Lateral Braid: A Little How-to

I recently knit these:

They are fingerless mitts from a pattern called “Treads“.  I made them as a Christmas gift, so when I initially blogged about them, I didn’t include much detail.  I knitted them with cashmere, and wow was it nice to knit with.  So soft.  I hope they hold up well! I learned two new really neat stitches:  the linen ridge stitch, and then the lateral braid.

When I blogged about them, I talked a little about the lateral braid.  It creates a really neat sideways knit stitch.  It was a little tricky to learn, and I never really found much on the internet in the way of tutorial help.  Ever since I wrote that blog post, I’ve noticed that probably 4 or 5 times a week, someone comes to my blog as a result of their search “lateral braid”.  So I thought I’d try to provide a little explanation of how I did this.  I hope it helps.

The pattern describes the Lateral Braid as a Estonian technique.  The author of the pattern first encountered the technique in a Nancy Bush pattern called Fox Faces Socks.  (You can find some description of how to do the lateral braid there too.  In my knitting, I usually find going to several explanations can help me finally figure out how to do something.) In her pattern she also refers to the fact that there are more detailed instructions for this ‘Vikkel’ braid in Folk Knitting in Estonia (1999, Interweave Press) on page 50.  I’d like to find that book.

Anyway, I thought I would include some pictures that I hope will clarify a little bit on how to do the braid.  I thought about doing a video, but I found myself stumbling around and messing up.  Plus it’s not easy with Davey on the loose, not to mention a curious Siberian Husky.  So I am going to try to describe it just with some photos and written details.

I knit these mitts in the round on double pointed needles.  So when you start the lateral braid, you do a make 1 at the very beginning of the round.  I did a M1R because that is what the Treads pattern said to do.

In the photo below, I have picked up the bar between the first stitch on the left hand needle, and the last stitch on the right hand needle.

So I make the stitch.  It then is sitting on the right hand needle.  Put this stitch BACK onto the left hand needle.

Now.  Knit into the BACK of the second stitch on the left hand needle.   Like in the picture below:

Ok after you knit into the back of the second stitch,  immediately knit into the front of the FIRST stitch on the left hand needle.  (This is the stitch that you made a few minutes ago, and then slipped back to the lefthand needle.)

After you knit into the front of the first stitch, then you will slip both these first and second stitches off the lefthand needle.

Ok here is where I kept messing up at first, and I was getting this big ole bunched up mess.  You will  have two new stitches on your righthand needle.  Put the leftmost stitch – the first stitch on the righthand needle – back on the lefthand needle.

Then you just repeat this.  Knit into the back of the second stitch on the lefthand needle, then into the front of the first stitch on the lefthand needle, and then slip both of these off the lefthand needle.  Always remember to take that leftmost stitch (from the righthand needle)  and move it back to the lefthand needle.

And here is what begins to emerge.

When you finish the end of the round, you are going to have one extra stitch, because you did that increase at the very beginning.  So to get rid of it, just slip the first stitch of the next round (on lefthand needle) back to the righthand needle, and pass the last stitch of the round over that stitch – like if you were doing a bind off. )  Take the last stitch on the righthand needle (the one on which you just did the pass over) and move it back to the lefthand needle.  Now you are back to your original number of stitches and are good to go.

I hope this helps.  Leave me a comment if you need additional help!

Oh! My Back!

I finished the back of The Sweater last night.  And now I need to rip out about 6 inches.  I don’t know what I was thinking.  In the Eddie Bauer version, the solid areas are not equidistant between the colorwork areas, but I made them a little too not equal so that I don’t have enough solid right at the neck.

I held it up to David’s back though.  The length is good.  Looks like it will fit around him.  But ugh – gotta rip.  Now when I look at it, I am kind of embarrassed.  What was I thinking?

Those big old size 11 needles and the bulky yarn are kind of hurting my hands, so I am taking a small break and going back to my socks for a couple of days.  I want to get the Joy of Sox going again!

Here’s a photo of my little computer boy.  I had no idea that trying to get him not to spend too much time on the computer was going to begin at the tender age of 3!  He plays Little Einsteins games.  He negotiates from game to game.   When I offer to help, I hear the standard:  “Mommy.  I can do it all by myself!”

He also helped me make cookies today.   He likes to scoop them out and put them on the cookie sheet.  It’s not yet a pretty process, but it’s good practice for him.  Coordination building and all that.  Again, I heard “Mommy, please stand back.  I am doing this all by myself.”

It is getting late in the day.  It’s about time to get Davey to bed.  We are reading Mo Willems Pigeon books.  They are very funny, and I highly recommend them — to anyone!


Working on The Sweater

Whew.  The back of this sweater is a puzzle.  I think – I hope that I have it somewhat figured out.  I am taking the advice of my blogging friend Susan B, and I am just thinking about the sweater in small chunks.  I am not going to think about how in the world I am going to adapt the sleeves to fit my altered armholes.  I am not going to think about the placement of the colorwork on the sleeves.  I am especially not going to think about how in the world I will put a zipper in my finished sweater.

Today there was much ciphering and eye scrunching as I tried to figure out how and where to decrease for the armholes.  I realized that my pattern is not going to totally work.  The pattern I am using has a colorwork yoke thing going and raglan sleeves.  The sweater I am copying does not.  David agreed that he did not want raglan sleeves, so I have been trying to do sleeve conversion.  I found another pattern in my book with regular old set-in sleeves. (I don’t know what the heck a person who knows what they are doing calls them.)

So I may just have it figured out.  We shall see.  This pattern measures things in centimeters rather than inches.  I am really kind of liking that.  Fewer fractions I think.  That may make no sense.  This project is addling my brain.

So back I go to my notes, scribblings and then the actual knitting itself.

 

2010 Knitting – Year in Review

I’ve been reading several of my favorite knitting blogs today, and many of them created a summary of what they knitted in 2010.  This inspired me to want to do the same.   I began to list everything, and I was kind of surprised by all the things that I knitted in 2010.  Luckily, I’d kept track of most of my projects on Ravelry.

David put pictures of all my finished things into a collage.  It would have taken me 10 years, and it wouldn’t have looked nearly as nice, so thank you David.

There are five hats that I didn’t photograph, and I just finished a scarf and hat for my sister-in-law.  I forgot to get a picture of that as well.  Other than that though, I think this collage pretty much covers it.

In 2010, I knitted  total of 13 hats, 11 pairs of socks, 6 scarves, 1 pair of gloves, 2 pairs of fingerless mitts, 3 sweaters, 1 pair of baby pants, 5 stuffed animals, and one mini-me.  Holy mackerel.  That seems like a lot.

And it was really a year of learning too.  I learned to make bobbles, lateral braids, and I did my first herringbone rib.  I did lots of colorwork.  I learned magic loop and knitting on two circular needles.  It’s been quite a year.

2011 Knitting Resolutions?

1.  Seriously – get rid of the stash.  I don’t have a huge stash of yarn, but I really want to knit down what I have.

2.  Finish knitting the patterns in the The Joy of Sox book.

3.  Join my blogging friend Patti in knitting another wonderful sock book called Around the World in Knitting Socks. It’s a project she decided to do, and I’d really like to follow along.

4.  Successfully finish THE SWEATER.

Who knows what else will inspire me in 2011?  Maybe I can convert and inspire some new knitters!

Happy New Year of Knitting!

Back of THE SWEATER

I am hard at work on THE SWEATER.  I have the first section of colorwork done.

It’s hard for me to take a good picture, but my size 11 needles should be a little longer, or I should brave the snowy streets and go buy some 11 longer circular needles.  So the stitches are kind of bunched up on the needles.

But I do like how the colors look.  My gauge is a little bit large, but not incredibly off, so hopefully this will be ok.

Now I am ciphering like crazy trying to figure out just how to do the rest of the back.  I have to figure out where to put the colorwork sections and how this will fit in with decreasing and shaping the raglan armholes.  Thinking about raglan and sleeves makes my eyes just kind of glaze over.  It sounds so difficult to me.

We have had quite abit of snow.  I’ll share my kind of view that I have as I type this.

Knitting on I-70

We are in Salina, KS this morning.  We have about 4 and 1/2 hours left per google maps.  Of course google maps projected 7 hours to get to Salina from our house yesterday.  It took us an additional 3 hours.  Traveling tends to be more of a meander for us.  We took long breaks for lunch and dinner.  We wandered through Walmart for awhile.  We also stopped for breakfast about 5 minutes after we left our house.

I-70 must be one of the straightest roads in the country.  There is absolutely not a curve to be found.  The only thing that changes with this road is that it must be slightly downhill all the way from Denver to here.

I tend to get carsick in the car if I do anything but look out the window.  Not on the straightness of 70.  I was able to knit and knit and knit.  I could even refer to my pattern without problem.  I was able to finish a hat.  I have started a scarf.  I offered to drive but I told David that he would have to take over the knitting.  He drove all day.  I actually did volunteer to drive several times without the knitting condition, and he was fine.  Maybe I can chip in today.

There is a continental breakfast downstairs.  David went and got us a plate of food.  Davey wanted no part of any of it except for the banana.  At least his choice was the healthiest one.

So it’s back into the car for awhile longer.  Davey did so well yesterday.  He had his dvd player and several other things to help keep him entertained.  A dvd player can’t just be a dvd player though.  He really wasn’t too interested in watching it. He had to move it around.  He had to push buttons.  At one point it was upside down.  Luckily this is a light player.  I finally told him that he couldn’t push buttons anymore.  We didn’t want to break the dvd player.  So he’d watch for a few minutes.  “Mommy, I have a question, and I need to hit pause to ask you my question.”  I said. ok, and watched him try to quickly think of some type of question that would justify the pause (button pushing excuse).

He did great though.  Happy and no fussing!

So it’s about time to get ready for the last few hours of driving.  (and more knitting hopefully!)

Merry Christmas!

A knitting post: An ice cream hat and a beret

I have been knitting quite abit.  I am looking forward to putting up pictures after Christmas.  I have a couple of projects to share though. I started back on my Joy of Sox sock yesterday as well.  I also knitted a swatch for The Sweater. I now have a successful swatch.  I need to figure out the colorwork now.  It may be too much for my brain.

I finished my test knit for Susan.  It was very fun.  First of all, I loved all the different stitches.  I learned a ton knitting this hat.  I think I have already mentioned the bobbles.  Cascade 128 = really fun bobbles. And that horizontal cable.  I knitted a narrow long strip and then picked up stitches around to start the bobble section.  It was a type of hat construction that I’d not tried before, and I loved it.  I ended up picking up stitches on the other side of the horizontal cable at the end to do the chocolate rib.  It doesn’t get much better than talking about knitting in terms of ice cream.

I’d wanted to try a hat with earflaps.  They were easy and fun to knit.  I loved doing the crochet slip stitch edging in strawberry as well.

This was just a great hat.  I need a front photo of it as well, but the photo that David took of me, I think I have about 12 chins, so I couldn’t include it.  I’m vain that way. It is comfy (although next time I’d knit in 1/2 size bigger as I did not quite get gauge, and I think it would be great just a tad bigger.)  It would be fun to try out in different colors as well, although I highly recommend that Cascade 128.  Great yarn.

Then I knitted this little beret.  I’ve knitted this pattern once before.  I love it.  I love the spiral decreases.

I tried to model it on my chocolate covered fairly unwilling model.

Such a fun hat.  It’s a surprise for my sweet little niece.  Well I have three sweet little nieces.  This sweet little niece is 5 and currently has strep throat.  I hope she likes it!

Toe to Toe Socks: Done. Hurray.

I finished up my Toe to Toe socks today.  Ok, I do still have a few ends to weave in.  I will do that tonight.  I like the way these socks look, but they irritated the crud out of me.  I finally figured out why.  I do not like having 3 colors going.  It’s a constant battle of untangling no matter how hard I try to keep those guys apart.  They are like magnets – hopelessly attracted to each other.  I have realized that that’s the only thing that really bugs me in knitting.

But I do think they are pretty, and it was a fun colorwork pattern.

My assistant wore shoes today.  It’s getting chilly to be outside barefoot.

Then he got out the magnifying glass to really take a look.

My next socks are scaring me a little.  For the first time, I will be attempting a sock done with 2 circular needles (magic loop I think it is called?).  Yikes.

 

Rippppit. Ripppppppit

Yep.  Frogged ’em.  I still like the feel of bamboo sock yarn, but this yarn is not meant for a pattern where there is so much texture and stitch definition.  So I have begun again.  I had some Knit Picks Gloss in Burgundy in my small stash.   It is 70% wool and 30% silk.  Going to try that.

I had reached a row in my pattern that I could just not figure out.  I was befuddled.  Thank goodness for Ravelry.  I messaged the author of the pattern. (Her name is Gina House, and she is very helpful and friendly!)  She referred me to a forum where they had been discussing errata for the pattern and in particular, this row!  I can imagine it would be really frustrating to see errors in  your pattern after publish.  But thank goodness for ravelry.  Yeah, said that already.

If you knit this pattern, watch out for row 10.  I will be happy to point you to the errata for it.  There is also errata for the transition row.  I am not there yet so I have no idea what it is about.  However, here’s the cool thing that happens in row 10.   You slip 10 stitches and pass the first one over the other 9.  It is not easy to do, but creates that look of a sheaf of wheat.  Cool huh!  That part I was able to figure out, it was the rest of the row that I was having trouble with.

Luckily I am a “process” knitter instead of a “product” knitter.  So starting over again is of no consequence to me.  Yeah, I’ll keep telling myself that.   But I really minded a lot less than I thought I might.  It was good to test out the bamboo, and now I’ll see how this knitpicks knits up!

And now to Davey.  He is sick.  He had almost a 103 last night.  Now this morning it is back up to 102.  Poor thing.  He’s watching shows and is tucked into his little fold out sofa thing.  Pillow and little blanket and his “tas” (pacifiers) are all he wants at the moment.

We had some fun family/friend plans for the weekend – more this weekend than usual – but it happens. Here’s Davey a few days ago feeling great!  Here’s  hoping he will be back to this in a day or so!