Date: Thu, 31 Jul 1997 10:44:13 -0700 From: "The Boudreau's" (patrick.boudreau@ns.sympatico.ca) Subject: [BOND] Braids and Trims for Afghans etc. Afghan Trim:- Rehang 3 stitches of finished afghan on needlframe. Knit 6 rows, carriage on right. Pick up next 3 stitches and hang them on the three stitches you still have on the needleframe. Knit 6 rows. Pick up next 3 stitches and hang them on the three stitches you just rehung on the frame. Repeat around for a scalloped edge. If this sounds complicated draw a square, and draw scallops around the square. You will then see that you start with three stitches, knit 6 rows, repeat around the entire afghan. Try it on your tension square and then save it as a lovely facecloth or now is the time to start that book where you save the techniques in plastic three ring holders with the sample on the inside front and the directions facing on the back page out. Then tape shut and just remove the sheet when you need a refresher course on the technique. ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Hearts:- Cast on 10 stitches. * Knit 10 rows. Pick up lower right hand stitch of first cast on row and hang on first needle right side of "0" Pick up lower left hand stitch of first cast on row and hang on first needle left side of "0" Knit 10 rows* Repeat for desired length. If this sounds complicated draw a square. In the middle of the top of the square put a "0"--on the bottom of the square put a dot on the lefthand corner and one on the righthand corner. Put a "1" each side of "0" at the top. Draw a line from the dot on the bottom left to the "1" on the lefthandside of "0", draw a line from dot on the bottom right to the "1" on the righthand side of "0". You may change colours every ten rows if desired. A picture really helps, so sketch it out and file it in the technique folder. ----------------------------------- Irish Swirl:- Cast on 10 stitches. * Knit 10 rows. Pick up bottom right stitch and hook in onto the last need on left hand side. Knit 10 rows. Pick up bottom left hand stitch and hook it onto far right needle*. Compete for desired length. Now to draw a picture, draw a rectangle on its side, put a dot at the centre of the long side, put a dot in each corner at the bottom of the opposite long side. Draw an arrow from bottom left to far right. Draw another rectangle on top of this, put a dot in each corner at the bottom of the longside just finished. Put a dot in the centre of the long side just drawn. Draw an arrom from the bottom right to far left....repeat left then right every ten rows. File in technique folder. ----------------------------------------------------- Note:- Most of these trims except for the scallop unless you knit a base strip can be used with heavier weight yarns to make headbands and lovely sititched on already knit garments or over seams on colour/blocked pillows, afghans or sweaters. Have fun bonding and sharing on the net. Linda patrick.boudreau@ns.sympatico.ca North Kentville Knits " Where knitting is still considered an art." ---------------------- Date: Tue, 29 Jul 1997 10:26:24 -0400 (EDT) Subject: [BOND] Newbie Hello to all. I got my ISM last Feb. So far I have only made the sweaters from the pattern book that came with it.(pull over sweaters.) Since I don't have anymore patterns, as of yet, I decided to buy some lace trim. One sweater that I did was pale yellow, with a white lacey ruffle that had yellow beads going down the middle of the ruffle, that I then sewed around the bottom of the neck rib and also down the middle of the sweater. I have just been making sweaters for my three girls using different color yarns and also different trim. I made one sweater for myself but I didn't like it after it was done. It was light blue with a cable down the center. I hate it. It looks so plane compared to the ones I made for my girls. Oh well.... Does anyone else use trim like this? Essex68 ------------------------ Date: Tue, 12 Aug 1997 00:28:17 +1000 From: Val Paino (val@cia.com.au) Subject: Mock heart trim There's a trim that resembles the Heart Trim, but is much quicker and easier to knit. I've only knitted it in finer yarns on a standard gauge, so let me just guess at this - it would have different numbers for different yarns anyway. You need an odd number of stitches, sufficient for about a 1 inch width in your yarn. For a sample, knit a few rows, transfer the centre stitch to one side - i.e. a lace hole - and knit say 1.5"/3.5cm, make another lace hole and so on. Try about 10 lace holes, take off the machine, fasten off, perhaps by just threading the yarn through the open stitches. Then with the plain side facing, push the fastened-off end through the first hole. from the back, draw through, then through the next hole and draw through, and so on. First saw it in an old Brother book, in angora, with a tiny pearl bead in the centre of each segment, and it was most effective. I've also seen it with the purl side used as the "right" side, which meant starting the threading-through with the purl side facing. It is sewn on flat, rather than a fold-over edging. Val Sydney Australia val@cia.com.au ---------------------------------------- Date: Thu, 14 Aug 1997 19:26:50 -0400 (EDT) From: Val2571214@aol.com Subject: [BOND] Re: bond-digest V1 #36 I made that afghan in the book included with the ism, the one with the loopy braided border joining 5 panels. I have made one already, and am finishing the second, in Red Heart Aran Super Saver, Keyplate 4, for wedding presents. I also go around the outside edge 1 row with single crochet, the second row with popcorns in every other stitch of the single crochet row, and finish up by doing another row of single crochet.... Has a very "crunchy" look and feel. Great for cold nights!! If you haven't tried this one yet because of the weird joining for the panels, give it a shot! The directions are a lot harder to read than they are to follow. :) Valarie in Tennessee ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Mon, 27 Oct 1997 04:56:09 -0700 From: styxer@cyberhighway.net Subject: Re: [BOND] edgings One of the more effective crochet edgings I've done in simple stitches is to make a picot edge by figuring out how many st across and dividing it evenly into plain sc and picot. Each corner st gets 3 sc in it, with the middle sc being the picot st, so remember to figure this in when placing picots. The picot is very simple...sc to where you want to put picot, *(sc in that st, ch 3, and then sl st into sc just finished), sc to next picot spot, repeat from * around. Of course, I usually use this when working with thread to dress up a plain placemat or filet crochet piece. If doing a placemat for Christmas, how about finding out how many picots you're going to place, and the threading a contrast color with the appropriate number of beads, sliding a bead up into place in the middle st of the ch 3 of the picot. That way each point will have a bit of added sparkle. Another picot that is done is simply to ch 3 where you want a picot and then go on to the next sc, but I found that it just makes the piece look lumpy or puckered, and the other picot where you ch 3 and then sc in the sc you did in the picot's place is too bulky for my taste. Hope it helps! Julie (the Styx fan) styxer@cyberhighway.net ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 21 Nov 1997 15:10:05 -0600 From: "Ann Yotter" (gyotter@nash.tds.net) Subject: Re: [BOND] I-Cord on the ISM > years ago. I never made it, but isn't it open but curls over. The open > edge make it easy to attach as a binding to edges like you would use bias > tape. Does anyone make this on the ISM? > I made one of these to edge an afghan with. Made it 4 sts wide and put a needle in NWP and 1 more st at one side, then unraveled the 1 st to make the loops to weave it along the edge of the afghan. Did it so the curl was opposite what the afghan tried to curl. Made a nice edge. Did it in the contrasting color of 2 of the 5 panels. The magicord makes a closed tube, tho. What we are talking about for a magicord hem is to make the cord, then hang it on the needles and start knitting off it so it is the bottom edge. I haven't tried it yet, but sonds interesting. I have to find some sport weight yarn in something besides baby colors first. Ann in Tenn gyotter@nash.tds.net ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 21 Nov 1997 22:29:17 +0000 From: Jenny Kosarew (jkos@escher.demon.co.uk) Subject: Re: [BOND] I-Cord on the ISM TinaNH@aol.com wrote: >You can do this, but it's kind of a hassle. After you knit a row, you pick >up the carriage and move it back to the other side of the bed. Keep knitting >in this way for the desired length. You don't have to pick up the carriage, just pull the needles out to HP for the return row, then push them back to FWP for the knitted row. >This only works if the I cord is a few sts (3-4 ?) wide, otherwise you end up >w/ floats that turn into loose sts when you take it off the machine. But you can latch up that ladder just as you latch up rib, except that you are doing it from the right side of the fabric. Barbarawrote: >Just what does the "I" in I-Cord....mean?.......feeling foolish Or even ... I-diotic? ;-) The I is for idiot, either because even an idiot can make it, or because only an idiot would try, or you'll end up an idiot after (hand-)knitting yards of it ... take your pick, sources vary. And Christine asked about using it as a hem/border - two ways spring to mind. You can either knit the garment (perhaps leaving the starting and ending rows open), then knit the I-cord and attach it around the article 'seam-as-you-go. Alternatively, you can start by knitting the I-cord, then cast on for the garment piece, hang some of the I-cord on the needles (work out how many I-cord rows to how many needles from a swatch) and start knitting, joining the I-cord to the sides by seam-as- you-go, then graft the top edge. -- Jenny Kosarew jkos@escher.demon.co.uk from Berkshire, England http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/3968/ http://www.escher.demon.co.uk/Bond_Gallery/ ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 23 Jul 1998 03:36:00 -0500 From: Heidi Stepp (rhstepp@snowhill.com) Subject: [BOND] Scallops on the Bond I didn't see the fall issue of Interweave Knits but I played around with scalloped edgings on the Bond today. This is what I came up with after looking at several books: Cast on about 30 stitches. Knit with waste yarn for several rows, preferrably with contrasting yarn. Now do an e-wrap cast-on with the main yarn and knit one row. *Starting on either side, push the fifth needle, then every tenth needle to holding position. With transfer tool move the stitches on the needles in holding position to the needles on the left, these now have two stitches on them. Now transfer each stitch that is on the needle to the left of the one with the two stitches to that same needle, so these now have three stitches on them. With the three prong transfer tool, move three stitches on each side of the needle with the three stitches on it over by one needle, filling the previously empty needles on both sides of it. There are now groups of seven stitches (I am counting the one with the three stitches on it as one) with one empty needle on each side and one single stitch in the center separating them. With the single prong transfer tool, move one purl bump from the last needle (from the row below) of each 7-stitch group to the empty needle on each side of the single stitch so that all needles now have a stitch on them. Knit 2 rows. Repeat from * two more times. Then continue in regular stockinet stitch. You could increase the width of the scallops by having 11 stitches between them instead of the 9 above and then transferring four stitches towards the center three stitches or you could make them narrower by having only 7 stitches between them and then only transferring two towards the center. I haven't tried that out yet but I'm sure that would work too. I did my swatch with keyplate 2 and a sportsweight yarn but worsted weight should work as well. Maybe a row of crochet around the edge would be nice too, even in a contrasting yarn. Right now my swatch is curling but I haven't blocked it yet. I hope you can understand my directions, it's so much easier to show than to tell! :) Bye for now, Heidi in Alabama ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 16 Sep 1998 11:32:37 -0500 From: "Ann Yotter" Subject: [BOND] afghan edging The braided edging is done just like the rest of the afghan, but the "panel" is only 6 sts wide. The 2nd needle in from one edge is left in NWP to form a ladder. You unravel the edge st and ladder to get the loops to weave together and you use groups of 2 loops. (That beginner afghan unravels 2 edge sts and uses 3 loops in a group. I tried that edging on one afghan and thought it was too loose and floppy. {I was using a pretty soft yarn like Dazzelaire - a firmer yarn like Red Heart might not do that.} Go with shorter loops. On the beginner afghan that will mean changing the 2 outside panels and leaving the 2nd st in from the edge in NWP - or just do the whole afgahn like that. The joining will be a little closer is all.) The extra 4 sts will roll into a mock I-cord at the edge. You want to remember to do the 2 edgings in mirror images (If you use a needle in NWP to form a ladder, one will use #2 and the other #5. Same when you bind off. Leave sts 1&2 free on one, sts 5&6 free on the other.) and apply the edging so the purl side is showing. When it rolls forward, the knit will show. That way the rolling on the edges works opposite each other and they kinda cancel out. It will still roll at first, but relaxes after it has been steamed and/or washed. Newbies - when you work the braiding, only undo the loops you are actually using. The beginner book reads like you unravel the whole edge, then go back and weave. NOT! Been there, done that, disaster! Put the crochet hook or latch tool under the strand between the edge st and the next st and pull gently. Sts on 2 rows will undo to form a loop on your tool. Take 2 or 3 loops from each panel and pull the second group thru the first group already on the tool. Then go back to the first panel for more loops. The worm edging I tried on the ends was nice. I got it off a web site last year and I think the old Mother Goose site used to have it also. I think it is also in Hand Manipulated Stitches and goes by several names, none of which I can think of off the top of my head. Anyway, starting at one corner, you hang 3 sts of your edge, knit 6 rows, hang the next 3 sts of your edge on the same needles (there are now 2 sts on each needle and a loop formed by those first 6 rows of work. Knit 6 rows again. You just attached the first loop end down and started another loop. Keep working along your edge. It makes a series of scallops. You can vary the number of sts used and the rows worked to get different looks. Have the right side of your main work facing you when your rehang to work the edging. This looks a little fancier than just a band of crochet, even one with a shell worked on the edge of the crochet, but isn't the hassle of loose fringe when using it. Jackie ( the girl I did it for) and I were very pleased with the look. Ann in Tenn gyotter@nash.tds.net ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 16 Sep 1998 12:45:03 -0500 From: "Ann Yotter" Subject: Re: [BOND] afgan...... You might also work a garter st border on the outside edges. Convert about 6 sts when the carriage is on that side. Each row will have conversions, but the side will alternate. I did one with 4 sts and it needed to be a little wider. I also did one where I converted sts, but did them every other row and only did every other st in 5 or 6 sts. Makes a moss or seed st type of pattern. that did pretty good. You still need to steam it, but the curl should relax with use and washing. You can also do a shaker rib along the edge, about 3 of them, to stop rolling. Ravel down, then latch back up, but only do every other ladder. I did this on a baby security blanket. I thought it pulled up the side a little shorter, tho. Maybe if you unraveled 2 adjacent sts but only latched up one large st it wouldn't pull up the edge. I've seen that done somewhere. If there seems to be too much yarn, latch up every 3rd ladder. You put the latch tool behind the ladders to reach up and pull the loops in front over the ladders so they are encased in the rib. Ann in Tenn gyotter@nash.tds.net ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 19 Nov 1998 11:03:53 -0700 From: "Adams" Subject: Re: [BOND] Andrea's Fan Skirt Edging A simple "shell" crocheted around the bottom of your skirt would create the look of upside-down fans. Not being familiar with the gauge of the yarn or the cast-on, I can't tell you how to space them, but just single crochet in the edge, *skip at least 1 stitch; double- or triple-crochet 5, 7, or 9 times in the next stitch; skip at least 1 stitch; single crochet in next stitch*. Repeat between *'s around the bottom or the skirt. If you want it lacier, chain between each single & double or triple crochet. Will this help? If you can do a single and double crochet, that's all you'd need! Patricia in the Black Hills of SD adamst@mato.com ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Apr 2000 13:24:55 -0700 From: "Dan and Judy Bartel" Subject: Re: [BOND] inspiration please! Something fun to try is lace edgings. Example: Cast on 4 needles. Carriage on right. Knit one row R to L bring one needle into work on the right side, transfer stitch #3 on right side to needle #4. *Knit 2 rows( 5 needles in work) bring one needle into work on right side, transfer second needle on the right to the third needle. * continue until 10 needles are in work. Knit 2 rows, decrease 1 stitch. After decreasing one stitch on the right , transfer new stitch #3 on right to needle #2, knit 2 rows until 4 stitches are left. Continue from the beginning increasing out to 10 and back down to 4 for the length of edging desired. The edging can be knit in sew as you go or be attached after the length is knit. You can vary the lace by adding eyelets to the wider areas or change the direction the stitches are transferred. vvvv vovv vvovv vvvvv vvvovv vvvvvv vvvvovv vvvvvvv vvvvvovv vvvvvvvv vvvovovv vvvvvvvvv vvvvovovv vvvvvvvvvv vvvvovovv vvvvvvvvv vvvovovv vvvvvvvv vvvvovv vvvvvvv vvvovv vvvvvv vvvv Enjoy! Judith Bartel
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Author : Steph Thornton.
Last modified on : 2nd may 2000.