Authors: Stephanie Pearl–McPhee
stash.
The yarn you've squirreled away for a rainy day. Possessing a stash is not only noble and decent, but a source of inspiration as well. Don't allow others to make you feel guilty about your stash, even if it has reached WHACO (see below) proportions. Practice looking unbelievers straight in the eye and asking them how much paint they thought Michelanglo had. By the way, there are several subgroups of stash. Canopy stash, for instance, represents that upper, transient layer that's usually first in and first out; well-aged stash is yarn that has probably taken up permanent residence.
SABLE (Stash Acquisition Beyond Life Expectancy).
Yarn you'll never have time to use. Quite common, and isn't nearly as bad as it sounds. After all, you want to have yarn to bequeath to your children, don't you?
steek.
A knitter's shortcut, and a terrifying one. Steeking is when a knitter cuts open her knitting to create armholes or fronts where only a tube existed before.
stitch gain.
The infuriating tendency of newbie knitting to grow in stitch count and width by surprising frequency. Can be countered by either frogging (see above) the work or (and I plead guilty to this one) knitting two together on a subsequent row. Not pretty, but it gives you the right number of stitches again. (It's also a one-way ticket to Ruffletown, but there are limits to how many times you're going to rip back something.)
stockinette stitch.
A tremendously popular stitch with all the flat knit stitches on one side and all of the bumpy purls on the other. If you're knitting back and forth, this is accomplished by knitting all the right-side rows and purling all the wrong-side rows. In circular knitting, you do this by knitting every single stitch, every single time. You know you're doing it right when you have either entered a state of Zen-like bliss, brought on by the meditative quality of the predictable pattern, or your brain begins to leak out of your left ear out of unrelenting boredom. Prolonged exposure to stockinette stitch can also cause an almost irresistible urge to whack a big honking cable right down the middle of a sleeve.
swift.
A wooden or metal yarn holder. Usually it clamps to a table and opens much like an umbrella to accommodate different sizes of skeins of yarn. A knitter places the skein on the swift, pulls an end free, and begins to pull, winding off the yarn into a ball as the swift turns. A swift replaces a family member bitter about the job of holding yarn for you.
tink.
Knit
spelled backwards, and the act of painstakingly undoing your work one stitch at a time. Used when the mistake is small and recent or when you're too afraid (for whatever reason) to pull the work off the needles.
UFO (unfinished object).
A project that's incomplete, and proud of it. A UFO is seldom found alone, but instead roams the knitter's home in packs. The discovery of one UFO should be regarded as a warning sign that there are
many, many more. There are reports of mythic “one-thing-at-a time” knitters but these are only anecdotal. A thorough search usually reveals several objects the knitter abandoned and consequently banished from memory.
WHACO.
An acronym for
Wool Housing and Containment Overload.
This will happen to almost all knitters eventually. It's the state reached when a knitter's stash outgrows her particular ability and her resources to contain it. This is usually a chronic condition, but periods of remission may occur when a knitter runs out of money (and is thus forced to knit some stash yarn) or moves to a bigger house.
wool.
A “gateway” yarn that has the potential to lead to alpaca, quiviut, and other natural fibers. Prolonged exposure to the loveliness of wool can also drag you straight down the path to felting, and, in the vulnerable, spinning.
yarn.
In a knitting context, anything you can knit. Highly addictive and to be approached with extreme caution and an awareness of one's budget. An important note: Yarn is not to be confused with wool. For, while wool is always a yarn, a yarn is not always wool.
yarn diet.
An approach to yarn control known to be ineffective in dropping permanent pounds from the stash. It can lead to dangerous wool bingeing and yo-yo dieting, wherein the knitter holds off on purchases, shrinks the stash, then rebounds to old yarn habits, gains back the merino, and adds nine balls of the silk. Not pretty to watch.
acrylics
blocking/steaming, cautions,
200
addiction, symptoms of,
14
â15
animal fibers, identifying,
42
artificial fibers, identifying,
40
â41
ash residue (burn test),
41
back-of-chair method for estimating ball length,
46
balls, estimating amount of yarn in,
44
â46
beginning knitters
stitches for,
213
stitch gain,
214
bigger stitches, how to make,
90
bleach test,
42
blocking
acrylics, cautions,
200
defined,
212
for sweaters,
195
â200
books, collecting and storing,
75
â77
borders for scarves,
160
burn test,
39
â41
button bands and cardigans,
200
â204
buttonholes,
203
cardigan sweaters,
200
â204
casein needles,
63
casting on
knitted-on cast-on,
214
long-tail cast-on,
214
â15
for scarves, formula for,
161
,
164
Christmas decorations,
89
circular needles
features and uses for,
58
â59
using, tips for,
131
Circular Shawl: Method 1,
175
â76
Circular Shawl: Method 2,
176
â78
Circular Shawl: Method 3,
178
â80
color, variety of,
10
containers for yarn stash,
33
â34
cotton
bleach test,
42
burn test,
40
â41
felt-ability,
42
craft of knitting,
97
â99
creative possibilities
and the appeal of knitting,
9
,
14
,
51
hats,
120
â24
scarves,
156
â58
crochet hook,
68
darning needle,
68
Decreasing Triangular Shawl,
180
â81
detail, attention to
importance of in knitting,
8
,
54
project notebooks and,
71
during swatch-creation,
88
diets, yarn,
34
â36
double-pointed needles (DPN),
59
â60,
212
doubling rows,
175
â76
ease of garments,
212
emotional appeal of knitting,
8
entertainment value of knitting,
32
â33
entrelac technique,
212
equipment
appropriate, importance of,
77
knitting bags and contents,
64
â65
needles,
54
â63
etiquette for knitting in public,
22
,
23
exercise, knitting during,
23
Fair Isle technique,
112
,
146
,
199
,
213
fancy stitches, with hats,
122
â23
feet, human and sock length estimates,
130
,
140
felt-ability test,
42
â43
felting (fulling),
213
fiber types
identifying, tests for,
39
â41
and quality yarns,
50
summary,
46
â49
flattening stitches, tips,
112
focused knitters,
15
garter stitch,
213
gauge.
See also
swatches
defined,
213
â14
importance,
79
for knitting socks,
132
measuring, tips,
88
pros and cons,
80
â81
swatchless, cautionary tale,
92
â97
when to pay attention to,
81
â82,
84
â85
and wraps per inch,
44
A Good, Plain Sock,
131
â33
grafting (Kitchener stitch),
141
,
142
,
166
,
214
hands
length of, and scarf measurements,
107
â8
watching while knitting,
98
â99
hand-spun yarns, limits,
97
hats
head sizes,
109
â11
making more exciting,
120
â24
The No-Pattern Hat,
115
â20
other uses for,
125
reasons to knit,
104
â5
ribbed edges,
120
Scarf Rescue Hat,
107
â9
versus scarves, as beginner project,
106
tops, finishing options,
111
â13
troubleshooting problems with,
124
â25
who wears them,
113
â14
head sizes,
104
,
109
â11,
117
,
118
heels
heel flaps,
134
â35
picking up flap stitches,
137
â38
turning,
135
â37
Increasing Triangular Shawl,
181
â82
instep gussets,
138
â39
interested knitters,
14
Kitchener stitch.
See
grafting
knitted-on cast-on,
214
knitters
how to identify,
24
â25
The Knitter's Almanac
(Zimmerman),
173
knitting.
See also
yarn
basic process,
7
creative possibilities,
9
,
14
,
51
emotional appeal,
8
passion for, explaining,
7
sensory appeal,
10
â11
therapeutic benefits,
149
knitting bag
reasons for carrying,
64
â66
suggested contents,
67
â69
knitting lace,
33
knitting library,
74
â75
knitting needles
blocking sweaters on,
200
casein,
63
circular,
58
â59
double-pointed,
59
â60
extra, including in knitting bag,
68
metal,
61
â62
miscellaneous types,
63
plastic,
62
â63
sizes,
54
â57
and stitch size,
90
straight,
57
â58
lace-edged scarf,
164
â66
lace patterns for socks,
146
ladders in socks,
148
length estimates
amount of yarn in yarn balls,
45
â46
button bands,
202
linen, identifying,
40
â41
long-tail cast-on,
214
â15
magazines, managing and storing,
74
â75
mantilla,
172
materials, variety of,
7
,
10
.
See also
stash; yarn
McMorran balance,
45
measuring tape,
67
metal needles,
61
â62
metric sizing system,
55
â56
missionary knitters,
18
â19
mixed-needle projects, swatches for,
87
movies, knitting during,
22
mystery yarn, identifying
bleach test,
42
burn test,
39
â41
felt-ability test,
42
â43
it seems like ⦠test,
43
weight calculations,
43
â44
in yarn stash, inevitability of,
37
â39