Picking Up Neckline Stitches
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 22 พ.ย. 2024
- How to pick up neckline stitches, or armhole stitches etc.
Accompanying blog post: wp.me/p119Xb-2fS
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Just watched this again in preparation for picking up the armholes and neckband on my vest. Thanks for the clear explanation.
You're very welcome!
Wonderful video! Exactly what I was looking for. I'm a beginner, and I am sewing my first baby sweater (pattern called Daniel's Pullover with Cascade Yarns; basketweave pattern) and I'm at the "pickup stitches around the neckline". My neckline did not look like perfect bind off stitches, and you showed me why.....and how to pick up the different types. Thank You!!!
You're very welcome - I'm so glad it was helpful!
I’m finishing up a Christmas sweater for my sister and this just saved my butt. So simple, yet so freaking helpful. Thank you!!!
You're very welcome!! I'm so glad it was helpful!
I love the way you describe how to start the process. you just lost me at the ratio bit. I've learned to pick up stitches when knitting slippers, so that was simple but doing this vest pattern proved very difficult.
Very good tutorial videos. 👌🏼👏💖💚💕thank you. please can you teach also the Back of V-Neck of Vest for kids too? . I been trying to knit a V-Neck Vest for my grandson. But, no any success for me to finish this project because The V-Neck shapes it turns too small. I need some help to learn a bout that. Thank you 🙏🏼
Hi! I will try to film something on that soon! In the meantime, the back should be worked very similarly to the front - make sure you pick up stitch to stitch along the straight edges. You may need to adjust your needle size if you find it is too tight.
So am I not supposed to make a slip knot in the beginning? I always get nervous about the tail
You could do that if you'd like ( and then make sure to remove the slip knot and not work it!) But it's really not required. If your tail is long enough it won't come loose. Then just snug that stitch up before weaving in the tail afterwards.
Great tutorial. Thanks
Hello do you have a tutorial where you shape the neckline?
No, not currently! I'll add it to my video request list!
Not sure how you worked out the ratio
I took the stitch gauge and row gauge of my base swatch (over 1") - and that was my ratio. That usually works as a good starting point. If your neckline pattern is a drastically different stitch gauge, then you'll need to take the stitch gauge from it and not the base fabric. (But still use the row gauge from your base fabric.)
excellent tutorial but I get lost when you talk about ratio etc, I'd like an exact math exercise that one does and not guess at it. Thank you very much
There isn't a hard and fast rule - you will need to calculate it for each fabric you create.
Measure your stitch gauge over 1" in the neckline fabric (you will have to work a swatch in the yarn and needles and pattern you will use for the neckline - ribbing, etc). Then measure the row gauge over 1" in your body fabric. The stitches over rows is your ratio - reduce it as much as you can. So, say the stitch gauge is 5 and the row gauge is 7, your ratio is 5 sts to 7 rows. For every 5 passes of the needle into a stitch, you will need to work 7 rows -- so you'll do something like 1-1-2-1-2 (where the 2s are you will skip a row, and where the 1s are you work one stitch to one row.)
I hope this helps and doesn't just muddy the waters more!
I was fine until maths was involved. I don't understand how to work out stitch guage. so confused now.
I'm sorry you're confused!! If the math is confusing, it's ok to do trial and error for the pickups. You want a happy medium where the neckband is not too tight or too loose. It should lay flat and smooth along the selvedge edge.
Can anyone suggest where I may buy a skirt knitting pattern
Christine...look up FreeKnittingPatterns.com (among others, surely, but I find lots there).
Many thanks