I've been knitting, for 50 years and have never done Fair Isle work. Just thought it was too complex, but, watching this video set me free! I might just give it a try. Does not look difficult at all. thanks!
Thank you! The 2nd method is such a time saver, as I knit all my Fair Isle and Icelandic patterns with yarn in both hands, so this works perfectly. I can't believe how much time I spent twisting one yarn around the other, which meant having to drop the yarns, do the twist, and then pick up the yarns again. I'm flying it now! Thanks again!
This video has changed my life. It’s amazing. My fair isle knitting is so much faster, and much less awkward now. I taught myself to use both hands to hold the yarn when knitting fair isle, but had to do the cumbersome drop and twist to carry floats. Now I don’t anymore and MY LIFE HAS CHANGED. Thank you once again, Staci!
Extremely helpful for a senior knitter who is just returning to knitting in my retired years and trying to catch up on new techniques. This is a "jewel" for learning. Karen
The second option where you pull the yarn in your left hand over the work and knit with the right hand is a lifesaver, or at least saved me an enormous amount of time. Thank you so much.
That IS awesome! Never having done any type color work before, I'm watching all the tutorials I can, to add to my arsenal of tools before I begin. Thanks for sharing!
SUPER helpful! I had done a fair isle hat ages ago and was told to twist for long floats. This way is so much easier and less hassle withput having to plop your yarns back and forth. Thank you!
Oh that's so much better! I knit in combination, holding the wool in each hand so it doesn't get tangled. However, I was bringing the wool forward before inserting the hook to catch the float and it was disturbing the pattern slightly. I was trying to do it in places the colours would match but I was taking away from that nice neat stockinette stitch pattern having a float run in front on the right side for a single stitch. This is so helpful !!!! I’ve been loving learning to knit recently. I’ve crocheted for many years and made amigurumi. I thought knitting wouldn’t be too difficult after that but it is very different and has been quite challenging to transition. Thanks for the tips!!
This has to be one of the best tricks I’ve learned in a long time! This is helping me out immensely with the sweater I’m working on. Thank you, thank you, thank you!
BRILLIANT as usual Staci- I watched this video and have been catching my floats for the first time in my life without ending up with a twisted ball of tangled yarn! Thank you!!!!
OMG!!! Thank you so much for this video. I'm an adventurous novice knitter who is very new to FI knitting. Trying simple patterns, but the tangling was driving me bonkers. This technique helps. Just need to practice the steps so they are smoother.
This was very helpful. Thank you for showing the technique of pulling the yarn forward and then pulling it back with each color in a separate hand. That was great! I had to slow the video down to watch closely, but it made complete sense to me! Thank you again!
Thank you so much for this and so many of your videos! I’m starting a 2 colour pattern in fingering weight and for my gauge swatch I tried 3 different styles of catching floats. Your 2nd technique won Hands Down😅. The blocking showed holes where the floating yarn peeked through, but not on the rows where I did your 2nd technique. I have been so looking forward to knitting this pattern and your video definitely saved the day. Only my dear husband knows the sweat I go through…. You are the very best!!!
This is the way I carry floats, especially since as a continental knitter, I learned how to flick from you, Staci! So, I knit color strandedly pretty fast thanks to you. :) So, just one comment: The video shows the way to carry the non-dominant color under the dominant color, but it’s slightly different wrapping what around what if you want to keep the yarns in each hand without switching from one hand to the other to carry the dominant under the non-dominant. It’s just a little different as far as which you wrap around what. So, if you have a carry of say 8 blue stitches in the hat, you’d do it slightly differently if you want to keep the yarns in the same hands. Maybe this can be another video,and you can share a fun way to remember what you wrap/counter or clockwise, etc.
This is awesome! Can you do a slow motion video of how you are holding your 2 working yarns in your right hand so that you can easily switch between them as you work without having to drop and pick up the working yarn constantly?
No way! I did my 1st ever fair isle pattern yesterday and instinctively held my yarns in both hands (English and continental at the same time) and carried my float over like you just showed! I must be a natural 😂
I am an English-style flicker but I knit stranded with my dominant color in my left hand and my background color in my right. There are techniques for catching floats with both colors that vary slightly but keep your hands on the work and keep it flowing very smoothly. The plus to doing it this way is that you never have to untangle your yarn!
This was so helpful! I was looking at a book that showed how to do this, but I didn’t understand. I went immediately to this video and I got it in seconds! I didn’t realize how easy this was. Now I will continue my color work pillow with my friend.
I have always done it this way (taught by my mother who was so expert...but it’s been long enough since doing any stranded color work that I needed a review! Thanks so very much!
What a wonderful demonstration. I love knitting fairisle and this is going to make it easier now since the yarns won't tangle as much. Thanks again for a great video. 😉
I love and frequently knit fair isle and never knew this. My mind is blown and I am super excited to carry floats this way from here on out! How much simpler!
I’ll have to give this a try. As a Continental Knitter I use both hands for stranded knitting. I’m not sure how I feel about the second color in my left hand but it’s worth a try! Thanks for sharing!
thank you so much for the video about how I can secure my floats. When they are loose they can be such a mess. I think this will also help me to keep my tension better. I loooove doing fair isle knitting. It is like watching a picture develop. I do the flicking method of knitting, but when doing fair isle I carry the yarn in both hands. Thanks a bunch
My grandma tight me to knit when I was 7. Just love your videos. They look like a very nice set to knit with. Thank you for sharing! Might be fun to try fair isle knitting for some thing new.
Thank you! I am a English knitter but for color work I hold one color in each hand. I used to catch the floats the first way you show, but it was very messy, twisted the yarn, and slow, so I stop doing it. This is much faster. ONE problem: I like to have the main color in the right hand , and the contrast in the left. Depending on the chart, you may need to carry the float of the main yarn as well. I dont like to swithc colors, since it is confusing, but you can do it, just being more careful! Thank you!
I learned the Continental method so I could fair isle that way, but I have yet to see that particular way to strand. I will definitely be trying that next fair isle project I have! Thank you!
I am currently working on my first stranded colorwork project, and since I'm strictly an English-style knitter, I had to find a way to keep my working yarn on top. I purchased two yarn bowls (plastic with rubber bottoms for grip) and placed them on a lazy susan. I set the whole thing on the floor and gave it a half turn counterclockwise with my foot to keep the working yarn on top :) Goofy, I know, but I got tired of taking my hand off my needles to turn the yarn. This way, I can keep going, and my yarn doesn't get all twisted up (except when I want it to 😀) Where there's a will, there's a way, I guess.
Lol I commented about how I carry floats this way/weave in the ends. It's much easier because I can hold both colors in one hand 😉💖 The way I trap floats and hold both strands in one hand is I go under the yarn I want to trap and pull the color to knit with under and through the stitch. Then my next stitch I go over the trapped float yarn and grab the color, pull it over, then through the stitch. I'll need to make a video on this I swear lol it sounds confusing but it really isn't. It's essentially twisting the yarn but only at the working area instead of clear down near the balls
Did you ever make that video? I found this comment /after/ sitting here for a while trying to figure out the exact technique you're describing, but even with your description, I'm still not quite getting it to work. Edit: I just needed to sleep on it, it's working well and looking good this morning. Thanks for leaving this tidbit, it was helpful.
I learned a method similar to this from an article in Interweave Knits, Spring 2014, by Daniela Nii "Holding Yarn for Stranded Colorwork" In this method you leave the long float, making sure it's not taut and finish the round. On the next round, when you get to the point where you want to trap the float, Put the needle into the stitch, scoop up the float from the round below and knit the stitch and the float together, trapping the float. It hardly slows you down, is really easy and it keeps the yarns from getting twisted.
I loved your "Weaving in ends as you go" video and have worked it into every project since (I do loads of stripes and colourwork, so this has been invaluable to me!). I have also used this method to attach a new yarn in the middle of a row - I knit the first 6 or so stitches as if I was weaving the start of the new yarn in as an end, then it gave me the perfect tension to start knitting with! You have taught me everything I know about knitting, you're my first port of call when I come across something new I'd like learn. Just as a small end note, have you done a video about making bobbles in knitting &/or substitutes to them? They were in a pattern I want to try, but the instructions weren't written very well. Thank you so much for all your help and hard work! Much good luck and brightest blessings for your future (from a fellow Ravenclaw, too) 💙💙💙
Hi that is a great tip...i will definitely try. I do it the same way as you use to and always have to untangle my yarn too often. This way i hope i won’t get soo tangled 😁🧶
I saw someone else demonstrating the second technique but from a bad angle so even though I tried it didn’t work (I’m also a lefty so I was trying to mirror it too lol). This view from above is sooo much better and I can’t wait to try this technique now!
Lovely. I just started fair isle and have never done continental knitting. But as my pattern is two colours im finding it quite easy to english knit my main colour and continental knit my second colour so that i never have to drop a strand to switch colours.
Thanks for solving this -- what to me has been a -- mystery! I've been trying all kinds of things but couldn't figure this out. NOW, I can't figure out the reverse. I'm doing stranded knitting on a flat piece. So when knitting in one direction I need to carry the floats in the back, but going the other way, I need to carry the floats in the FRONT. I'm trying to do the "mirror" image of the technique you demonstrated, but it isn't working.
I am a continental knitter, and it is totally possible to do the second catch demonstrated with both yarns in your left hand. You simply have to dip your right needle under the float color (after inserting into the next stitch) and pick up your working color. et voila! The only requirement for this technique is that your float must be held below your working yarn.
Thank you. I gave up on a Penelope (movie) scarf bc of that tension despite giving those floats a lot of slack. Can't wait to dig out that pattern and yarns now. ^_^
I still seem to get puckering with my fair isle and I swear I'm leaving the floats very loose. I'll have to see if this method can help. Thanks for bringing us these videos!
I catch the float in every stitch. The float scare me as I'm clumsy and I'm sure my work would be ruined through normal use. It does stiffen the work ALOT. There is no stretch horizontally but there is still vertical stretch.
Another things that would be good to note for knitters is that the blue yarn is always on top of the grey, the grey is always UNDER. that's what keeps the floats looking uniform on the back ;-)
trying to knit a heart shape into my work with a different colour yarn .. and can’t seem to work out how to increase and decrease without creating a hole … do you have a video which shows how to do this ? thank you 🙏🏼
Hi, Staci. I am fairly new to stranded knitting but enjoy doing it. Today I went to my local yarn shop and discovered a handy gadget called a Yarn Guide by Clover. It slips on your index finger and holds several yarns and keeps them tidy. I love it but can't figure out how to carry floats with it. Are you familiar with it and could you do an instructional video? Thank you. You are always my go to site for knitting quandaries.
Yes this is kind of how I do it, but I hold one yarn in each hand, then when you catch the blue yarn in, you don't actually need to pull the yarn forward over the work, just when you poke your needle through to make the grey stitch, just feed it under the blue instead of over and it will just catch it when you wrap anyway. A bit trickier when you are needing to carry the one in your right hand though. Best demonstration I have seen of this is on Fruity Knitting podcast Baable Hat video.
I'd love to see the difference in appearance from the front. Sometimes when I do the catch the carried colour sometimes shows through on the right side as a little dot of colour. Is this less likely to happen with this alternate method of colour carrying? I guess I'm asking what the benefit is of this method. Thanks for another super interesting video. :)
That happens sometimes if you always catch the float in the same place. It's less likely to happen if you, like she does here, catch the float on the third grey stitch instead of the fourth like she did last round.
@@nancythome9355 I decided to keep going but it's going to bug me. However............it may be an excuse to buy some more yarn and knit me another one - a nicer one - next one.....mmmm
PS I just tho't of a suggestion for new video: If it's possible please make video for Fair Isle knitting with MAGIC LOOP, so that you show specifically how to carry floats over from one needle to other when at end of row where pull out one needle around to knit on other needle...is this possible? (I've gotten so used to ML don't want to knit in round anymore, haha)
I like to comment on your knit companion video. It was very good for visually learning of knit companion. I hope you will be doing more video as you grow with knit companion. Be a visually it was very helpful. Thank you
I am having a difficult time with tension and a float that goes the whole length of the piece while doing garter stitch, could you do a video? Too tight.
for colour work as I am not a Continental knitter. So seeing you here, I wonder how to solve the Problem of the yarns beeing twisted while knitting by throwing. Do you perhaps have you a solution for this ???
So if I’m knitting with four or five colors and I need to catch all of those floats, can I catch all the colors in one float or how would I do that without making a mess?
Just got fair isle patterns and some yarn from my daughter, so undertaking my first project. Your videos and instruction are so helpful! Want your hat pattern too. Just noticed this cider is 5yrs old. Do you still get the comments?
Yes, it's an active channel and I get all the comments. :) That hat pattern can be found here: verypink.com/2011/01/13/learn-to-knit-fair-isle-baby-or-adult-cap/
That is the way I was taught to handle floats. But I was overly ambitious & tried 1 color in each hand right away - my 1st fair isle pattern - it was a disaster. I pulled the work in too much.
I use both hands; one knitting English and one Continental. There is a way to catch floats both ways. No twisting and yarns stay in position. Catching from Continental is a little more complicated but doable.
Hi love love your videos. When I need help or looking for something you always have a video on it. My question I just watched your video on carrying floats where you refer to your previous video on weaving in ends as you go. The second method in this video you do the same method as weaving in the ends but there is a difference and maybe it doesn't matter. In this video you bring the float in front then you finish your stitch and then you bring the floated yarn to the back but in the weaving in ends video you put your needle in then bring the yarn in front put your working yarn around your needle then you bring back the yarn from the front to the back and then you finish the stitch. My question is the end result the same? Thank you!
Perfect timing as I’m in the middle of making Julekuler Christmas ornaments. I’ve now just tried this method and it worked perfectly. Thank you so much. Staci I noticed you keep your two Yarns to the right. Is that just for demonstration purposes? Can you show how you keep them from getting twisted up? I do not use bobbins, just two balls of yarn. I knit English style. Thanks so much. 💕💖 Edit: I did watch your video Knitting help Fair Isle tricks ( I think that’s the name). Where you showed a bit of two hand English/continental. It was a bit fast so I didn’t quite catch on but I’ll give another go. Maybe if you have another. I get a bit twisted up and it’s a tad slow going. Thanks again.
I have a pattern that says "knit stitch, purl on wrong side and keep colorwork floats on the right side of the work" Curious to find out how to actually achieve this? Seems like all the tutorials are for floats on the wrong side of the work. Would appreciate any tips!
You suggest catching roughly every 5 st. What if you're working at a gauge of 30 st/4" where those same 5 st would make a shorter float than a 20 st/4" gauge. Can you twist every 7 or 8 st. instead?
You can do whatever you feel is enough, but I still catch every 5th stitch, regardless of the gauge. The thing to think about is how the knitted item is going to be used. If you are knitting fair isle mittens, you want to catch the float often, so that the wearer's fingers don't get caught. In a hat, it is maybe less important.
so how would you recommend adapting this for continental? or does it absolutely have to be held in the left hand? could you hold both in the left hand and just carry forward the yarn you want to float?
I love your videos! I’m self taught through UA-cam and your videos are a go-to for me! Thank you for sharing your skills with all of us! I have a question I hope you or someone out there can answer- I’m starting my first colorwork project and I don’t quite get how to switch from one color to the next when holding one color in each hand. When I use one hand for both colors it’s easy to twist the two yarns to switch colors, but it’s slow and messy (drop color A, twist with color B, pick up and knit with color B etc). I’d rather knit holding each color in a different hand but when I do that I get the hole that occurs when you don’t twist the yarn one over the other... how do you do it so seamlessly without having to drop the yarn to twist it and then pick it back up again?
If you have a longer float (many stitches), you do have to drop the yarns to catch or twist them. Otherwise, it's just practice, and finding how it is most comfortable in your hands.
VeryPink Knits, Thank you! Actually, that was very helpful. I know now I just need to practice and keep at it. It’s comforting to know I’m doing it right, just need to keep at it. I don’t want to learn incorrectly and then have to unlearn bad habits. I’m working on a free yarnspirations pattern for a cute googly-eyed baby hat in the shape of an owl head for a baby shower (actually I’m making three of them for 3 babies... interesting how pregnancies tend to come in threes) and the googly eyes section has varying floats of up to ten stitches at a time. It’s not looking too bad so far, so I’ll just keep on clickin’ on!
I was actually working on mosaic knitting and ended up making a pattern error which I did not notice until it was wayyyy too late. I ended up with four very long strands when I got the pattern to look correct. Do you have a way of connecting an overly long strand after the fact that you can show or explain? Many thanks!
When I do any kind of colorwork I knit with both hands. Heck, I thought this was how everyone caught their floats. I catch my floats at least every three stitches and with socks and mittens/gloves I catch them every two stitches.
I've been knitting, for 50 years and have never done Fair Isle work. Just thought it was too complex, but, watching this video set me free! I might just give it a try. Does not look difficult at all. thanks!
Did you? End up trying Fair Isle?
@@SilenceYesify Sadly, no... not yet. I guess during these times I want totally simple in front of the tv!
@@psdumas You can do it! Maybe try a swatch, just to prove it to yourself? Good luck :)
@@c0ldcity thankyou!!
You are the best knitting teacher on the Internet. I have been teaching a younger person and I always send her here for help. Thank you!
Thank you! The 2nd method is such a time saver, as I knit all my Fair Isle and Icelandic patterns with yarn in both hands, so this works perfectly. I can't believe how much time I spent twisting one yarn around the other, which meant having to drop the yarns, do the twist, and then pick up the yarns again. I'm flying it now! Thanks again!
This video has changed my life. It’s amazing. My fair isle knitting is so much faster, and much less awkward now. I taught myself to use both hands to hold the yarn when knitting fair isle, but had to do the cumbersome drop and twist to carry floats. Now I don’t anymore and MY LIFE HAS CHANGED. Thank you once again, Staci!
Extremely helpful for a senior knitter who is just returning to knitting in my retired years and trying to catch up on new techniques. This is a "jewel" for learning. Karen
Awesome! Love your videos! I’ve been knitting since I was 8 years old and still learning ! I’m now 79! Thanks for always sharing your help!
The second option where you pull the yarn in your left hand over the work and knit with the right hand is a lifesaver, or at least saved me an enormous amount of time. Thank you so much.
That IS awesome! Never having done any type color work before, I'm watching all the tutorials I can, to add to my arsenal of tools before I begin. Thanks for sharing!
SUPER helpful! I had done a fair isle hat ages ago and was told to twist for long floats. This way is so much easier and less hassle withput having to plop your yarns back and forth. Thank you!
Portuguese knitter here! Loved this vídeo.Thank you! I follow your channel for years now, and it's a reference for me.
I often refer to your videos when I need a refresher or a hand with something new... Clear and informative thank you
Oh that's so much better! I knit in combination, holding the wool in each hand so it doesn't get tangled. However, I was bringing the wool forward before inserting the hook to catch the float and it was disturbing the pattern slightly. I was trying to do it in places the colours would match but I was taking away from that nice neat stockinette stitch pattern having a float run in front on the right side for a single stitch. This is so helpful !!!! I’ve been loving learning to knit recently. I’ve crocheted for many years and made amigurumi. I thought knitting wouldn’t be too difficult after that but it is very different and has been quite challenging to transition. Thanks for the tips!!
You made it sooooo easy. Still on my knitting journey snd I'm doing my first CW. Thank you do much!
Ugh, the mystery is finally solved! Thank you so much for this, I can now enjoy doing fair isle patterns!
This has to be one of the best tricks I’ve learned in a long time! This is helping me out immensely with the sweater I’m working on. Thank you, thank you, thank you!
BRILLIANT as usual Staci- I watched this video and have been catching my floats for the first time in my life without ending up with a twisted ball of tangled yarn! Thank you!!!!
And we students appreciate your videos and podcasts! Thanks Staci! 😍
OMG!!! Thank you so much for this video. I'm an adventurous novice knitter who is very new to FI knitting. Trying simple patterns, but the tangling was driving me bonkers. This technique helps. Just need to practice the steps so they are smoother.
This was very helpful. Thank you for showing the technique of pulling the yarn forward and then pulling it back with each color in a separate hand. That was great! I had to slow the video down to watch closely, but it made complete sense to me! Thank you again!
Thank you so much for this and so many of your videos! I’m starting a 2 colour pattern in fingering weight and for my gauge swatch I tried 3 different styles of catching floats. Your 2nd technique won Hands Down😅. The blocking showed holes where the floating yarn peeked through, but not on the rows where I did your 2nd technique. I have been so looking forward to knitting this pattern and your video definitely saved the day. Only my dear husband knows the sweat I go through…. You are the very best!!!
This is the way I carry floats, especially since as a continental knitter, I learned how to flick from you, Staci! So, I knit color strandedly pretty fast thanks to you. :) So, just one comment: The video shows the way to carry the non-dominant color under the dominant color, but it’s slightly different wrapping what around what if you want to keep the yarns in each hand without switching from one hand to the other to carry the dominant under the non-dominant. It’s just a little different as far as which you wrap around what. So, if you have a carry of say 8 blue stitches in the hat, you’d do it slightly differently if you want to keep the yarns in the same hands. Maybe this can be another video,and you can share a fun way to remember what you wrap/counter or clockwise, etc.
I was wondering this too. She shows 1 colour only, so I’m kinda even more confused if that’s possible lol
This is awesome! Can you do a slow motion video of how you are holding your 2 working yarns in your right hand so that you can easily switch between them as you work without having to drop and pick up the working yarn constantly?
I love your tutorials. You have made me such an accomplished knitter. You're the best!
I love watching you knit! You have such a smooth snappy way if throwing that yarn, it is great!
Thank you for your tutorials, so informative.
No way! I did my 1st ever fair isle pattern yesterday and instinctively held my yarns in both hands (English and continental at the same time) and carried my float over like you just showed! I must be a natural 😂
It is so GREAT you appreciate a comment idea and then share it!! So thank you and to the one who shared with you.
I am an English-style flicker but I knit stranded with my dominant color in my left hand and my background color in my right. There are techniques for catching floats with both colors that vary slightly but keep your hands on the work and keep it flowing very smoothly. The plus to doing it this way is that you never have to untangle your yarn!
This was so helpful! I was looking at a book that showed how to do this, but I didn’t understand. I went immediately to this video and I got it in seconds! I didn’t realize how easy this was. Now I will continue my color work pillow with my friend.
I have always done it this way (taught by my mother who was so expert...but it’s been long enough since doing any stranded color work that I needed a review! Thanks so very much!
I watched 5 other videos and could not get it to work. First try after watching yours, and I'm carrying my colors like a boss. Thank you.
I'm just starting with Fair Isle and I thank you for this video. Can't wait to give each method a try.
What a wonderful demonstration. I love knitting fairisle and this is going to make it easier now since the yarns won't tangle as much. Thanks again for a great video. 😉
I love and frequently knit fair isle and never knew this. My mind is blown and I am super excited to carry floats this way from here on out! How much simpler!
I’ll have to give this a try. As a Continental Knitter I use both hands for stranded knitting. I’m not sure how I feel about the second color in my left hand but it’s worth a try! Thanks for sharing!
Thea Stewart o
thank you so much for the video about how I can secure my floats. When they are loose they can be such a mess. I think this will also help me to keep my tension better. I loooove doing fair isle knitting. It is like watching a picture develop. I do the flicking method of knitting, but when doing fair isle I carry the yarn in both hands. Thanks a bunch
My grandma tight me to knit when I was 7. Just love your videos. They look like a very nice set to knit with. Thank you for sharing! Might be fun to try fair isle knitting for some thing new.
Thanks for sharing! My tension was always off with fair isle, but I think just watching how you do the floats will improve it tremendously!
I really love your tutorials!! I have learned so much! I have a pillow to try and make with this technique, I can't wait to get started. Thank you!!
Thank you! I am a English knitter but for color work I hold one color in each hand. I used to catch the floats the first way you show, but it was very messy, twisted the yarn, and slow, so I stop doing it. This is much faster. ONE problem: I like to have the main color in the right hand , and the contrast in the left. Depending on the chart, you may need to carry the float of the main yarn as well. I dont like to swithc colors, since it is confusing, but you can do it, just being more careful! Thank you!
I learned the Continental method so I could fair isle that way, but I have yet to see that particular way to strand. I will definitely be trying that next fair isle project I have! Thank you!
I am currently working on my first stranded colorwork project, and since I'm strictly an English-style knitter, I had to find a way to keep my working yarn on top. I purchased two yarn bowls (plastic with rubber bottoms for grip) and placed them on a lazy susan. I set the whole thing on the floor and gave it a half turn counterclockwise with my foot to keep the working yarn on top :) Goofy, I know, but I got tired of taking my hand off my needles to turn the yarn. This way, I can keep going, and my yarn doesn't get all twisted up (except when I want it to 😀) Where there's a will, there's a way, I guess.
Thank you I am so excited to see that you can Do fair isle knitting English style .
Thank you. I have done the snowflake to try fair isle knitting it came out perfect.
Lol I commented about how I carry floats this way/weave in the ends. It's much easier because I can hold both colors in one hand 😉💖
The way I trap floats and hold both strands in one hand is I go under the yarn I want to trap and pull the color to knit with under and through the stitch. Then my next stitch I go over the trapped float yarn and grab the color, pull it over, then through the stitch.
I'll need to make a video on this I swear lol it sounds confusing but it really isn't. It's essentially twisting the yarn but only at the working area instead of clear down near the balls
Did you ever make that video? I found this comment /after/ sitting here for a while trying to figure out the exact technique you're describing, but even with your description, I'm still not quite getting it to work.
Edit: I just needed to sleep on it, it's working well and looking good this morning. Thanks for leaving this tidbit, it was helpful.
Just brilliant 😁 thank you so much made knitting those stranded mittens so much easier. Xx
You do such a beautiful work , thank you for sharing with all of us and for the tutorial ! 😊💗
I learned a method similar to this from an article in Interweave Knits, Spring 2014, by Daniela Nii "Holding Yarn for Stranded Colorwork" In this method you leave the long float, making sure it's not taut and finish the round. On the next round, when you get to the point where you want to trap the float, Put the needle into the stitch, scoop up the float from the round below and knit the stitch and the float together, trapping the float. It hardly slows you down, is really easy and it keeps the yarns from getting twisted.
Patricia Phythian screenshotted your comment, sounds like a great method! Thanks you for sharing
I loved your "Weaving in ends as you go" video and have worked it into every project since (I do loads of stripes and colourwork, so this has been invaluable to me!). I have also used this method to attach a new yarn in the middle of a row - I knit the first 6 or so stitches as if I was weaving the start of the new yarn in as an end, then it gave me the perfect tension to start knitting with!
You have taught me everything I know about knitting, you're my first port of call when I come across something new I'd like learn. Just as a small end note, have you done a video about making bobbles in knitting &/or substitutes to them? They were in a pattern I want to try, but the instructions weren't written very well.
Thank you so much for all your help and hard work! Much good luck and brightest blessings for your future (from a fellow Ravenclaw, too) 💙💙💙
I don't have a video on bobbles, it's a good idea! Thank you!
@@verypinkknits ua-cam.com/video/5o47kLkqXLU/v-deo.html
Yay! Now I will try Fair Isle with confidence! Love your videos!
I hear the clicking! This technique is cool. I will try this when I do my first fair isle project. I’m not sure I can do it.
Hi that is a great tip...i will definitely try. I do it the same way as you use to and always have to untangle my yarn too often. This way i hope i won’t get soo tangled 😁🧶
I saw someone else demonstrating the second technique but from a bad angle so even though I tried it didn’t work (I’m also a lefty so I was trying to mirror it too lol). This view from above is sooo much better and I can’t wait to try this technique now!
Thank you Staci. Just in time. About to start my very first fair isle project (Arne and Carlos' Christmas balls)
Lovely. I just started fair isle and have never done continental knitting. But as my pattern is two colours im finding it quite easy to english knit my main colour and continental knit my second colour so that i never have to drop a strand to switch colours.
this is great thank you …. what about when you’re knitting purl and the yarn is at the front ?
Thanks for solving this -- what to me has been a -- mystery! I've been trying all kinds of things but couldn't figure this out. NOW, I can't figure out the reverse. I'm doing stranded knitting on a flat piece. So when knitting in one direction I need to carry the floats in the back, but going the other way, I need to carry the floats in the FRONT. I'm trying to do the "mirror" image of the technique you demonstrated, but it isn't working.
I am a continental knitter, and it is totally possible to do the second catch demonstrated with both yarns in your left hand. You simply have to dip your right needle under the float color (after inserting into the next stitch) and pick up your working color. et voila! The only requirement for this technique is that your float must be held below your working yarn.
I think I’ll try fair isle now because this makes sense! Thanks!
Thank you. I gave up on a Penelope (movie) scarf bc of that tension despite giving those floats a lot of slack. Can't wait to dig out that pattern and yarns now. ^_^
Love this! Thank you! Your videos taught me how to knit!
I still seem to get puckering with my fair isle and I swear I'm leaving the floats very loose. I'll have to see if this method can help. Thanks for bringing us these videos!
Vanessa LaFleur Did it help? I have the same problem. I’m trying a knit inside out method.
I catch the float in every stitch. The float scare me as I'm clumsy and I'm sure my work would be ruined through normal use. It does stiffen the work ALOT. There is no stretch horizontally but there is still vertical stretch.
Mine has no stretch, I'm a beginner and decided to use 2 colours
Another things that would be good to note for knitters is that the blue yarn is always on top of the grey, the grey is always UNDER. that's what keeps the floats looking uniform on the back ;-)
Thank you so much!! I’ve learned so much from you - you’re a great teacher.
trying to knit a heart shape into my work with a different colour yarn .. and can’t seem to work out how to increase and decrease without creating a hole … do you have a video which shows how to do this ? thank you 🙏🏼
Can you suggest what would be the best number of floats to carry in the back of a piece with two colors BUT not working in the round?
Hi, Staci. I am fairly new to stranded knitting but enjoy doing it. Today I went to my local yarn shop and discovered a handy gadget called a Yarn Guide by Clover. It slips on your index finger and holds several yarns and keeps them tidy. I love it but can't figure out how to carry floats with it. Are you familiar with it and could you do an instructional video? Thank you. You are always my go to site for knitting quandaries.
Yes this is kind of how I do it, but I hold one yarn in each hand, then when you catch the blue yarn in, you don't actually need to pull the yarn forward over the work, just when you poke your needle through to make the grey stitch, just feed it under the blue instead of over and it will just catch it when you wrap anyway. A bit trickier when you are needing to carry the one in your right hand though. Best demonstration I have seen of this is on Fruity Knitting podcast Baable Hat video.
Could you please do a video on what you do when you're doing a magic loop hat and carry yarn across the needles?
That's a good idea - thank you for the suggestion!
I'd love to see the difference in appearance from the front. Sometimes when I do the catch the carried colour sometimes shows through on the right side as a little dot of colour. Is this less likely to happen with this alternate method of colour carrying? I guess I'm asking what the benefit is of this method. Thanks for another super interesting video. :)
That happens sometimes if you always catch the float in the same place. It's less likely to happen if you, like she does here, catch the float on the third grey stitch instead of the fourth like she did last round.
Oh crap. I’ve just done an entire yoke with long strands because I didn’t know this. Oh well. My next project….
Same here! Might rip it out and start over
@@nancythome9355 I decided to keep going but it's going to bug me. However............it may be an excuse to buy some more yarn and knit me another one - a nicer one - next one.....mmmm
Saludos. Tengo las extensiones de esa marca. Vivo en Guatemala y no hay de esas agujas. Como puedo hacer para obtenerlas?
Very helpful thanks, do find that your blue yarn coming from over the white and white over blue, makes your stitches sit flat?
Honestly that was a game changer for me! Thank you!
I do something like your first wrap except every other time I wrap the other direction so I'm not getting the yarns tangled.
PS I just tho't of a suggestion for new video: If it's possible please make video for Fair Isle knitting with MAGIC LOOP, so that you show specifically how to carry floats over from one needle to other when at end of row where pull out one needle around to knit on other needle...is this possible? (I've gotten so used to ML don't want to knit in round anymore, haha)
I like to comment on your knit companion video. It was very good for visually learning of knit companion. I hope you will be doing more video as you grow with knit companion. Be a visually it was very helpful. Thank you
I am having a difficult time with tension and a float that goes the whole length of the piece while doing garter stitch, could you do a video? Too tight.
Yes I also come to you to learn what I need explained. Now I need to know how I hold the yarn
for colour work as I am not a Continental knitter. So seeing you here, I wonder how to solve the Problem of the yarns beeing twisted while knitting by throwing. Do you perhaps have you a solution for this ???
Can’t wait to try this trick!
So if I’m knitting with four or five colors and I need to catch all of those floats, can I catch all the colors in one float or how would I do that without making a mess?
Just got fair isle patterns and some yarn from my daughter, so undertaking my first project. Your videos and instruction are so helpful! Want your hat pattern too. Just noticed this cider is 5yrs old. Do you still get the comments?
Yes, it's an active channel and I get all the comments. :) That hat pattern can be found here: verypink.com/2011/01/13/learn-to-knit-fair-isle-baby-or-adult-cap/
That is the way I was taught to handle floats. But I was overly ambitious & tried 1 color in each hand right away - my 1st fair isle pattern - it was a disaster. I pulled the work in too much.
I use both hands; one knitting English and one Continental. There is a way to catch floats both ways. No twisting and yarns stay in position. Catching from Continental is a little more complicated but doable.
Hi love love your videos. When I need help or looking for something you always have a video on it. My question I just watched your video on carrying floats where you refer to your previous video on weaving in ends as you go. The second method in this video you do the same method as weaving in the ends but there is a difference and maybe it doesn't matter. In this video you bring the float in front then you finish your stitch and then you bring the floated yarn to the back but in the weaving in ends video you put your needle in then bring the yarn in front put your working yarn around your needle then you bring back the yarn from the front to the back and then you finish the stitch. My question is the end result the same? Thank you!
this was great thank you. i am too uncordinated. Is it ok to just twist the yarn like you showed in the beginning to carry the yarn?
Perfect timing as I’m in the middle of making Julekuler Christmas ornaments. I’ve now just tried this method and it worked perfectly. Thank you so much.
Staci I noticed you keep your two Yarns to the right. Is that just for demonstration purposes? Can you show how you keep them from getting twisted up?
I do not use bobbins, just two balls of yarn. I knit English style. Thanks so much. 💕💖
Edit: I did watch your video Knitting help Fair Isle tricks ( I think that’s the name). Where you showed a bit of two hand English/continental. It was a bit fast so I didn’t quite catch on but I’ll give another go. Maybe if you have another. I get a bit twisted up and it’s a tad slow going. Thanks again.
I knit English style also. Thanks for this video.
Do you have a video showing how to do this on the purl side or with more than two strands?
I have a pattern that says "knit stitch, purl on wrong side and keep colorwork floats on the right side of the work"
Curious to find out how to actually achieve this? Seems like all the tutorials are for floats on the wrong side of the work. Would appreciate any tips!
I can't be sure of what the designer means by that. Please contact the designer directly for support.
You always have the very best instruction. Thank you!
You suggest catching roughly every 5 st. What if you're working at a gauge of 30 st/4" where those same 5 st would make a shorter float than a 20 st/4" gauge. Can you twist every 7 or 8 st. instead?
You can do whatever you feel is enough, but I still catch every 5th stitch, regardless of the gauge. The thing to think about is how the knitted item is going to be used. If you are knitting fair isle mittens, you want to catch the float often, so that the wearer's fingers don't get caught. In a hat, it is maybe less important.
Is there any way of carrying the yarn like in crochet - the yarn is completely in between the stitches and hidden on the back?
so how would you recommend adapting this for continental? or does it absolutely have to be held in the left hand? could you hold both in the left hand and just carry forward the yarn you want to float?
The technique is the same, regardless of which hand you use to hold the working yarn.
I know what you mean about that clicking! It is a lovely sound!
I'm a beginning knitter. Doing my first sweater. "Easy". But it just says "change colour"!! Thanks for helping my first project come together!
I love your videos! I’m self taught through UA-cam and your videos are a go-to for me! Thank you for sharing your skills with all of us!
I have a question I hope you or someone out there can answer- I’m starting my first colorwork project and I don’t quite get how to switch from one color to the next when holding one color in each hand. When I use one hand for both colors it’s easy to twist the two yarns to switch colors, but it’s slow and messy (drop color A, twist with color B, pick up and knit with color B etc). I’d rather knit holding each color in a different hand but when I do that I get the hole that occurs when you don’t twist the yarn one over the other... how do you do it so seamlessly without having to drop the yarn to twist it and then pick it back up again?
I can see that you’re able to do it in the video, but it’s so fast I can’t see how.
If you have a longer float (many stitches), you do have to drop the yarns to catch or twist them. Otherwise, it's just practice, and finding how it is most comfortable in your hands.
VeryPink Knits, Thank you! Actually, that was very helpful. I know now I just need to practice and keep at it. It’s comforting to know I’m doing it right, just need to keep at it. I don’t want to learn incorrectly and then have to unlearn bad habits. I’m working on a free yarnspirations pattern for a cute googly-eyed baby hat in the shape of an owl head for a baby shower (actually I’m making three of them for 3 babies... interesting how pregnancies tend to come in threes) and the googly eyes section has varying floats of up to ten stitches at a time. It’s not looking too bad so far, so I’ll just keep on clickin’ on!
I was actually working on mosaic knitting and ended up making a pattern error which I did not notice until it was wayyyy too late. I ended up with four very long strands when I got the pattern to look correct. Do you have a way of connecting an overly long strand after the fact that you can show or explain? Many thanks!
Спасибо огромное! Очень много полезного взяла себе,просиатртвая ваши видео!
When I do any kind of colorwork I knit with both hands. Heck, I thought this was how everyone caught their floats. I catch my floats at least every three stitches and with socks and mittens/gloves I catch them every two stitches.