2012 - Week One - Let's Do This2012 - Week One - Let's Do This I'm starting off 2012 with a positive surge of energy and eagerness because I know this is going to be a great year!  This year, although I don't set new year's goals or resolutions, I am looking forward...

Read more

Week Fifty - GiftsWeek Fifty - Gifts This week's post is all about gifts.  First I'll start with the gift of an amazing husband who cares for me way more than I could ever deserve.  This past week, my laptop that I use for doing my job...

Read more

Week Fourty Nine - Lessons LearnedWeek Fourty Nine - Lessons Learned One of the things I have learned about blogging over the past years, is that the very thing that you most want to write about generally keeps you from writing. That thing is called life. When I get busy,...

Read more

Week Thirty - Rabbits Reborn and Sharing the Game of SoccerWeek Thirty - Rabbits Reborn and Sharing the Game of... This week has been a long one.  Scott has been in Africa all week and does not get back until Wednesday.  Although I have missed him greatly, I have been able to accomplish much with the quiet house...

Read more

Week Twenty Nine - Missions and MittensWeek Twenty Nine - Missions and Mittens Scott left for Uganda yesterday on his first mission trip, ever.  He will be gone for 10 days and is part of an all male (testosterone rich) group of coaches and active guys.  He was excited, nervous,...

Read more

twitter

Guinevere Has Dyed

Category : Fiber Arts, Patterns

Technically, she has been dyed. Originally, I knit this stole in Dye Your Own Lace Weight Yarn from Knitpicks. I wore it in the natural color for a while and decided that the color was too beige for my skin tone. So, since my son is getting married in 10 days and the colors in the wedding are cream and chocolate, I decided to dye it a chocolate brown. The hardest part of this entire process was lowering it into the dye pot. Here are the results.

Before:

Guinevere as knitted.

After:

IMG_0093dyepot

IMG_0094guineveredyed

Become a Guest Author on KWU

Category : Patterns

Do you have a blog and write interesting content for knitters?  Many bloggers have found that writing a guest post on another blog can be great fun and will also bring new traffic to their own blog.  If you have an interest in writing for us just use our contact form at the top of the site.

We are looking for articles that are well written, professional in nature, and have a little spunk.  If you think you fit that description just let us know what you idea is and you may see it posted here.  KWU

Charting the No Stitch

Category : Fiber Arts

Why are “no stitches” charted? The answer to this, basically, is that if you are reading from a chart and you are also “reading” your knitting as you go, you want things to line up properly. Ok, so why doesn’t the chart reduce in size from the outside like my knitting does? The answer is that your knitting is not really decreasing from the outside edges. But, rather, it is reducing from where there is a decrease without a corresponding increase. Let me try to demonstrate. Below are two sample charts. The first is a chart drawn without the “no stitches” charted.

uncharted_no_stitch

The knitting chart above is drawn without the “no stitch” squares. If you were to knit this sample, (please feel free to do so) this is an accurate depiction of how your finished knitted sample would “look”. However, if you were to try to knit from this chart, when you got to row 7 you would knit 2, knit 2 together, and yarn over exactly in the same place you had been before. These four stitches and the yarn over on your knitted piece do not actually move one stitch toward the center. So why do the rows get smaller and smaller toward the point of the sample?

Beginning with row seven, do you see the decrease symbols toward the center? These decreases do not have increases that go along with them. Therefore, this is actually where your pattern is “coming together” or decreasing toward the center.

Now take a look at the chart below.

charted_no_stitch

This chart is drawn with the decreasing of stitches where they actually occur. In this chart, the beginning four stitches we discussed above all line up, as they should, on every row. They should also “line up” on your knitted piece. The decreases are happening within the knitted piece itself. To accommodate for the reduced number of stitches on each row as you move up the chart the stitches are charted as “no stitches”. Each row as you go up the chart has two less stitches in it, therefore the “no stitch” space gets larger toward the top of the chart.

So the conclusion to all of this is that a “no stitch” on a knitting chart means exactly what it sounds like. Where you see a No Stitch charted, skip over it and move on down the row, knitting only the stitches that are actually there.

Try it on the sample above. Cast on 25 stitches. Knit three rows of garter stitch and then begin the chart. On the even rows knit 5, purl 15, knit 5. Follow the charts and see if you can “read” what is happening in your knitted piece as you progress.

Legend

Enjoy.

Monday’s Poll Question

Category : Fiber Arts

What I do at the Auburn Basketball Games.I have been considering doing a Nautical Knitter podcast and I found myself wondering how many of you out there would be interested in hearing from my part of the earth. So, what to do? I created a poll in the sidebar for you all to let me know what you think. Please vote!! If you are interested in hearing a podcast from the Nautical Knitter helm, please leave me comments on what you would like to hear about. Do you want to know more about basic knitting techniques? Would you like to be updated on the latest patterns, yarns, etc.? Or, would you just like to hang out with us, knit, and see what happens? Additionally, I have been trying to decide which direction to take the blog as well. Do you want more technical content? or would you prefer more personal stuff about us and the boat? or perhaps a mixture of both? Comments are welcome!!!!!!

Technical Knitting Tuesday

Category : Fiber Arts

Sarah, of the Front Porch Swing, has come up with a an interesting “new” technique for knitting in the round and still being able to place additional colors within your knitted piece. Somewhat like intarsia, but not… It is an interesting technique and although I haven’t tried it yet, it looks like it has loads of possibilities. Check it out and let me know what you think.