Three Categories of Color Work // Technique Tuesday

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  • Опубликовано: 20 янв 2025

Комментарии • 53

  • @TiffanyM3
    @TiffanyM3 10 месяцев назад +2

    Wow thank you for this! Having all of the categories explained back-to-back like this really helps highlight the differences between them, and the benefits of using which and when. I'm not a new knitter, but in the past I've shied away from intricate colorwork. Now that I'm branching out with my techniques, I'm trying to keep it all straight. Your explanation has "cleared the colorwork fog" for me! ❤

  • @anikabennett810
    @anikabennett810 3 года назад +7

    Whenever I have a problem or question, I look for your videos. I love your logical approach and I can follow your instructions . I guess my mind loves the reasons you give for knitting a certain way. You are the best and…my favorite teacher!

  • @katalinacs703
    @katalinacs703 6 лет назад +9

    Dear Roxanne, I love your videos. I've learnt a lot from you, I love that you arrange information in a systematic and analytic way. Thanks a lot :)

  • @shutupcaf
    @shutupcaf 10 месяцев назад

    So so helpful! I’ve never known the difference between say, intarsia & stranded knitting. This was such a clear explanation. Thank you 😊

  • @maryalgar8779
    @maryalgar8779 6 лет назад +4

    Very much like the effect you got with that yellow and blue sample. Great video Roxanne.

    • @annmariebusu9924
      @annmariebusu9924 3 года назад

      It would make a nice hat pattern 😁

    • @romystumpy1197
      @romystumpy1197 2 года назад

      I agree I like this very much ,I would like to see how the pattern is worked written down

  • @k.embers
    @k.embers 3 года назад +3

    Thank you for this explanation! I was very confused about whether my current project was fair isle, intarsia, stranded, etc because the terms all seem to be used interchangeably, but I was inferring through various sources there are technical differences and I just couldn’t piece them apart. Now I know my project is just stranded knitting 😁

  • @janeschwarz2807
    @janeschwarz2807 2 года назад

    Good Morning, I would love to know how to knit the blue and yellow slip stitch diamond pattern. I need to work in another color at the bottom of a sweater and this is lovely!! it is the stitch at 3:35 on the video. thank you!!

    • @RoxanneRichardson
      @RoxanneRichardson  2 года назад

      Source: Walker, Barbara. A Second Treasury, “French Weave, Plain.” pp 42-43.

  • @theastewart6721
    @theastewart6721 6 лет назад +1

    Thanks for sharing! Very interesting! I love color work! As a part Armenian American I’ll have to check this out!

    • @RoxanneRichardson
      @RoxanneRichardson  6 лет назад

      It's entirely possible that the term "Armenian knitting" was made up. There was a famous sweater designed back in the 1920s that required this technique, and it was an Armenian woman who was hired to knit it, using this technique. When the design became popular, she found other women familiar with this technique to do the knitting. Here is a link to the sweater design with a bit of information. www.schoolhousepress.com/patterns/bowknot-sweater.html

  • @sophieinspired
    @sophieinspired 4 месяца назад

    I love that blue and yellow slip stitch pattern! Could you tell me the name? Would love to recreate it but sadly couldn’t figure it out by just looking at the swatch 😅💖

    • @RoxanneRichardson
      @RoxanneRichardson  4 месяца назад +1

      Source: Walker, Barbara. A Second Treasury of Knitting Patterns, “French Weave, Plain.” pp 42-43.

    • @sophieinspired
      @sophieinspired 4 месяца назад

      @@RoxanneRichardson thank you so much! 💖

  • @KLD521
    @KLD521 6 лет назад

    This video tutorial was very helpful, not too long ago I just finished a shawl with color work, but following a pattern. This will help me when I decide to make my own pattern, it's going to take patience and frogging as I temp to write my own design. Thank you so much for sharing. Respectfully, Donna

  • @kensalaman3951
    @kensalaman3951 2 года назад

    Excellent content, Rox. thanks so much. :*

  • @azarlohrasbpour8837
    @azarlohrasbpour8837 5 лет назад +1

    Hello, can you please share the pattern for the yellow & blue slip stitch? It’s very nice. Thank you.

    • @RoxanneRichardson
      @RoxanneRichardson  5 лет назад +2

      It's from Barbara Walker's Second Treasury of Knitting Patterns. "French Weave, Plain" pp 42-43.

    • @azarlohrasbpour8837
      @azarlohrasbpour8837 5 лет назад

      Roxanne Richardson - found it online - thanks.

    • @romystumpy1197
      @romystumpy1197 2 года назад

      Great you asked about this blue and yellow slip stitch

  • @shawnapoudrier9921
    @shawnapoudrier9921 4 года назад +1

    Do you have videos on how to knit intarsia or color block? I looked on your channel and I didn't find any except this one. Also I was wondering how do I determine which color work method to use for a given project?

  • @claudiacano4916
    @claudiacano4916 6 лет назад +1

    I love how you explain things, thank you for this video. I wonder if double knitting, and two color brioche belong to any of these categories.

    • @RoxanneRichardson
      @RoxanneRichardson  6 лет назад +3

      Double knitting could easily fall into the alternating colors category, or the stripes category, depending on what you're doing. I'm inclined to put two-color brioche into the stripes category , as you are only working across the stitches with one color at a time. (There are probably exceptions in each case.) Thanks for bringing those up!

    • @sokirasden6278
      @sokirasden6278 6 лет назад

      I feel like double knitting and two-color brioche together can be lumped into a 4th category, where you create 2 layers of fabric together and symmetrically. (there are ways to do two-color brioche in 1 pass and the 2 pass method still needs both colors to complete a row). You can also do ANYTHING in double knitting in terms of color pattern (with only 2 colors, of course).

    • @sokirasden6278
      @sokirasden6278 6 лет назад

      For example, you can totally do color blocks in double knitting.

    • @sokirasden6278
      @sokirasden6278 6 лет назад +1

      I guess you can call this category "simultaneous", "double-layered", or "vertical stripes"

  • @kristinesvendsen7667
    @kristinesvendsen7667 2 года назад

    As I don’t speak Finnish I an having a problem understanding the technique: tikapuutekniikka/ ladder back jackard.
    Do you know how to work it and could you make a tutorial video?

  • @jeribianca9013
    @jeribianca9013 6 лет назад

    Thanks for the refresher!

  • @winningnumbers
    @winningnumbers 4 года назад

    Is it possible to do reverse stockinette using 2 colors??? Thanks in advance for a reply

    • @RoxanneRichardson
      @RoxanneRichardson  4 года назад

      Not without getting color "blips". I have a video that explains the interaction of purl sts with color changes: ruclips.net/video/HDuYUH6Lyg0/видео.html

  • @Hezz6142
    @Hezz6142 6 лет назад +2

    I have 2 unrelated questions I hope you can answer. First when a knit wear designer designs a sweater pattern and they give the amount of yarn needed for the sweater does that amount include the swatch? Everytime I swatch I worry about this.
    Also I know that you are a fabulous cable knitter, do you use a cable needle or not and if so what kind? Thank you Roxanne you've taught me so much and I enjoy watching you.

  • @samuelajah8649
    @samuelajah8649 2 года назад

    Is the pattern for the intarsia sweater available?

    • @RoxanneRichardson
      @RoxanneRichardson  2 года назад +1

      You'd have to find a copy of the book it was published in back in 1987, or a copy of the magazine where it was published in 2011: www.ravelry.com/patterns/library/welsh-poppy

    • @samuelajah8649
      @samuelajah8649 2 года назад

      @@RoxanneRichardson thank you!

  • @louisegordon5169
    @louisegordon5169 2 года назад

    PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE Do a video on TWO color DOUBLE KNITTING-thank you

  • @sandygrogg1203
    @sandygrogg1203 6 лет назад

    Interesting information.. Thank you!😊

  • @shoelessmonk1941
    @shoelessmonk1941 6 лет назад

    hi roxanne, have you made any videos on garter tab knit. i found it interesting when i looked into it for the shaw i am making. i never knew until now why it was worked, as it was so difficult for me to figure out. but now i know why it is used in a triangle shaw, but is their any other way to begin it except the 3 stitches?....stacy

    • @RoxanneRichardson
      @RoxanneRichardson  6 лет назад +1

      Well, there are multiple ways of getting to the point where you have 3 sts ready to work in 3 different directions, but otherwise, I'm not aware of how else you'd want to set up a top-down triangular shawl. There are different choices for casting on/picking up, and different choices for provisional CO methods (vs regular CO), but they all end with 3 sts in each of 3 directions.

  • @carlajewett1091
    @carlajewett1091 6 лет назад

    I am new to mosaic knitting and plan to knit a hat using this technique. The tutorials demonstrate knitting each color for two rounds. I notice that this method produces an elongated stitch, which I find undesirable. There is only one tutorial demonstrating knitting one round of each color, which eliminates the elongated stitch. I am curious to know why other tutorials don’t mention ths method for knittng in the round in stockinette.
    Carla J
    nycSox

    • @RoxanneRichardson
      @RoxanneRichardson  6 лет назад

      Mosaic knitting inherently has elongated stitches, whether you change colors every two rounds or every round, because the color that is not worked has to span the row or rows from when it was last worked to when it is worked again. There are methods of working *stranded color work* that allow you to work the sts for one color as you work the round, slipping the other colors, and then work the second color as you work the round again, slipping those that were worked in the first pass, and knitting those that were slipped. That is, you work every round of patterning by making two passes, using one color each time. If that is what you are doing, that is not mosaic knitting, that's a slow method of doing stranded color work, taking two passes per round.

  • @ooohlaa13
    @ooohlaa13 6 лет назад

    this is so helpful and clear, as is usual for your videos, you have such a gift for methodical information and wow, your workmanship is wonderful ... a little off topic on the sweater with the flowers, how did you get the pink edging, looks like maybe single crochet? When I do single crochet it comes out "wavy" but yours is so flat and neat. Is that what you used, or do you have a video on how to get such a "finished" look. It really makes the piece "pop". Do you use the same size needle?

    • @RoxanneRichardson
      @RoxanneRichardson  6 лет назад

      I knit that sweater more than 25 years ago! :-) I just switched to the fuchsia for the final row of 1x1 ribbing, before binding off. Nothing special.

    • @ooohlaa13
      @ooohlaa13 6 лет назад

      👏thanx my color is also fuschia so .... perfect!

  • @suewalan7635
    @suewalan7635 4 года назад

    I really enjoy your videos! You have helped me so much. I am preparing to start a bottom up, knit in the round sweater that has 24 out of 52 rows in the yoke with 3 colors. (It also has 1 row with 4 colors, but I will modify the pattern to use 3 colors.) I knit continental with both colors in my left hand and do my color work in Armenian / weaving. What should I do with the third color? I only found one video where you mention three color rows in passing: "Three Categories of Color Work // Technique Tuesday
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    • @RoxanneRichardson
      @RoxanneRichardson  4 года назад +1

      There isn't any one method that is going to work in all situations. A lot of it depends on how evenly/frequently spaced the color changes are, combined with the knitting style. One reason I haven't done a video on it (and likely why it's hard to find much advice) is because there are so many variations on how this can play out.

    • @suewalan7635
      @suewalan7635 4 года назад

      @@RoxanneRichardson
      Thank you. It's an 8 stitch pattern repeat. On the rows with 3 colors - one color is occasionally carried for 7 stitches. I am practicing by making a hat (as my swatch) using about half of the colorwork pattern. I'll try the various things I've found, and I'm sure something will work.

    • @suewalan7635
      @suewalan7635 4 года назад

      @@RoxanneRichardson Make that half of the colorwork CHART.

  • @GrapeApe2018
    @GrapeApe2018 6 лет назад

    I have been researching color work again, now that I have actually learned to knit. I knew I wanted to use this technique as soon as it was realistic to try. I knew before I actually learned to knit, it was my number two motivator for giving it one more shot before giving up forever. Socks, colorwork socks was no. one. Anyway, in crochet color work, and in a lot of written materials, the use of bobbins is widely used/ discussed. Yet not one flesh and blood knitter or knitting teacher has mentioned them. Are they some big faux pa s in the knitting realm?

    • @RoxanneRichardson
      @RoxanneRichardson  6 лет назад +1

      Not at all. Bobbins can be useful when working intarsia, but aren't really necessary for other forms of colorwork. For intarsia, some people use bobbins, others wind center-pull butterflies, and others just use lengths of yarn that are a couple yards long, and pull the correct one out of the tangled mess when it's time to use that color. Perhaps bobbins are easier to manage when crocheting, because you have a hand free (hook in only one hand)? Many knitters find bobbins aggravating when working with many colors at once, because of how the hanging strands tangle around each other.

    • @Gertyutz
      @Gertyutz 5 лет назад

      I don't make bobbins, but center-pull butterflies. You can get much more yarn into a butterfly. I tie them with a slipknot of contrasting yarn, and tighten it just a bit every now and then.