Quick Intro to Brioche Knitting - Basic Stitches (sl1yo, brk1, brp1) in English-style
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- Опубликовано: 21 авг 2024
- A quick intro to brioche knitting, demonstrating the basic stitches sl1yo, brioche knit (brk1), and brioche purl (brp1) in English-style knitting (with the yarn held in the right hand).
For more info and brioche knitting patters, go to
www.sosu.at
Finally! A demonstration for English style. Thank you x
I can't describe the frustrations I had trying to knit a brioche sweater for my sister before I found your video. The sweater's well under way. Thank you a million times over (or should I say 'thanks yarn over?).
This is the best explanation that I have come across for brioche! Thank you so much; it finally makes sense!
thank you SO much - finally a video that shows me how to actually read the stitches to know if it should be brioche purl or knit!
This video has helped me tremendously with the Brioche stitch. I wanted to learn this stitch to make a queen size blanket for my bed and now I can! Thank you!
A very clear explanation of how each of the three stiches of brioche - Sl1Yo, BrKnit, BrPurl are formed... particularly how the YO's are worked differently for brknit rows and brpurl rows. As a beginner in brioche style, I also find it easier after the tutorial to understand when exactly to turn over the work without looking at written instructions.
Thank you for your wonderful tutorial that has made the so called 'challenging' brioche stitch much simpler to understand and I already feel more confident in working with Brioche.
-Sherry (Mumbai, India)
Thank you for this awesome intro to brioche!
This is incredibly helpful. Thank you.
Thank you for such a clear video
Thank you so much. This was very helpful.
Thank you. Excellent lesson!
Your video is amazing! The brioche stitch makes a lot more sense right now, with all the yarn overs-it seems I was doing them excessively!
I have one question though: I am working a pattern which starts each row with "Sl1 wyif" while it seems you are doing a sort of knit stitch (that selvedge thing).
Truly, I cannot find any example starting with a slip stitch so I am wondering if the pattern's author meant something else. I am new to knitting so I don't know if any of these terms mean something else in different contexts.
This is the pattern, it appears as if the beginning and the ending stitch are reversed to the way you are showing it and I don't know if it's in fact possible to do so:
Setup-row (wrong side): Sl1 wyif, *yo, sl1p, k1*.
1. row (right side): Sl1 wyif, *brk, yo, sl1p*, repeat from * to * until there are 2 sts left on your needle, brk, k1.
2. row (wrong side): Sl1 wyif, */yo, sl1p, brk*/ until there are 2 sts left on your needle, yo, sl1p, k1
Boa tarde, Susanne!
Esse seu vídeo tutorial para 2 cores e de uma maneira " quase slow motion" é perfeito. Consegui perceber cada ponto e ficou bem facil perceber cada um.
Gostaria de saber se é possivel fazer um vídeo com uma cor e no estilo inglês.
Desde já, agradeço pela atenção.
Eu sou Marlene de São Paulo Brasil
💐👍😉
Hoping to start a swatch tomorrow.
Thank you so much for this. What yarns did you use- they are lovely
Δύσκολο αλλά το αποτέλεσμα τέλειο.
Suppose we had 10 instead of 9?
If you're working with an even stitch count, you'll have a Brioche knit rib at the beginning and a Brioche purl rib at the end, or vice versa.
I prefer an odd stitch count for symmetry when working flat, but you need an even one for working in the round.
You can leave out the last stitch (before the selvedge) on both RS rows, and the first stitch (after the selvedge) on both WS rows.