Shelia Wilson Oh, yay! So glad to be of help, and I would love to know what you're knitting. Feel free to share a picture on my facebook page, there should be a link on my channel here. Happy Knitting!!!
Just knit it like a regular stitch, unless a pattern directs otherwise. A yarn over is just a stitch and can be knit, purled or even slipped, depending on the pattern.
So how many stitches do you end up with after doing with? I know it decreases by one since you knit the two together, but does the yo count as a stitch as well?
love the child asking what you knitting mommy. so sweet.
very clear!
My SSK's look so nice thanks to you. Thank you!!
Another excellent, video.
Thank you so much. It makes sense now. I can't seem to get it by looking in a book.
Hello, I am so grateful for this video, thank you because I just could not get the written steps in my head. This is wonderful.
Shelia Wilson Oh, yay! So glad to be of help, and I would love to know what you're knitting. Feel free to share a picture on my facebook page, there should be a link on my channel here. Happy Knitting!!!
thank you!
Thank you so much, for some reason its not the easiest to find this type of video lol😂
I love the yarn, what brand is it?
I'm afraid I don't remember.
I am knitting in the round. How do you knit the yo in the next row which is a knit row
Just knit it like a regular stitch, unless a pattern directs otherwise. A yarn over is just a stitch and can be knit, purled or even slipped, depending on the pattern.
So how many stitches do you end up with after doing with? I know it decreases by one since you knit the two together, but does the yo count as a stitch as well?
The yo adds the stitch taken away by the ssk decrease, so the stitch count should remain constant.
Traducir vídeo