How to Use a Nostepinne | How to wind a centre pull ball of yarn with one.
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- Опубликовано: 13 сен 2024
- Want to learn how to wind yarn into a ball using a stick? Seriously who doesn't, we don't all have ball winders, or even if we do sometimes we don't want to or can't use it. What are the options then? You can use your ball from the nostepinne either as a centre pull ball or use the outside, or both depending on your project. So grab a nostepinne, watch the demonstration and wind a ball of yarn for your self, Its fun :)
In this video, I am using a Chiaogoo Nostepinne, its lovely and smooth, and really inexpensive. You can get yours here: fiberific.com....
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Your counting wraps by “three and turn 1-quarter” makes it so much easier! Thank you.
Happy to help!
You have a nice voice listen to and I think you spend just enough time on each little part of your explanation so the listener/student doesn't get bored. Thank you.
Thank you for this video lesson. This is the first one I found on the nostepinne that I understood. Excellent video.
Glad it was helpful!
Best instructions out of about 7 videos. Love the rubber band trick-extremely yet simply helpful. Oddly, I like 3s best too and find odd numbers more aesthetically balanced. Mind you my first tiny cake now wound is a little jumbly this way and that way. I'm winding tiny balls of the thick cotton thread which comes wound around large cardboard spools, to make them easier to pack for travel.
Your eyes are so pretty! They match the yarn
I've watched quite a few videos on this and your video was by far the best explained and I appreciate the detail on each step. Thank you
Thank you Angie! I'm glad my video could help!
So nice and clear! Thanks for shooting the video over your shoulder - wish everyone did that!
Thank you! I'm glad I could help!
Thank you so much for this. I think it's the best explanation I've seen so far.
You're very welcome!
Terrific video, especially appreciate your rubber band trick & excellent demonstration, thank you! You're correct in pronouncing the final 'e,' as it's a Nordic-origin word so all vowels are pronounced. It means 'skein stick' (nøste pinne), in Swedish it's NOHS-teh-PIN-eh, in Norwegian the first vowel is more a combination of O & A, more like NAHS-teh-PIN-eh. Thanks again for a lovely video!
Thank you Athena!
Thanks so much for this!! Well done and nice to hear the Aussie accent. 🙂🙂
Thanku .Another great tool for knitting/crocheting.I love that you show what these tools are and how to use them.Great for a newbie like me.Always interested to see what's available in the knitting world.
Glad you like it!! It feels a little wizardy ;)
Thanks for explaining it so clearly, I made a nostepine from an antique stair spindle I cut down and have been making yarn eggs
Hi Linda, what a great idea!! Thanks for the tip. I plan on doing the same thing. 🙏❤🤗
Nice! My ball winder and Swift is in storage so i've been using a paper towel cardboard cylinder. It's been ok and I actually quite find it therapeutic. But this Nostipinne looks great and fancier than a cardboard tube! So glad I came across your video. Thanks so much 👍
My daughter's mother had a thing about consecutive even numbers. My daughter was born on 02/04/06... So obviously you can carry number obsessions to ridiculous lengths 😁
Good instructional video. Thanks.
Thanks Franklin, HAHAHA!
Love this, Chantelle! Another great product by ChiaoGoo!!
Hi, the word is nøstepinne. It’s Norwegian and probably danish. The ø is pronounced as i in Girl. Nøste means ball or making a ball. Pinne means stick.
Great directions and it worked great! Thanks!!!!!!
Clear explanation. Thank you very much for sharing
Great video. Love the elastic band. Think I have a thing for stirring porridge ( with a thistle on top) that will do the job nicely.
I've used one of my late moms old large thick cardboard thread cones for years the same way and it does the same job, you know the big ones that look like an ice cream cone, it works great is tapered and is not so cumbersome as this is.
Very cool vids. Keep it up!
Thanks for all the support as well Chantelle!
Thanks Man, and always, you rock!
Wow very good teacher....thank you so much
Lurve your yarn! Gorgeous colours.
Thank you!!!
Great tutorial. Thank you so much!
Thank you!
Thanks! I had this tool, but I didn’t know how to use it.
Nasty pine, is the way my hubby pronounced it the first time 😆😆!
I have tried doing this soooo many times and watched a load of videos and really started off great with yours, but I've still made an egg 😭
Heyy new subscriber hereee😍😍🥰
Thank you so much 👍😊
Very helpful thank you.
you are very welcome, thank you!
I’m pretty sure the e at the end of nostepine is silent. You can also use it to draft with a spindle.
And I know how to pronounce it! Great video.
Well I think you are one up on me Anke! I am not sure what the correct pronunciation is lol
Great demo; unfortunately, I don’t use hanks. I need to see how to use the nostepinne to roll a regular skein of yarn into a ball.
No matter the format of the yarn you are winding from... The nostepinne winding is till the same.
@@Fiberific Do I just pull the yarn from the middle of the skein and wind it on the nostepinne?
@@annadion4134 I would wind from the outside, just so I dont have to deal with yarn barf.
@@Fiberific Thank you.
The contemporary use of -nne in the word handgonne in a Staffordshire accent simply sounds as a dour gun. Therefore your Nostepinne is just Noste-pin, much as clothes pin, or the pins used in carpentry. It seems to be related to the Welsh love-spoon, and we find a similar -nne diminutive in the Minne-singers, the love balladeers of the courts of love of the 13th-14th century: the -nne is barely voiced.
Do you spin with a Scottish spindle? Love to see you do this. Your video was great. Helped a lot. Thanks.
I can spin with a scottish spindle, I will add it to my list, might be a was off though.
Thanks
I have a piece of 1/2" pvc that I'm using as a makeshift nostepinne. I can't wait till I have my mechanical manual yarn winders. Its cool to do things the old fashioned way but for me it's not practical.
I got it first hand, you say nerste pinner, closest I get phonetically!
I'd like to learn how to make broomstick lace.
OOh What a great Idea!
Lol I can do this with a Mimi m&m container I really want a actual nostepinne though
+vicki lynch it's one of those things that you can do on a number of things, but having the tool is nice too 😉
Nystpinne in Swedish translate to yarnstick, i Think it got lost in translation.
Who has the time to use this?? 😉😊
Wow -- at first, you started using it correctly, and then you went all wrong, just like everyone else! You really should learn how to use it properly if you are going to do a video on it!
Have you made a video that does show the correct way ?
I've seen you make this comment on other nostipinne videos but I can't find a video by you that shows what you mean by correct. Do you have one, please?