Clasped Weft Join

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  • Опубликовано: 1 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 122

  • @peggylynne
    @peggylynne Год назад +23

    I can’t believe I hadn’t heard of this simple yet brilliant trick until now. I’d been weaving the strands back into themselves with a tapestry needle, which I now see was an unnecessary extra, fiddly step. You’ve just made a huge improvement in my life - thank you! Now I’m going to go explore your backlog and see what other clever things you’ve got to teach me.

  • @karyncroll3235
    @karyncroll3235 Год назад +7

    So good to hear your voice again Jen! I've missed your calm and complete tips!

  • @yuetng4648
    @yuetng4648 Год назад +8

    What a great tip for joining a new strand of yarn and most importantly not having to weave in ends. Thank you thank you!!

  • @katespin99
    @katespin99 Год назад +2

    I loved hearing about the technique but would have liked to see you doing a demo of the color change as well.

  • @ritahanigan7896
    @ritahanigan7896 Год назад +6

    I've been knitting for over 7 decades and this is the first time I ever saw this tip anywhere! Absolutely brilliant! Thank you ever so much. Also, I love the brioche pattern you're working on. Beyond me still. Going to check your channel to see what else I've missed all this time.

  • @eileenshepard2424
    @eileenshepard2424 Год назад +1

    As always, so clear and so easy to follow your instructions. Thank you so very much!

  • @judithwhaley9498
    @judithwhaley9498 Год назад

    Lovely to hear you again.

  • @polenker7293
    @polenker7293 Год назад

    So it called like that. I saw this kind of joining in a video for crochet 4 years ago. And I adapted it to my knitting works since then. Now I know how to call it.

  • @wandahorn5808
    @wandahorn5808 Год назад +1

    Hearing your voice again was like welcoming an old friend into my home! Thank you for this tip - what a great idea. I am going to use it today!

  • @cathygow2934
    @cathygow2934 Год назад +8

    Thank you , Jen! So happy to see you back giving us such wonderful tips and advice.

  • @inbal_gross_knitting
    @inbal_gross_knitting Год назад

    It is like the russian joint, only without the sewing part! Cool!

  • @SuperQuoll
    @SuperQuoll Год назад

    Wow! Sort of like a cross between a Russian join and a knit several stitches with both yarns together! I love it!!!!

  • @gillg2165
    @gillg2165 Год назад +1

    Welcome back - you are my go to expert!

  • @blairconger240
    @blairconger240 Год назад

    Brilliant! What a joy to hear your soothing voice.

  • @Lynne-G
    @Lynne-G Год назад +3

    On reading the comments I'm not the only one happy to hear your voice again and also sharing clear and precise techniques..have thought of you often and looking forward to seeing more of your awesome technique videos ❤️

  • @nz-nz
    @nz-nz Год назад

    Well honky donkey.
    I LOVE IT!!!!!!!
    And I guess you could even “plan where you could make the change if you wanted too.
    How wonderful, thanks for sharing.

  • @cheryljenkins9823
    @cheryljenkins9823 Год назад

    I have missed your voice. This is such a great tip and I am doing Stephen West MKAL in Undercover otter and it is slippery this will be so great.

  • @patjohnson5586
    @patjohnson5586 Год назад +3

    Fantastic join going to be my go to from now on. Thanks for sharing.

  • @micheleheddane3804
    @micheleheddane3804 Год назад +1

    I’ve been knitting for years never heard of this can’t wait to try it ,thank you

  • @mrsminiverblue
    @mrsminiverblue Год назад +2

    What a great way to join yarns. Thanks for sharing. 💕

  • @esmekaffen4961
    @esmekaffen4961 Год назад +1

    This is absolutely brilliant! I’ve been knitting for about 20 years and have never come across this before, but I tried it today and it works beautifully. I agree with the commentator who said it probably wouldn’t work with, or I wouldn’t use it on, anything above a dk, but it is totally invisible with the sport weight I’m using. Thank you thank you thank you! ❤️☮️.
    Edit: I’ve now used it with a heavy Aran/bulky superwash and it works a charm. Can’t tell AT ALL without finding the little ends sticking out. So big thank you again to ACTechniques❤️☮️

  • @angelawinters7810
    @angelawinters7810 Год назад +1

    Brilliant to have you back with such wonderful tips….as calm and clear as ever 😊

  • @IslandLady76
    @IslandLady76 Год назад

    This is brilliant, and another reason why I love your channel(as was mentioned by another comment, your soothing voice and accent is a treat to listen to) Thank you for this and the discount.

  • @KathleenTruitt
    @KathleenTruitt Год назад

    I’m so excited to “see” you here Jen! Great tip, thank you.

  • @janisi9262
    @janisi9262 Год назад

    Huh. I "invented" this on my own recently; it's nice to know it has a name!
    You can do nearly the same thing and form a lark's head knot, or luggage hitch, but this is probably unnecessary for all but the very slipperiest yarns.

  • @brookedowns3531
    @brookedowns3531 Год назад

    As a new knitter this is brilliant.

  • @andrewstiller1662
    @andrewstiller1662 Год назад

    What an amazing technique. The technical term is a bit of a tongue twister, but the results are beautiful.

  • @charliecrossing
    @charliecrossing Год назад +1

    What an incredible technique, I can't believe I've never seen this before! Thanks for the wonderful tutorial!

  • @patthraen2027
    @patthraen2027 Год назад

    So pleased to see and hear you again! Great technique for joining, too, but then again, you always have great techniques. You are such a great teacher! Sending love and best wishes!

  • @clairenason4869
    @clairenason4869 Год назад

    Thank you very much for that information

  • @p4tdotb
    @p4tdotb Год назад

    That's so clever! Great to hear from you again Jen.

  • @nalodailec
    @nalodailec Год назад

    That is just brilliant - thank you ❤

  • @wandaowen7755
    @wandaowen7755 Год назад +1

    Welcome back!

  • @janiceknight2343
    @janiceknight2343 Год назад

    Great to hear from you again! Love the tip!

  • @elizabethrutledge8182
    @elizabethrutledge8182 Год назад +1

    Thanks so very much Jen! What a great idea and so well explained- lovely to hear from you again 🧶🧶

  • @Melmaz32
    @Melmaz32 3 месяца назад

    Thank you! That is a great tip!

  • @carolm7606
    @carolm7606 Год назад

    Thank you - a very good tip and as before, an excellent video. So good to hear from you again.

  • @cathybrown6267
    @cathybrown6267 Год назад

    This is great!! So simple!! Why did I not know this before?

  • @mixedandknot5911
    @mixedandknot5911 Год назад

    Easiest join ever! Why could I not figure this out? LOL.
    Great instructions, great video explanations and it is just perfect. Thank you very much and Merry Christmas.

  • @antoniomartinazzo5847
    @antoniomartinazzo5847 9 месяцев назад

    This is class. Thank you.

  • @barbaragaspard1989
    @barbaragaspard1989 Год назад

    Thank you very much for this tutorial, when I came across this and thought I will save this video in the intent I may want to try this type of join whenever knitting a multiple skeins garment. I found myself having to lenghten a sock that I miss counted and short myself a few rows so I applied this technique and I just love this, you are brilliant. I have subscribed to your channel not wanting to miss any other of your ideas, just made this correction for me more pleasant and efficient.

  • @roelyvdham
    @roelyvdham Год назад +2

    Bedankt

    • @ACTechniques
      @ACTechniques  Год назад

      Thank you Roely!

    • @roelyvdham
      @roelyvdham Год назад

      A wonderful idea; I certainly will do it. Thanks!

  • @christinecope4120
    @christinecope4120 Год назад

    Lovely to see you back Jen. Excellent tip, as always.

  • @shawnferguson2205
    @shawnferguson2205 Год назад

    Brilliant! Thank you.

  • @ivysantiago1572
    @ivysantiago1572 Год назад

    This is brilliant! I can’t wait to try it. Thank you! 😊

  • @lauradibble6074
    @lauradibble6074 Год назад

    Thanks for a clear and helpful tutorial.

  • @patwaterman5109
    @patwaterman5109 Год назад +1

    Thanks

    • @ACTechniques
      @ACTechniques  Год назад

      Thank you Pat! You are the first person to use the thanks tip jar. 🥰

  • @yolandagutierrez1041
    @yolandagutierrez1041 Год назад

    Love this trick. Had never heard of it.

  • @debweiss470
    @debweiss470 Год назад

    Happy to hear from you!! Great tip too.

  • @marsy1480
    @marsy1480 Год назад +1

    Woohoo you’re back...even if it's only temporarily! ❤️

  • @margaretsamplerlover
    @margaretsamplerlover Год назад +1

    Brilliant!!! I love how this works! Thank you!

  • @gailaltschwager7377
    @gailaltschwager7377 Год назад

    Thank you!

  • @joycewright2596
    @joycewright2596 Год назад

    I am thrilled to hear your voice and to learning this method. So glad to see you're back for these tutorials and your advice! Happy New Year to you and your family!

  • @andreaabsolom2819
    @andreaabsolom2819 Год назад

    Fantastic, thank you

  • @bluesheepyarn
    @bluesheepyarn Год назад

    Welcome back Jen! A simple but super useful tip, many thanks 🌻

  • @BarbMaddox-zx7nb
    @BarbMaddox-zx7nb Месяц назад

    I love this!!! 3:18

  • @joybrewer4382
    @joybrewer4382 Год назад

    This is brilliant!!

  • @angehuntsman679
    @angehuntsman679 Год назад

    Very many thanks. I will try this and looks like will be my goto method. Simply ace. Best wishes to you

  • @sylviemimichevol3567
    @sylviemimichevol3567 Год назад +1

    This is brilliant! Thanks so much ❤

  • @isobelgreer7693
    @isobelgreer7693 Год назад

    Great tip.

  • @janeshipley6993
    @janeshipley6993 Год назад

    thank you so much!

  • @sienavan
    @sienavan Год назад

    That is brilliant!

  • @dileli1
    @dileli1 Год назад

    What a great tip! So easy and like how seamless it is.❤

  • @lauradibble6074
    @lauradibble6074 Год назад

    Thanks!

  • @margaretmetcalfe9380
    @margaretmetcalfe9380 Год назад

    Wow, that's fabulous thanks for the tip

  • @RuthTerry-hw1uu
    @RuthTerry-hw1uu Год назад

    Brilliant! I will be using this technique in the future and clasped weft join shouldn't be hard for a weaver to recall. LOL Welcome back it is so good to "see" you again.

  • @joansheehan3366
    @joansheehan3366 Год назад

    Wonderful!!!

  • @joycestewart4893
    @joycestewart4893 Год назад

    Brilliant in it's simplicity!!

  • @nancyhughes386
    @nancyhughes386 Год назад

    Brilliant!

  • @JJPKnits
    @JJPKnits Год назад

    It seems easy to do when changing to a new ball of yarn in the same color. I can't quite wrap my mind around how to change colors at a specific point, though. Would you consider making a tutorial to demonstrate that?

    • @ACTechniques
      @ACTechniques  Год назад +1

      It’s on my to do list. ☺️

    • @juliapriest9427
      @juliapriest9427 Год назад +1

      @@ACTechniques I understood Jen to imply that after you have knit to find out exactly where your fold point needs to be, fold and mark it, unpick 3-4 st, clasp the two yarns at the fold point you just identified, and then re-knit with this technique.

  • @hazeldonner1855
    @hazeldonner1855 Год назад

    I hope you are well recovered now and fresh again Jen. It’s lovely to have you back with this great tip. I am wondering though if it will make a thick bulky line in a st st sweater. It looks ok in rib or Brioche but in plain knitting I think it would show. I’m willing to try it out especially in colour work. ❤️

    • @ACTechniques
      @ACTechniques  Год назад

      I’ve used it on the st st jumper that I’ve just completed and it’s not visible. It’s the bit of knitting I used in the video demonstration. I probably wouldn’t use it with a super bulky yarn, but it was totally fine in DK.

    • @nellstults5432
      @nellstults5432 Год назад

      @@ACTechniques What about fingering or sock yarn? I've just discovered your page!

    • @ACTechniques
      @ACTechniques  Год назад

      @@nellstults5432 Totally fine. 👍🏻

  • @karena5975
    @karena5975 Год назад

    Brilliant tip thank you

  • @micky.b3213
    @micky.b3213 Год назад

    This is a wonderful tip. Thank you so much!

  • @Purple_Box
    @Purple_Box 11 месяцев назад

    I wish you’d show the color change with this method in action!

    • @ACTechniques
      @ACTechniques  11 месяцев назад

      I have! ☺️ Here is the video: ruclips.net/video/U9TiYgsHywc/видео.htmlsi=0vwPC_DQ7qmPrBbT

  • @dlord802
    @dlord802 Год назад

    Amazing!

  • @KathleenTruitt
    @KathleenTruitt Год назад

    Hi Jen! I have a tutorial request. Can you demonstrate how to manage color work using 3 (or more) colors in a row? I would love to knit a bohus design, but doing three colors in a row is very scary. I thiiiink I would hold two in my right hand and one in my left, but some Jen Magic would be the ultimate de-mystifier. Thank you!

  • @veravanslyke7851
    @veravanslyke7851 Год назад

    Ingenious!!!! Thank you.

  • @sophiep.7781
    @sophiep.7781 Год назад

    This is great! Thank you!

  • @cleta2045
    @cleta2045 Год назад

    Thank you for this. Is there another video where you show changing colors?

  • @alisonramshaw3186
    @alisonramshaw3186 Год назад

    Ingenious! However I still am not clear about joining a different colour at a precise spot. I wish you had demonstrated that .

    • @ACTechniques
      @ACTechniques  Год назад +1

      A separate video is coming. 👍🏻

  • @cindyb.1604
    @cindyb.1604 Год назад

    I’d love to see a video with this technique using two colors. Not sure how you do it to get color change in right position/location.

  • @janetd4862
    @janetd4862 Год назад

    I knit socks on an antique sock knitting machine, and this is how I switch colors all the time. We call it a faux Russian join.

  • @hazelbrowne7982
    @hazelbrowne7982 Год назад

    Genius! Thank you!

  • @marybethdimarco3215
    @marybethdimarco3215 Год назад

    brilliant!

  • @feeberizer
    @feeberizer Год назад

    I've been doing this type of join for decades, especially since I use mostly synthetic yarns. Not sure where I learned it. 🤔

  • @judithdomangue9995
    @judithdomangue9995 Год назад

    Clever!

  • @angixm
    @angixm Год назад

    May I ask advice on a specific type of yarn? (Rowan Alpaca Soft DK) Would I use this join, clasped weft, or the other join, splicing? I love these videos!! Brilliant!! Thank you for them!!!!! 🙏🏻🥰

    • @ACTechniques
      @ACTechniques  Год назад +1

      If the wool content is superwash, then use the clasped weft. If not then I would splice. Hope that helps.

    • @angixm
      @angixm Год назад

      Thank you ❤

  • @OB17358
    @OB17358 Год назад

    What is the green yarn with small rows of flecked colors? It is beautiful. The join you just taught is the one I use from now on.

    • @ACTechniques
      @ACTechniques  Год назад

      The speckled yarns are Hedgehog Fibres. The teal yarns are Skein Queen and the orange to pink yarns are Sweet Georgia. The main grey is Fyberspates vivacious 4ply. I hope that helps.

    • @OB17358
      @OB17358 Год назад

      @@ACTechniques so you are changing colors to get this marled look as in a prior video? I thought it was one very cleverly dyed yarn…thank you. Am going to try this.

    • @ACTechniques
      @ACTechniques  Год назад +1

      @@OB17358 No, it isn’t marling. It’s just stripes of brioche knitting. There is a link to the pattern in the notes for the video.

    • @OB17358
      @OB17358 Год назад

      @@ACTechniques the green yarn you demonstrated the clasp weft join on is the yarn I was wondering about. It is beautiful and cleverly dyed.

    • @ACTechniques
      @ACTechniques  Год назад

      @@OB17358 sorry I misunderstood. That is wool kitchen DK.

  • @caroles1986
    @caroles1986 9 месяцев назад

    I'm making dishcloths with heavy cotton. Do you have a suggestion for a join for that. I think its much to heavy and would leave a very obviouse lump

    • @ACTechniques
      @ACTechniques  9 месяцев назад +1

      I’m afraid I have no expertise with cotton as I always knit with wool. I would think you’d need to split the plies and weave the ends in, in multiple directions to avoid a thick lump.

  • @LottaSocks
    @LottaSocks Год назад

    I’m about to embark on a shawl using stash/scraps, so this is timely! Socks: I think this would work wonderfully for stripey, stash/scrap socks, saving all the weaving. I might leave a longer end & weave ends in anyway…which totally defeats the purpose, I’m sure. Or … make the tails longer??? Or … leave a longer tail, & then on the next row, work over that extra bit of tail ?? Am I worrying too much? lol
    Thanks for all the tips & tricks, I try to keep a journal with allll the tools (ie tips etc) needed for all/any projects!

    • @ACTechniques
      @ACTechniques  Год назад +3

      If you want more security then totally leave a longer tail and weave it back in in the opposite direction. The join will still have saved you time!

    • @LottaSocks
      @LottaSocks Год назад

      @@ACTechniques Yes!! Now why didn’t I think of that ?! I WILL do that! Thanks a whole bunch !❤️

  • @smallshebear
    @smallshebear Год назад

    🤩

  • @lynnann96
    @lynnann96 Год назад

    How did I get to the age of 72 without knowing this!

  • @cleta2045
    @cleta2045 Год назад

    Added correction: where you demonstrate changing colors.

  • @diannbruce9542
    @diannbruce9542 Год назад

    What pattern is this and where can I buy it ?

    • @ACTechniques
      @ACTechniques  Год назад

      The pattern information is in the notes for the video. 👍🏻

  • @virginiabrooks3861
    @virginiabrooks3861 Год назад

    Thank you for the great tutorial! Just found you on RUclips and what a great find. 😊🧶

  • @therealjetlag
    @therealjetlag Год назад

    Genius

  • @vickistockley1711
    @vickistockley1711 Год назад

    Brilliant!

  • @sharongeorge5557
    @sharongeorge5557 Год назад

    Brilliant, thank you!

  • @iamjenortiz
    @iamjenortiz Год назад

    Brilliant!