I made some notes on it from another video: if you are doing regular ribbing followed by Fair Isle work in the body of the garment, you need to increase the number of stitches by about 25%. If you are doing 2 colour ribbing (corrugated, I didn't know until I saw this video that it had a name), then you need to increase the stitch number by about 15%. So the corrugated ribbing does have some stretch, just not as much as regular.
What is your preferred method of knitting? Then it makes sense to have the contrast yarn in your non dominant hand. This is a great tutorial. Thank you.
I'm going to guess she's a continental knitter - as someone who began life as an English knitter I struggle with continental purls. So while I've been working on two-handed colour work (I feel I'm less likely to get muddled that way), any purling gets done with the wool in the right hand, leaving the knit stitches for the left.
In my amateur opinion: no, provided you are consistent along the entire row. Having one yarn in each hand helps to achieve that consistency without you really having to think about it.
Hi Andrea! Myself and two girlfriends are starting a knitting podcast, Wool and Wine. We filmed our first episode today, we created a gmail account and a TH-cam channel but are clueless about what comes next. What platform do you use to create show notes, etc.? I’m asking you because you claim to also be technically challenged 😉 but always have great video and show notes.
I love the look of this corrugated rib. Thanks for the tutorial.
I love a corrugated rib, especially in 2x2! Great tutorial!
C'est la 1ere que je te regarde,j'aime le tricot et aime voir et apprendre en regardant. I Like it. My english is not good but I follow to you. 😁
So fun! I've never seen this before.Thx!!
I love the look of corrugated ribbing. It's only way less stretchy, is that right?
Yes, it isn't really "ribbing" per se, in fact since it's colorwork it's likely to be even less stretchy than one color stockinette
I made some notes on it from another video: if you are doing regular ribbing followed by Fair Isle work in the body of the garment, you need to increase the number of stitches by about 25%. If you are doing 2 colour ribbing (corrugated, I didn't know until I saw this video that it had a name), then you need to increase the stitch number by about 15%. So the corrugated ribbing does have some stretch, just not as much as regular.
Love the look of that. Thank you.
Why will it always be in the round?
I love this ! 💜🧶
Just wondering, have you considered doing Norwegian purling in which yarn remains in the back when continental knitting?
What is your preferred method of knitting? Then it makes sense to have the contrast yarn in your non dominant hand. This is a great tutorial. Thank you.
I'm going to guess she's a continental knitter - as someone who began life as an English knitter I struggle with continental purls. So while I've been working on two-handed colour work (I feel I'm less likely to get muddled that way), any purling gets done with the wool in the right hand, leaving the knit stitches for the left.
Does yarn dominance/which strand is carried on top - matter at all with this technique?
In my amateur opinion: no, provided you are consistent along the entire row. Having one yarn in each hand helps to achieve that consistency without you really having to think about it.
Hi Andrea! Myself and two girlfriends are starting a knitting podcast, Wool and Wine. We filmed our first episode today, we created a gmail account and a TH-cam channel but are clueless about what comes next. What platform do you use to create show notes, etc.? I’m asking you because you claim to also be technically challenged 😉 but always have great video and show notes.