I apparently didn't make it clear in the video WHY I thought "The Finchley Graft" would be a good name for this technique. The book where I found it was "Plain Needle-work and all its branches," Vol #4 of the Finchley Manuals of Industry, published in 1852. There's a link in the video description to the digitized book, if you're interested.
I would pin this to the top of the comments, if that’s possible...or you might get this question a bunch of times since not everyone scrolls through the comments. Just a thought. Thanks again for rediscovering and sharing this lost-to-us technique!
Don't worry..... you did mention WHY you thought 'The Finchley Graft' ... its at 5:42 in the video and onwards. Thank you so much for this method, really so much easier than Kitchener.
I have been trying to finish a cowl with 4 attempts. I like the yarn but the pattern and yarn were in differently dyed yarns. So the graft takes place over live stitches in a solid purple and live stitched with two ply, one white and one bright blue...They also are yarns not heavily spun. It just does not look great. So I found a couple of videos on the FINCHLEY GRAFT, but this morning found YOUR VIDEO. THANK YOU
Thank you, thank you and thank you! Trying to graft a bag strap for the first time, I attempted kitchener stitch on a swatch and kept thinking, “THIS is ridiculously complicated; it should be easier.” And now I know there IS an easier way with the Finchley Graft. You are a born instructor. No wasted words and excellent visual on how to do this graft.
Roxanne you are such a GIFT to our community. I love that you had the forethought to include the possible pitfalls and what to do if you're interrupted during this technique. Brilliant!
Used to knit socks as a child of 12 years and was taught this method. Am now 79 and have watched this video as I need to join the centre of a scarf and thought I'd have to use the dreaded Kitchener stitch. Had completely forgotten this way of joining, thank you so much!
You are very welcome! I love hearing from long-time knitters who have known this method in the past and are reminded of it after watching this video. :-)
I was in tears trying to learn the Kitchener stitch. After 7 hours, I looked for some other way to graft and found your video. I had cut the sleeves in half of a beautiful sweater I had just made, foolishly thinking I could add several rows to lengthen the sleeves and just easily put back together. After learning the Finchley stitch on the first sleeve, it only took 45 minutes to do the second. Thank you!!
I love this method. So much better than kitchner stitch. I took a dozen rows out of a sweater that I knit too long. 186 stitches. I find the kitchner too brain taxing for a toe, let alone 30 inches of a sweater. This is so easy. Thank you Roxanne. 🥰
Well, this is SO much simpler than the Kitchener stitch - I don't know why more people don't know about it - I love this method. Thank you for bringing it to everyone's attention.
Thank you so much for this tutorial!!! It's so easy to follow, but more importantly, easy to remember. You have a gift of explaining things very clearly and you don't need an hour to do so.
I have done the Kitchener stitch several times, but I don't like doing it. I watched your video and was amazed. It looks so simple now. I must drop everything and go make socks now!
Bingo! I replied to your last Casual Friday, mentioning some older relatives....this, as you guessed, is the way they grafted. Only difference, they took the work off their needles, and if more than a few stitches, put it on waste yarn and just pulled the waste yarn out when the graft was complete. I'm guessing the use of the darning egg was because, as the manual referenced, this method also used for repairing, and they darned a LOT of socks. I personally prefer taking it off the needles and I just work the graft with the open seam held vertically so my grafting stitches are horizontally done. They grafted everything this way, shoulders, etc. NO DOG EARS this way. FYI they also sometimes did a few short rows on the last toe rows to produce a more rounded toe. Aunt Sade's husband had a particularly long big toe, and she added the short rows for the big toe side, thus making a right and a left sock. I'm on a mission now. I'll bet this manual contains some tricks I've forgotten about ...back in the day, it was all about making life easier. In particular, they did their decreases for the toe differently, you could not see the decreases and I'd like to find that. If you were kntting socks for 8 little and 2 big feet, that was a lot of knitting. Your epiphany has been my supreme pleasure to observe!!!
This is amazing! I feel like when we (or society) jumped on loads of new inventions for machine-manufacturing things, we sortof "threw out the baby with the bathwater" and just forgot a lot of older techniques. You can see this with spinning and with weaving and sewing and all sorts. I'm so glad some people still remember! And that we have an archive of old books to look through.
Oh my you have done it again!!! Saved my butt! I am about to need to graft 252 thread stitches after what feels like an eternity knitting a dainty shawl! Thank you so much! Love from MN
I am so happy to see this method of grafting! A little late for the 100+ stitches of a shawl I did the kitchener with, but, oh so happy to have this for future projects! ❤
So easy! Thank you for sharing the history of sock toes, too. Very interesting! I can't imagine how uncomfortable a sock toe that was just cinched at the end like a hat would be!
The consensus seems to be that this technique is for sock toes but I used it to graft flat material in the middle of a sleeve that I knitted too long. It was a raglan sleeve with increased bottom half and decreased top half. I just didn't want to rip back that much knitting so I tried this technique and it worked perfectly. So much faster and easier to understand than the kitchner stitch. The sleeve even had a center patterned panel of purl stitches and that even worked by flipping the pieces over and keeping the purl side to the front. Roxanne, thanks so much for finding and demonstrating this technique.
Thank you so much for your straightforward instructions and historical note on the Finchley graft. I have spent literally months looking for a grafting technique I could use and not forget when interrupted, or have to start over after barely an inch of progress because I can’t figure out where I left off. All this as a result of a mistake on my part: assuming that it would be easy to put back together a top down sweater in which the top part was réunit. I naively expected to be able to reattach its bottom the same way they were initially knit. That’s an amateur knitter for you. Anyway, I think I can see clearly now and this time I’m pretty sure I can do it! Thanks for your easily understandable approach. Wish me luck!
Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge about the Finchley Grafting Technique. Both of my Grandmother's were beautiful knitters and used this method of finishing. My Mother was always going to show me this method but as time went on and Grandchildren arrived the need for knitting socks was not important, it was little boys sweaters, caps and jackets where the thing. I asked her one day if she had time could she show me how to graft the toe of a sock like she used to and she couldn't remember. I too had forgotten the name until I saw it mentioned in your tutorial. Thank you for sharing, it really means so much. ame
Thank you, thank you, thank you! Finally…the dog ears are gone! After so many years of sock knitting! I use so many of the techniques you demonstrate…can’t thank you enough!
Thanks so much for finding and demonstrating the Finchley Graft. I’m finishing my socks for the August Sock KAL and used this technique to close the toe of my socks. I like it a lot and am looking forward to sharing this with friends.
Thank you for this… I have been practising Portuguese knitting which typically has the purl side towards you as the purl is the easiest stitch to create. I just got to the end of my toes and then realized I couldn’t do a Kitchener stitch to close them as the right sides were facing each other. The Finchley graft was the solution!
So interesting and easy. Now if the stitch can be made with the sock inside out, there must be a way to work it so that the sock is right side out. Love how you find all of these interesting details about knitting and share them with us.
The Kitchener Stitch process is the method on the RS of the work. The path the yarn has to take through the stitches in order to replicate a row of knitting just differs, based on the orientation of the sts.
@@RoxanneRichardson Well that makes sense and good to know too! I appreciate learning to understand how read stitches and how they interact with one another. Thank you!
Wow! In a way I'm glad that this "Finchley" grafting didn't come to light earlier. If it had, I probably wouldn't have persevered in learning the Kitchener graft. Thank you. You're a marvel (that's a good thing).🙂
This craft is absolutely brilliant. It's so sad that it has been "lost" for so many years. Every time you say that there are so many different ways to accomplish the same thing in knitting, I think about Microsoft Word and Excel spreadsheets.
Having cut a jumper to lengthen it I was all set to Kitchener stitch the 'hem' back but I could not get the hang of it. I used this and did the job in no time. I could not see the point at which I switched from one stitch type to the other and the only give away is where I had a couple of stitches twisted, which is my fault and a small thing. I shall use the Finchley graft from now on. Thank you. I also have to say that I love how you gave credit to the book from which you got this, rather than claiming it as your own, as others who have got it from you are doing.
Thank you very kindly, Roxanne Richardson! The Finchley will surely come in handy. I’ve always enjoyed the Kitchener stitch to close up socks and mittens, but would have to re-learn it after being away from making socks or mitts for a while. This seems much easier to remember... I can’t help but wonder why this would possibly have fallen out of common use in favour of the Kitchener. :)
This is the best! I’m a new loom knitter and zero experience with needle knitting. The Kitchener stitch that I used for my first pair of socks was very stressful and difficult. This is sooo much easier and seems to have a nice tension without even trying. Thank you!!
I started knitting toe up socks because I despise the Kitchener stitch, thank you for your instruction on the Finchley graft. I’m going to do a cuff down pair of socks and practice it in them. Again thank you
Thank you so much. I have just finished my second pair of adult socks in a sports weight yarn. I did the kitchener stitch on the first sock and I was not happy with the bulk that appeared at either end of the graft. I also found it difficult to keep the tension appropriate and struggled to pull the working yarn through the graft stitches. Found your tutorial and tried this graft on the second sock - i love it. I love your explanation and clear instructions. This graft looks 100% better than the first sock. I'm going to keep them this way to see how they wear on the person's foot and as a reminder for me.
Wow! You really rock!😅 another great, easy-to-follow explanation! Thanks! Just when I thought I didn't want to try this technique, you changed my mind! I will do one sock this way and maybe the other in Kitchener, or maybe try a swatch first!🤣
I don’t knit socks (mostly because I live in Florida and I only wear socks once or twice in the winter). So I rarely need Kitchener, but the few times I’ve tried it, I just couldn’t understand why it had to be so complicated. THANK YOU so much for showing us that it doesn’t have to be!
First, I love your shirt!! Second thank you for this, and thank you for such a beautifully done video. Your voice is nice to hear, you don't repeat yourself and you're straightforward in your descriptions and instructions. It's really awesome to listen to!! Your instructions are the best I've ever heard anyone do! Thank you!!
I just discovered this technique yesterday. I used it to graft two pieces of a lace scarf together. Not perfect On my first try, but so much easier and better than using the Kitchener stitch, at which I was totally unsuccessful. Thanks, Rox.
I come back to this video to use this technique again and again. I don’t mind the Kitchener stitch, but sometimes I don’t want to think that much. This is perfect for me for early morning or late night grafting. Thank you for applying this method to grafting sock toes and sharing it with us!
Eureka! Starting off the video showing what the grafting would look like at the end made all the difference for me! Great demonstration- i get it now. In 4 short minutes you’ve alleviated my disdain for grafting. Thank you -what a gift! :)
WOW, WOW, WOW!!! I've actually learned to like doing the Kitchener stitch, but I still have to concentrate on what I'm doing... with this method though, I believe I will be able to "multi-task" (like listen to a podcast or audiobook) while grafting! YAY! ... and thank you SO MUCH!
Thank you! Thank you! Thank you, Roxanne! I spent a day trying to Kitchener stitch two stitches together (in a hole which I have no idea how it occurred!) and then found this technique that I did in a matter of minutes SUCCESSFULLY! You do rock!
My preferred method of knitting socks is two at a time toes up, so this wouldn't be needed for the toes. However, I love to knit afterthought heels but hatehatehate grafting the heel seam. This will be such a Great help to me. Thank you!
This is the best!!! Thank you, Roxanne! i make Christmas stockings for relatives every year. Sometimes the Kitchener stitch works up like a dream, and sometimes (like today) I take it out 2 or 3 times. This will be my new go-to grafting technique. I'm grateful!
I just completed this stich to join a cowl. I have tried to do the Kitchner stich and was not able to do it. THIS WORKED BEAUTIFULLY, THANK YOU Rox. I learn so much from your videos, easier than books.
I may have found this 2 years after you posted it, but this is a life saver for sure. Just did a mitten graft with "Kitchener" and still not a good technique for me. Thank you so much for "Finchley" tutorial. Saving this in my library.
I just learned a version of the Kitchener that does away with the set up row and I didn't need to have the instructions in front of me anymore to do it.. Now this is even easier. Can't wait to try this on my next socks. Thank you.
Thank you so much! I thought I didn't hate kitchener, and then I just finished (or tried to finish) the toe on the second sock for my father's christmas present and thoroughly mucked it up, so I'm so glad I can unpick it and try this instead. If nothing else it'll be easier to remember!
Genius find, thank you. I remember a repairshop for stockings on the corner of my grandmothers street when I was very little. For these very fine and obviously in those days expensive stockings he must have used the same kind of grafting stitch.
I also meant to thank you for the link to the little booklet that was included in your post. I love the History of knitting especially when there was no RUclips or Wikipedia. Thank you.
I just finished knitting my first pair of socks for my Dad and I wish I had seen this video. Saving it now. Thank you so much for your clear instructions and close-up of how to do this. :)
OMG - THANK YOU so much for this. I was recommended it via the Knitting Facebook group and it has meant that I could finish my project without bursting into frustrated tears trying to remember where I was using Kitchener stich. Love your clear instructions and anticipations of what to do when things go wrong. Fab!
I had never heard of this but tried it for the first time after seeing your video and love it! I have always had a hard time getting my Kitchener stitch to look nice. This is definitely going to make me less hesitant to knit socks! Thank you.
I apparently didn't make it clear in the video WHY I thought "The Finchley Graft" would be a good name for this technique. The book where I found it was "Plain Needle-work and all its branches," Vol #4 of the Finchley Manuals of Industry, published in 1852. There's a link in the video description to the digitized book, if you're interested.
You said that in the video I think. I know I got that bit of info from the video anyhow.
I would pin this to the top of the comments, if that’s possible...or you might get this question a bunch of times since not everyone scrolls through the comments. Just a thought. Thanks again for rediscovering and sharing this lost-to-us technique!
Don't worry..... you did mention WHY you thought 'The Finchley Graft' ... its at 5:42 in the video and onwards. Thank you so much for this method, really so much easier than Kitchener.
If we can name a CO after a Chinese waitress in a diner, you can name a stitch after a manual. My next pair might even be top-down.
I have been trying to finish a cowl with 4 attempts. I like the yarn but the pattern and yarn were in differently dyed yarns. So the graft takes place over live stitches in a solid purple and live stitched with two ply, one white and one bright blue...They also are yarns not heavily spun. It just does not look great. So I found a couple of videos on the FINCHLEY GRAFT, but this morning found YOUR VIDEO. THANK YOU
🇬🇧 For services to humanity and sanity I dub you Dame Roxanne.
Thank you, thank you and thank you! Trying to graft a bag strap for the first time, I attempted kitchener stitch on a swatch and kept thinking, “THIS is ridiculously complicated; it should be easier.” And now I know there IS an easier way with the Finchley Graft. You are a born instructor. No wasted words and excellent visual on how to do this graft.
I love this- and will try it. I must also be the one weird knitter who actually loves the Kitchener stitch. It’s kind of magical.
There's at least two of us. I, also, enjoy doing the Kitchener stitch and then admiring the result.
Thank you very much. Finally I have a graft method which I can do without having to have a youtube video on repeat for every single stitch.
Roxanne you are such a GIFT to our community. I love that you had the forethought to include the possible pitfalls and what to do if you're interrupted during this technique. Brilliant!
All that trouble “sort of” learning the Kitchener stitch and then you share this amazingly simple technique. 🤦🏻♀️🤷🏻♀️ thanks 😊
Used to knit socks as a child of 12 years and was taught this method. Am now 79 and have watched this video as I need to join the centre of a scarf and thought I'd have to use the dreaded Kitchener stitch. Had completely forgotten this way of joining, thank you so much!
You are very welcome! I love hearing from long-time knitters who have known this method in the past and are reminded of it after watching this video. :-)
I was in tears trying to learn the Kitchener stitch. After 7 hours, I looked for some other way to graft and found your video. I had cut the sleeves in half of a beautiful sweater I had just made, foolishly thinking I could add several rows to lengthen the sleeves and just easily put back together. After learning the Finchley stitch on the first sleeve, it only took 45 minutes to do the second. Thank you!!
I love this method. So much better than kitchner stitch. I took a dozen rows out of a sweater that I knit too long. 186 stitches. I find the kitchner too brain taxing for a toe, let alone 30 inches of a sweater. This is so easy. Thank you Roxanne. 🥰
Roxane, you are a God's given gift to the entire world. Thank you for this.
Well, this is SO much simpler than the Kitchener stitch - I don't know why more people don't know about it - I love this method. Thank you for bringing it to everyone's attention.
Thank you so much for posting this! It is by far the easiest way to finish off the toe. Your explanation is so easy to follow. Thank you again!
Thank you so much for this tutorial!!! It's so easy to follow, but more importantly, easy to remember. You have a gift of explaining things very clearly and you don't need an hour to do so.
I have learned more from your videos than I learned on my own in the last 30 years! Than you so much! ❤️
I have done the Kitchener stitch several times, but I don't like doing it. I watched your video and was amazed. It looks so simple now. I must drop everything and go make socks now!
Bingo! I replied to your last Casual Friday, mentioning some older relatives....this, as you guessed, is the way they grafted. Only difference, they took the work off their needles, and if more than a few stitches, put it on waste yarn and just pulled the waste yarn out when the graft was complete. I'm guessing the use of the darning egg was because, as the manual referenced, this method also used for repairing, and they darned a LOT of socks. I personally prefer taking it off the needles and I just work the graft with the open seam held vertically so my grafting stitches are horizontally done. They grafted everything this way, shoulders, etc. NO DOG EARS this way. FYI they also sometimes did a few short rows on the last toe rows to produce a more rounded toe. Aunt Sade's husband had a particularly long big toe, and she added the short rows for the big toe side, thus making a right and a left sock. I'm on a mission now. I'll bet this manual contains some tricks I've forgotten about ...back in the day, it was all about making life easier. In particular, they did their decreases for the toe differently, you could not see the decreases and I'd like to find that. If you were kntting socks for 8 little and 2 big feet, that was a lot of knitting. Your epiphany has been my supreme pleasure to observe!!!
This is amazing! I feel like when we (or society) jumped on loads of new inventions for machine-manufacturing things, we sortof "threw out the baby with the bathwater" and just forgot a lot of older techniques. You can see this with spinning and with weaving and sewing and all sorts. I'm so glad some people still remember! And that we have an archive of old books to look through.
This is so brilliantly simple. Thanks for bringing it to 2019! Sometimes those old ways are so impressive, if someone, like you, finds them for us.
Isn't it though?! I can't wait to try it.
Oh my you have done it again!!! Saved my butt! I am about to need to graft 252 thread stitches after what feels like an eternity knitting a dainty shawl! Thank you so much! Love from MN
OMG! This is so-o-o much easier than the Kitchner stitch! Thank you! Thank you! Thank you!
I am so happy to see this method of grafting! A little late for the 100+ stitches of a shawl I did the kitchener with, but, oh so happy to have this for future projects! ❤
So easy! Thank you for sharing the history of sock toes, too. Very interesting! I can't imagine how uncomfortable a sock toe that was just cinched at the end like a hat would be!
The consensus seems to be that this technique is for sock toes but I used it to graft flat material in the middle of a sleeve that I knitted too long. It was a raglan sleeve with increased bottom half and decreased top half. I just didn't want to rip back that much knitting so I tried this technique and it worked perfectly. So much faster and easier to understand than the kitchner stitch. The sleeve even had a center patterned panel of purl stitches and that even worked by flipping the pieces over and keeping the purl side to the front. Roxanne, thanks so much for finding and demonstrating this technique.
Love all your videos-you teach with such clarity but I think you changed most of the knitting world with this one!
Thank you so much for your straightforward instructions and historical note on the Finchley graft. I have spent literally months looking for a grafting technique I could use and not forget when interrupted, or have to start over after barely an inch of progress because I can’t figure out where I left off.
All this as a result of a mistake on my part: assuming that it would be easy to put back together a top down sweater in which the top part was réunit. I naively expected to be able to reattach its bottom the same way they were initially knit. That’s an amateur knitter for you. Anyway, I think I can see clearly now and this time I’m pretty sure I can do it! Thanks for your easily understandable approach. Wish me luck!
Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge about the Finchley Grafting Technique. Both of my Grandmother's were beautiful knitters and used this method of finishing. My Mother was always going to show me this method but as time went on and Grandchildren arrived the need for knitting socks was not important, it was little boys sweaters, caps and jackets where the thing. I asked her one day if she had time could she show me how to graft the toe of a sock like she used to and she couldn't remember. I too had forgotten the name until I saw it mentioned in your tutorial. Thank you for sharing, it really means so much.
ame
Thank you, thank you, thank you! Finally…the dog ears are gone! After so many years of sock knitting! I use so many of the techniques you demonstrate…can’t thank you enough!
Thanks so much for finding and demonstrating the Finchley Graft. I’m finishing my socks for the August Sock KAL and used this technique to close the toe of my socks. I like it a lot and am looking forward to sharing this with friends.
Thank you for this… I have been practising Portuguese knitting which typically has the purl side towards you as the purl is the easiest stitch to create. I just got to the end of my toes and then realized I couldn’t do a Kitchener stitch to close them as the right sides were facing each other. The Finchley graft was the solution!
Thank you so much for introducing this
finchley grafting. For me, your finchley grafting is much much easier than kitchtner stitches.
So interesting and easy. Now if the stitch can be made with the sock inside out, there must be a way to work it so that the sock is right side out. Love how you find all of these interesting details about knitting and share them with us.
The Kitchener Stitch process is the method on the RS of the work. The path the yarn has to take through the stitches in order to replicate a row of knitting just differs, based on the orientation of the sts.
@@RoxanneRichardson Well that makes sense and good to know too! I appreciate learning to understand how read stitches and how they interact with one another. Thank you!
Roxanne, I looked at the Finchley manual by way of your link, and I have to say, hats off to you for deciphering that beast!
Amazing! So much easier! Why is this one not more widely known??!!
Thank you! I just used this to close up the headband loop for the 1898 Hat and it was almost perfect when it was just my first go at grafting!
Wow! In a way I'm glad that this "Finchley" grafting didn't come to light earlier. If it had, I probably wouldn't have persevered in learning the Kitchener graft. Thank you. You're a marvel (that's a good thing).🙂
You have officially saved, not only my life (as a knitter) but my sanity!!
THANK YOU SO VERY; VERY MUCH.
I just used the kitchener stitch for the first time in my last project. What a relief to have found this grafting method. Thx.
You are one smart lady! Thanks for sharing the technique and the history.
You are so welcome!
What a simple way to graft! Who would have thought one could get the Kitchener result so easily. Thank you for bringing this to us.
This craft is absolutely brilliant. It's so sad that it has been "lost" for so many years.
Every time you say that there are so many different ways to accomplish the same thing in knitting, I think about Microsoft Word and Excel spreadsheets.
Having cut a jumper to lengthen it I was all set to Kitchener stitch the 'hem' back but I could not get the hang of it. I used this and did the job in no time. I could not see the point at which I switched from one stitch type to the other and the only give away is where I had a couple of stitches twisted, which is my fault and a small thing. I shall use the Finchley graft from now on. Thank you.
I also have to say that I love how you gave credit to the book from which you got this, rather than claiming it as your own, as others who have got it from you are doing.
Thank you very kindly, Roxanne Richardson! The Finchley will surely come in handy. I’ve always enjoyed the Kitchener stitch to close up socks and mittens, but would have to re-learn it after being away from making socks or mitts for a while. This seems much easier to remember... I can’t help but wonder why this would possibly have fallen out of common use in favour of the Kitchener. :)
Easiest and best grafting tutorial I’ve seen. Thank you.
Just tried this technique for the first time...I’m in love..thank you for making it so easy 🌹
This is the best! I’m a new loom knitter and zero experience with needle knitting. The Kitchener stitch that I used for my first pair of socks was very stressful and difficult. This is sooo much easier and seems to have a nice tension without even trying. Thank you!!
Oh my goodness this is brilliant and such a gem of a find! Thank you for the vid. No more kitchener. :)
This is so brilliant! Thank you for sharing this technique.
I started knitting toe up socks because I despise the Kitchener stitch, thank you for your instruction on the Finchley graft. I’m going to do a cuff down pair of socks and practice it in them. Again thank you
You are so welcome!
Just used it to graft underarm stitches on a sweater. Worked great .
Thank you, Rox. Another fascinating dive into history--and useful tip for us!
So much easier than some of the convoluted ways that I have seen. Thank you so much
I will never be able to thank you enough for this! Absolutely brilliant! You saved my sweater and my sanity! I'll never graft any other way!
Thank you so much. I have just finished my second pair of adult socks in a sports weight yarn. I did the kitchener stitch on the first sock and I was not happy with the bulk that appeared at either end of the graft. I also found it difficult to keep the tension appropriate and struggled to pull the working yarn through the graft stitches. Found your tutorial and tried this graft on the second sock - i love it. I love your explanation and clear instructions. This graft looks 100% better than the first sock. I'm going to keep them this way to see how they wear on the person's foot and as a reminder for me.
Wow! You really rock!😅 another great, easy-to-follow explanation! Thanks! Just when I thought I didn't want to try this technique, you changed my mind! I will do one sock this way and maybe the other in Kitchener, or maybe try a swatch first!🤣
I don’t knit socks (mostly because I live in Florida and I only wear socks once or twice in the winter). So I rarely need Kitchener, but the few times I’ve tried it, I just couldn’t understand why it had to be so complicated. THANK YOU so much for showing us that it doesn’t have to be!
Wow! I really like this graft best!! Thank you so much. It appears easiest and will be trying it shortly!
First, I love your shirt!!
Second thank you for this, and thank you for such a beautifully done video. Your voice is nice to hear, you don't repeat yourself and you're straightforward in your descriptions and instructions. It's really awesome to listen to!! Your instructions are the best I've ever heard anyone do! Thank you!!
Thank you so much for sharing this with the knitting community. This is a game changer.
Your video is clear and so easy to understand.
WOW! Thank you so much for sharing this... I just did my first succesfull graft in over 10 years of knitting.
practical knitting tip and history lesson in one. love it!
I just discovered this technique yesterday. I used it to graft two pieces of a lace scarf together. Not perfect On my first try, but so much easier and better than using the Kitchener stitch, at which I was totally unsuccessful. Thanks, Rox.
Excellent! Your videos are always so clear and well filmed Roxanne. Every stitch is visible. Thanks. 🇬🇧
Thank you Roxanne, as always!! ❤
brilliant (as always), Roxanne. i am really enjoying all of the historical source material you have been bringing to our attention.
I come back to this video to use this technique again and again. I don’t mind the Kitchener stitch, but sometimes I don’t want to think that much. This is perfect for me for early morning or late night grafting. Thank you for applying this method to grafting sock toes and sharing it with us!
Thank you for the most interesting historical connections and clarity in your instructions.
I'm glad you enjoyed it! :-)
Eureka! Starting off the video showing what the grafting would look like at the end made all the difference for me! Great demonstration- i get it now. In 4 short minutes you’ve alleviated my disdain for grafting. Thank you -what a gift! :)
Wonderful! I was looking for a Kitchener stitch tutorial to help my husband finish his sock, but this is so much better. Thank you, Roxanne!
WOW, WOW, WOW!!! I've actually learned to like doing the Kitchener stitch, but I still have to concentrate on what I'm doing... with this method though, I believe I will be able to "multi-task" (like listen to a podcast or audiobook) while grafting! YAY! ... and thank you SO MUCH!
Thank you so very much! This will make joining any two pieces with live stitches so much easier!
Thank you! Thank you! Thank you, Roxanne! I spent a day trying to Kitchener stitch two stitches together (in a hole which I have no idea how it occurred!) and then found this technique that I did in a matter of minutes SUCCESSFULLY! You do rock!
Beautifully presented, crafted and innovative. Thank goodness you showed us. 😊
I tried so many, thank you so much for making this video. This one worked perfectly for binding an icord.
Thank you Roxanne! Such an easy and elegant method. I appreciate the historical background too.
Glad you liked it!
This looks so much easier than Kitchener thank you
My preferred method of knitting socks is two at a time toes up, so this wouldn't be needed for the toes. However, I love to knit afterthought heels but hatehatehate grafting the heel seam. This will be such a Great help to me. Thank you!
This is the best!!! Thank you, Roxanne! i make Christmas stockings for relatives every year. Sometimes the Kitchener stitch works up like a dream, and sometimes (like today) I take it out 2 or 3 times. This will be my new go-to grafting technique. I'm grateful!
Great technique! Love the history you give along with it. Thanks for sharing!
I just completed this stich to join a cowl. I have tried to do the Kitchner stich and was not able to do it. THIS WORKED BEAUTIFULLY, THANK YOU Rox. I learn so much from your videos, easier than books.
Life-changing! Thank you so much for sharing this technique
I may have found this 2 years after you posted it, but this is a life saver for sure. Just did a mitten graft with "Kitchener" and still not a good technique for me. Thank you so much for "Finchley" tutorial. Saving this in my library.
Thanks for the clear video on the Finchley Graft. I used this to close the top of a mitten and it worked beautifully.
Wonderful!
I can NOT wait to try this out!!! Fabulous!
I just learned a version of the Kitchener that does away with the set up row and I didn't need to have the instructions in front of me anymore to do it.. Now this is even easier. Can't wait to try this on my next socks. Thank you.
Thank you so much! I thought I didn't hate kitchener, and then I just finished (or tried to finish) the toe on the second sock for my father's christmas present and thoroughly mucked it up, so I'm so glad I can unpick it and try this instead. If nothing else it'll be easier to remember!
You made it look so easy. Thank you!!
Genius find, thank you. I remember a repairshop for stockings on the corner of my grandmothers street when I was very little. For these very fine and obviously in those days expensive stockings he must have used the same kind of grafting stitch.
Genius! Many thanks. This predates the usual Kitchener stitch so well done for finding it.
I also meant to thank you for the link to the little booklet that was included in your post. I love the History of knitting especially when there was no RUclips or Wikipedia. Thank you.
Super technique ! I have shared this with all my knitty friends!!
This is a game changer for me! I've only ever done one pair of top down socks but I shall try this tomorrow!
Thank you! I can't wait to try it as it looks so much easier!!
Nicely done. Clear & interesting. I will try this on my next top down socks. Thank you.
Thanks so much for sharing and all the historical research. Without your efforts this would never have been discovered. Bravo!
I just finished knitting my first pair of socks for my Dad and I wish I had seen this video. Saving it now. Thank you so much for your clear instructions and close-up of how to do this. :)
OMG - THANK YOU so much for this. I was recommended it via the Knitting Facebook group and it has meant that I could finish my project without bursting into frustrated tears trying to remember where I was using Kitchener stich. Love your clear instructions and anticipations of what to do when things go wrong. Fab!
Brilliant and very intuitive! Thank you for demonstrating it. I am returning to knitting after a 10 yr hiatus, and I am so glad I found your channel.
I had never heard of this but tried it for the first time after seeing your video and love it! I have always had a hard time getting my Kitchener stitch to look nice. This is definitely going to make me less hesitant to knit socks! Thank you.
Easiest method yet.🙏thanks.
Now that us worth doing. Don't have to remember what you did last. Finishing up a sock tomorrow and am going to try this method. Thank you Roxanne