Knitting Without Turning
If you learned to knit the way I did, then you work across a right
side row, turn and work across the wrong side. I have been knitting this
way since I was 4 years old.
For years, I would throw the yarn. The yarn would be over my right
hand index finger, under the next two fingers and then over my pinky. To
make a stitch, I would lift my index finger an wrap the yarn around the
needle.
I then moved from the 'throw' method to the Continental method. The
yarn would be over my index finger of my left hand, under the two middle
fingers, and over the pinky. I would insert the right hand needle into
the stitch, grab the yarn from my left hand index finger with the needle
and make the stitch in one motion. This method seemed quicker and more
fluid to me. It became my knitting method of choice.
I guess the next step was combining the two when I was doing color
knitting. I would hold one yarn in the left hand and the other in the
right, moving between throwing and Continental.
Time went by and I got older. With age, my right wrist wasn't as
cooperative anymore. It would get very sore doing Continental and I
would have to revert back to throwing. Eventually I stopped using
Continental all together and 50 years after I first learned, I am back
to throwing full time.
Last year, in January, after I had finished my newsletter article, I
decided to reward myself and buy the pattern and supplies for the Koigu
Oriental Jacket. The jacket is comprised of garter stitch squares in
three sizes. The knitter starts with one square, and keeps building.
There is now sewing involved. One square just gets added on and so on.
Some of the squares are very small and others are quite large.
As the jacket started building, I began to get annoyed with turning
the fabric on the small squares. It would take me longer to turn the
jacket than to knit the row.
I then asked myself how hard could it be to purl back. I would have
to purl back as opposed to knit back because it was garter stitch. I
turned just as I normally would, inserted my needle to start the row,
and turned it back again. In this way, I could see what the placement of
the left hand needle would look like if I hadn't turned.
To create a purl stitch on the right side coming left to right, the
needle is inserted in the back loop of the stitch from behind the
stitch...in other words on the right side of the back loop.
I am not ambidextrous. In fact, there are times when I wonder if my
left hand can do anything at all. I realized that rather have the left
needle insert it was much easier to move the right needle stitch down
onto the left needle. Since the yarn was in my right hand for throwing,
I just used the continental method to wrap.
Once I got the hang of it, I found that I could make each square
without ever turning the jacket.
Several months and several projects went by with me knitting the
normal way. Work across the row and then turn.
A few weeks ago, I finished a newsletter article and project and
rewarded myself again. This time it was with the Sheepscape Afghan kit.
This is another project made of squares. The rub here is that it is
Intarsia. I have always avoided Intarsia, because I hate the turning and
the tangled mess of color in the back. I also like to be able to see
what I am doing, thus have the right side facing.
I decided that I wasn't going to turn. Again, I analyzed how the
needle went into the stitch and duplicated it using the left needle as
the working needle to come back. The squares are basically stockinette
stitch.
I am in shock at how easy it is doing stockinette stitch from right
to left and then left to right without turning.
Insert the left needle into the back of the stitch on the right
needle, wrap and remove. Here is the neat thing. The yarn is over the
index finger of the right hand. When the left needle is inserted in the
back of the stitch, the yarn from the right index finger can be picked
up at the same time. There is actually no movement to wrap. It is
automatic.
Again, I am throwing from right to left and doing continental from
left to right.
After doing just one square, I was coming back across the row as
quickly as I would if I had turned and done my regular purl.
The advantage here is that I can always see my color work. By not
turning, I am not tangling the yarn hanging off the back at the color
change stitches. Above all, it is just so satisfying!
My biggest problem in mastering this technique was getting the
stitches to move on the left hand needle when I was coming back across
the row. I can't tell you how I finally got it to work, but I did. Now
that I have the stitches moving on the needle and don't have to stop to
push them down, I will feel comfortable trying this method on a garment.
For those of you, reading this, who are new to knitting, I apologize.
I am sure that it is very confusing. It is one of those things that
would be best described by demonstration. However, if you are fairly
comfortable with knitting, take a few moments to analyze needle
position. Cast 20 or so stitches using larger needles an a chunky yarn
and give it a try. Knit from right to left and then come back across the
row without turning.
I received an email from Maggie Dicey regarding this article. Maggie
is a continental knitter, and in a very succinct way describes 'knitting
back' using that method.
Maggie's words:
"I hold the yarn in my left hand, working continental-style from
right to left, and "flicking" with the left index finger on the return
row. Oddly enough, that flick maneuver was something I could never
master with my right hand, although I am definitely right-hand dominant.
(For color work, I hold both yarns in the left hand.)
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