Brilliant and exactly what I needed - precise demonstration of where to insert the needle in the inside edge. My collar came out looking perfect. Thank you!
Would that purl row be on the outside of the garment then? ie- not folded into the middle? Because you fold the cast on edge into the back of the working edge
Your video was so clear and I did not have any trouble seeing where one would pick up stiches on the backside. Thank you! By the way, what kind of a bind off would you use with this technique?
You just keep on going with the yoke or whatever is written next. Your neckline will be completely finished at this point except for weaving in the ends.
Your stitches should not double. You should be knitting the front stitch (on the needles) together with the back stitch (from the cast on edge). It sounds to me like you are pulling the working yarn through the cast on edge and creating a new stitch. That loop pulled through the cast on edge should be pulled right through your next stitch on the needle so you are working stitches together instead of adding stitches.
My pattern asks to purl the neck rib folded band together. Do I insert the needle on the cast on edge from back to front instead of front to back. Thank you.
You can easily apply this to Woodsmoke or any other pattern. Knit the ribbing to twice what you what the final result to be and follow the instructions in the tutorial to join the neckline together.
Hello, thank you for this tutorial, it's great! Do you think this will work for a neckline that has german short rows included in the pattern? The sweater from the pattern is knitted top down casting on at the neckline, proceeding with the short rows and then to the body, but I would love to have the neckline folded. Thank you!
It absolutely will work with German short rows in the pattern. The neckline is completed before you begin the short rows so it will have no effect on them.
@@JessicaMcDonaldKnits Thanks for your answer! In the pattern that I'm currently working with, the short rows are included in the neckline, not after it. But what I did is I knitted the folded neckline, but before joining it together, I worked the short rows and then joined the cast-on stitches with the stitches on my needles. It looks alright and it creates the back shaping quite nicely!
Im wondering how you do this when the sweater body is already attached... I guess turn the sweater inside out? it seems awkward, is there a better way to do a folded neckband when the sweater body is already done and part of the neck? oh wait I dont think this can be done with a sweater body I guess you have to do this neckband first then start the sweater...
For this the neckband shown in this tutorial, you knit the neckband first and then the sweater body. For a neckline that you attach after the sweater body is done, head into my tutorials and find the “How to pick up stitches for a neckline” and “How to sew down a folded neckline”
If you're planning to continue the body of the sweater in k1/p1 ribbing, you'd work the two edges together in ribbing. This is (I think) assuming a standard stockinette body/ribbed borders construction.
@@ElorauroraOkie I think that makes sense idk why I’m late to see this! I’m making my first raglan i wanted to try this method for my neckline which is k1/p1
Brilliant and exactly what I needed - precise demonstration of where to insert the needle in the inside edge. My collar came out looking perfect. Thank you!
Thanks so much! This was a lot easier to follow than another similar video I was watching. I have my neckline all folded together and knit neatly now.
If you want the rib to be folded flatter, you can complete the entire round (in the middle, i.e. where it is folded in half) using only purl stitch.
Do you have an example on how to do that? Would you pick up the CO edge or pull up a loop first from the CO to join that?
I work half my rib then do a purl row and work the other half of the rib. It makes the neckband lie flatter at the fold
Would that purl row be on the outside of the garment then? ie- not folded into the middle? Because you fold the cast on edge into the back of the working edge
@@lilskiiergirl Yes, on the right side.
Its a beautiful neckline. Thank you for this tutorial.
This is a very helpful video. I wasn’t making a top down neckline but I was still able to use your technique and tips. Thank you! ❤
Knits n pieces recommended your channel and you have a new sub
Wow that’s so neat. Thank you for the news letter and the demo video. Blessings
You may want to show the object when all the stitches have been done just for a visual reference.
Excellent tutorial!
You could also use a provisional cast on and use an extra needle to knit the 2 corresponding stitches together
Your video was so clear and I did not have any trouble seeing where one would pick up stiches on the backside. Thank you! By the way, what kind of a bind off would you use with this technique?
Thanks you for your interesting video 👍🙏👌❤️
Thank you! It was very helpful🧶😊
Thank you for this video!
This is wonderful; thank you! I have a question: after you finish this process, do you just go on to the yoke, or whatever is next after the neckband?
You just keep on going with the yoke or whatever is written next. Your neckline will be completely finished at this point except for weaving in the ends.
Great tutorial! After this, my stiches doubled and how can decrease them into beginning stich number?
Your stitches should not double. You should be knitting the front stitch (on the needles) together with the back stitch (from the cast on edge). It sounds to me like you are pulling the working yarn through the cast on edge and creating a new stitch. That loop pulled through the cast on edge should be pulled right through your next stitch on the needle so you are working stitches together instead of adding stitches.
My pattern asks to purl the neck rib folded band together. Do I insert the needle on the cast on edge from back to front instead of front to back. Thank you.
Very nice❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Fantastic!
This is wonderful! Could this be transferred easily to your Woodsmoke pattern, by doubling the number of rows, or even adding an extra one? Thank you!
You can easily apply this to Woodsmoke or any other pattern. Knit the ribbing to twice what you what the final result to be and follow the instructions in the tutorial to join the neckline together.
@@JessicaMcDonaldKnits that's really great to know, thank you for your help 💐
Thank you!
Hello, thank you for this tutorial, it's great! Do you think this will work for a neckline that has german short rows included in the pattern? The sweater from the pattern is knitted top down casting on at the neckline, proceeding with the short rows and then to the body, but I would love to have the neckline folded. Thank you!
It absolutely will work with German short rows in the pattern. The neckline is completed before you begin the short rows so it will have no effect on them.
@@JessicaMcDonaldKnits Thanks for your answer! In the pattern that I'm currently working with, the short rows are included in the neckline, not after it. But what I did is I knitted the folded neckline, but before joining it together, I worked the short rows and then joined the cast-on stitches with the stitches on my needles. It looks alright and it creates the back shaping quite nicely!
Attempted this 5 times, tonight, bit still ended up all janky with too many stitches and idk what to do 😂
No encuentro el tutorial de la continuación del buzo😢
Im wondering how you do this when the sweater body is already attached... I guess turn the sweater inside out? it seems awkward, is there a better way to do a folded neckband when the sweater body is already done and part of the neck? oh wait I dont think this can be done with a sweater body I guess you have to do this neckband first then start the sweater...
For this the neckband shown in this tutorial, you knit the neckband first and then the sweater body. For a neckline that you attach after the sweater body is done, head into my tutorials and find the “How to pick up stitches for a neckline” and “How to sew down a folded neckline”
Could this be done with a provisional cast on as well?
Do I do knit stitches even if I have a k1 p1 ribbing?
If you're planning to continue the body of the sweater in k1/p1 ribbing, you'd work the two edges together in ribbing. This is (I think) assuming a standard stockinette body/ribbed borders construction.
@@ElorauroraOkie I think that makes sense idk why I’m late to see this! I’m making my first raglan i wanted to try this method for my neckline which is k1/p1
5:58
Nu in haken😢