Thanks to you I know now how to knit pattern on straight needles - I didnt know that during purl you must read pattern from right side to left, I must try it
@@BettaKnitTV Grazie mille! So you can only really tell if a knitted pattern is done in intarsia or jacquard if you can see the reverse side of the knit.
@@paular6547 in genere si utilizza jacquard per disegni più piccoli e, con i fili passati dietro, il lavoro viene spesso e pesante. Invece nell'intarsio i fili non vengono trascinati dietro, quindi ogni zona di colore viene lavorata separatamente e il lavoro viene più sottile...
1) Why are you carrying the red yarn behind the yellow? 2) why are you not twisting the yarns together? 3) why are you calling this jaquard, it is intarsia? Jaquard is a weaving technique.
Intarsia and Jacquard are both colorwork techniques. In Intarsia, blocks of colors are worked with separate balls of yarns (or bobbins). The yarns are not carried across the back of the work between color changes and must be twisted around each other at each change to prevent holes in the work. Jacquard is a stranded knitting technique, where the unused color is carried along the back of the work, forming floats. Sometimes, to reduce the length of the floats on the wrong side of your works, you can weave them in every 4 or 5 stitches. We call them jacquard knitting because it reproduce the same result of the weaving technique :-)
Thanks to you I know now how to knit pattern on straight needles - I didnt know that during purl you must read pattern from right side to left, I must try it
I love this. Thank u
this was so helpful! thanks!!
Thank you Bethany!
What is the difference with Intarsia method?
I'd be eager to know as well :)
La differenza sta nel fatto che nell'Intarsio il filo non si trasporta sul retro, ma si hanno singoli gomitoli per ogni zona di colore...
Nell'Intarsio, il filo non si trasporta sul retro, ma si hanno singoli gomitoli per ogni zona di colore...
@@BettaKnitTV Grazie mille! So you can only really tell if a knitted pattern is done in intarsia or jacquard if you can see the reverse side of the knit.
@@paular6547 in genere si utilizza jacquard per disegni più piccoli e, con i fili passati dietro, il lavoro viene spesso e pesante. Invece nell'intarsio i fili non vengono trascinati dietro, quindi ogni zona di colore viene lavorata separatamente e il lavoro viene più sottile...
1) Why are you carrying the red yarn behind the yellow? 2) why are you not twisting the yarns together? 3) why are you calling this jaquard, it is intarsia? Jaquard is a weaving technique.
Intarsia and Jacquard are both colorwork techniques. In Intarsia, blocks of colors are worked with separate balls of yarns (or bobbins). The yarns are not carried across the back of the work between color changes and must be twisted around each other at each change to prevent holes in the work.
Jacquard is a stranded knitting technique, where the unused color is carried along the back of the work, forming floats. Sometimes, to reduce the length of the floats on the wrong side of your works, you can weave them in every 4 or 5 stitches.
We call them jacquard knitting because it reproduce the same result of the weaving technique :-)