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Seed stitch scarf

September 26th, 2005 Leave a comment Go to comments

I posted this as a reply to a question over in the knitting community, then realized it said more about my life than I thought, so I wanted to post it here so I’d have a record.

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Here’s a seed stitch scarf. Never mind the slit, it’s just the chunkiest seed stitch one I had.

I didn’t write down the pattern, but I’m pretty sure it’s just CO 11, *k1, p1* across. Repeat until the scarf is as long as you want. The key is that on each subsequent row, you knit the knits and purl the purls, so it has to be an odd number for that particular pattern to work.

If you want to do a slit like that, it’s pretty easy. About a third of the way up, start knitting with a separate ball halfway through the row. Continue knitting from the separate balls (or just the other end of the same ball if you’ve only got one) until the slit is as long as you need, then rejoin it with the original ball. Weave in the ends when you’re all done.

I gave that scarf to my kid’s kindergarten teacher’s assistant last year. Did she thank me? Nooooo. Of course, later she quit, apparently because they were expecting more of her than she had to do at last year’s school. I didn’t like her anyway – she was impatient, and unintentionally (I hope) belittling to the kids. I meant the scarf as something to try to show her were were all in this together and thus to improve her attitude. Yeah, that didn’t work.

It just goes to show why you shouldn’t give hand-knit things out of a sense of obligation, only out of a genuine desire to please the recipient. Too bad – it looked better on me than I’m sure it did on her.

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  1. September 26th, 2005 at 20:14 | #1

    Okay … here is a knitting question that I haven’t found mentioned in my learn to knit book. Just how do you work with multiple balls of yarn? There is a pattern I’d like to do that is very basic but it uses about six different color yarns alternating each row. I’ve no clue how to do something like that.

  2. September 26th, 2005 at 20:14 | #2

    Okay … here is a knitting question that I haven’t found mentioned in my learn to knit book. Just how do you work with multiple balls of yarn? There is a pattern I’d like to do that is very basic but it uses about six different color yarns alternating each row. I’ve no clue how to do something like that.

  3. September 26th, 2005 at 21:16 | #3

    It depends. How much of each color are you using?

    In other words, is it 10 rows of one color and then 10 rows of another? If so, you will probably want to cut the yarn at the end (leaving a good sized tail to weave in), then pick up with the second color, then cut that and pick up with a third, etc. and just weave in the ends at the end of the project. That’s what I did for this scarf.

    Is it just a couple of rows and then back to the first color? If so, just knit two rows in color A, and when you get back to your starting point, give the two yarns a little twist around each other to secure them and then knit two rows in color B. That’s what I did for this hat which had, I think, four rows before each color change. Sorry the picture is so cruddy.

    Does that make sense?

  4. September 26th, 2005 at 21:16 | #4

    It depends. How much of each color are you using?

    In other words, is it 10 rows of one color and then 10 rows of another? If so, you will probably want to cut the yarn at the end (leaving a good sized tail to weave in), then pick up with the second color, then cut that and pick up with a third, etc. and just weave in the ends at the end of the project. That’s what I did for this scarf.

    Is it just a couple of rows and then back to the first color? If so, just knit two rows in color A, and when you get back to your starting point, give the two yarns a little twist around each other to secure them and then knit two rows in color B. That’s what I did for this hat which had, I think, four rows before each color change. Sorry the picture is so cruddy.

    Does that make sense?

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