvedge stitch. When you work the gussets, decrease every other round until you have the number of sts needed for the ball of foot. If your ball of foot and ankle measurements are not the same, then you may need a different number of sts for the foot than you needed for the leg. So you can stop decreasing early, if your ball of foot is large, or you can keep decreasing if your ball of foot is smaller than your ankle. You can skip plain rounds and work several decrease rounds in a row, if you want to decrease rapidly, and you can add plain rounds between decrease rounds, if you want to decrease more slowly.
Such a fabulous tutorial! I learned so much. Tk you🤗
Hi, Roxanne. Great video...many thanks. I will be incorporating this into my next pair of socks. On another sock topic, I saw a video of yours where you discuss a method to avoid cutting the leg yarn when knitting a contrasting heel flap and heel turn. A way to somehow carry the leg yarn up or something when the heel colorway is completed and it's time to resume with the main colorway. I thought I saved this video but of course, I cannot find the link now. Can you please point me there? Many thanks.
Tips & Tricks for Contrast Heels: th-cam.com/video/ZB-UmbtE9TE/w-d-xo.html. If you lose it again in the future, just search TH-cam for "Roxanne Richardson contrast" or "Roxanne Richardson contrast heels" and it'll be at the top of the search results.
Thank you very much Roxanne! 👍
Thank you I will try this! I find picking up stitches hard snd trying to close the gap!
Great tips to prevent gaps on the heel. Thanks! I was picking up wrong stitches and i ended up with holes. Take practice alright
Learn something new every day!!!! Many thanks........
Thanks so much for explaining as I am yet to achieve knitting socks but I am going to give it a go
Great video, thank you so much. I had good success with the first heel flap edge, but I'm unclear which end to start the second edge after the instep and which way the needle enters the stitch. I managed with a lot of trial and error.
I do love picking up stitches like this.
Thank you Roxanne. 💖