Again, thank you! I'm mind boggled that more knitters aren't visiting your videos. I've been knitting for decades but am new to the Kitchener tequenics and I am thrilled to see them here.
OMGosh it exists!!!!!! Thank you soooo much for this! I was really struggling with accepting one row would be off when grafting together (9stitches on each side for border) and yes I’d be the only one would would see- but I cannot thank you enough for this! Love from MN! ❤️
Yay thank you. I'm knitting my second cardigan ever and I hated the seam at the back of the neck on my first. I knew there had to be a way to graft them instead of seaming.
This is so exciting, thank you! Working on the Penguono and I don't care for the first 16 rows on the bottom back. Sooo, going to knit new 16 rows, disconnect the original and attach the new! It's only knitting, right? I can always start over 🙃
Not quite, no! That type of grafting should be a bit easier, since you will not have the half stitch offset! If you're a TKGA member with access to Cast On magazine, Joni Coniglio has an article in the Spring 2024 issue: 'Decoding Grafting Steps Part 2', with a detailed explanation of top to bottom seed stitch grafting. I'll add filming a tutorial for that to my queue!
Again, thank you! I'm mind boggled that more knitters aren't visiting your videos. I've been knitting for decades but am new to the Kitchener tequenics and I am thrilled to see them here.
You are welcome!
OMGosh it exists!!!!!! Thank you soooo much for this! I was really struggling with accepting one row would be off when grafting together (9stitches on each side for border) and yes I’d be the only one would would see- but I cannot thank you enough for this! Love from MN! ❤️
Glad I could help!
Yay thank you. I'm knitting my second cardigan ever and I hated the seam at the back of the neck on my first. I knew there had to be a way to graft them instead of seaming.
You're welcome! It definitely can be done!
This is so exciting, thank you! Working on the Penguono and I don't care for the first 16 rows on the bottom back. Sooo, going to knit new 16 rows, disconnect the original and attach the new! It's only knitting, right? I can always start over 🙃
Oh, best of luck! You're right, it's only knitting -- make it a design element if you need to! :-)
Will this process be the same for grafting a provisional CO edge back to the BO edge? Thank you!!!
Not quite, no! That type of grafting should be a bit easier, since you will not have the half stitch offset! If you're a TKGA member with access to Cast On magazine, Joni Coniglio has an article in the Spring 2024 issue: 'Decoding Grafting Steps Part 2', with a detailed explanation of top to bottom seed stitch grafting. I'll add filming a tutorial for that to my queue!