Thank you for this. I really appreciate the diagrams you drew, too, as they helped me to understand the “how” of it all in a more 3D way. Also appreciated the tip re hand-dyed yarns.
Thank you Jared (and your team) for this clear demonstration and instruction. I particularly appreciated your little graphic of the simultaneous spirals...the picture provided a leap in my understanding of this method.
I have just been thinking about doing this when your video popped up. When I knit in the round I usually use two pairs of circular needles so I can see how easy it would be to do the helix stripes. It will be great for socks, especially as I have lots of leftover bits of sock yarn. Thank you for your video.
Thank you for such clear beautiful knitting tutorials! Jared Flood - you are knitting guru! Just wondering - maybe you could advise on specific way/technique on how to incorporate neatly short rows in helical striping in the round?
Great question! For multi-row stripes, you'll need to use a "jogless stripes" technique - Purl Soho has a good tutorial here: ua-cam.com/video/GUxFy_DKTeM/v-deo.html
Great question! For multi-row stripes, you'll need to use a "jogless stripes" technique - Purl Soho has a good tutorial here: ua-cam.com/video/GUxFy_DKTeM/v-deo.html
Great question! You can decrease as usual (K2tog, SSK, etc) with this technique, just make sure your color change isn't happening where your decreases are (you might need to change color a few stitches sooner or later). Happy striping!
Would love to see how you switch colors through raglan increases. Love this technique but got to where a color change was happening at the Increase point and froze
Hello! In this case, you can shift your color change to a couple of stitches before or after your raglan increases - with a 1x1 stripe it will hide pretty well!
Thank you for sharing this Jared! I used this method on the Ginn I knit for Tolt but do have a question for you. I seemed to have a probably finishing my helical knitting. Could you show how you stop using one yarn? Because basically you have 2 spirals you're knitting, right? But when you want to stop using a yarn, you have to jump up to the next row to keep working...at least that's what I found. Hmmm...would love a tutorial that shows how to stop using this method while knitting. :).
Hi Caro! Great question! You can shift the BOR so it's between decreases as you start the shaping - as with many things in knitting, it might take a little trial and error to decide where you want everything to line up. Let us know how you get on!
Hello, how do you bring all the yarns back to end on the same round? I've been knitting the body of a sweater with 3 skeins of the "same" color. Now I need to split for the hem and want to use one skein for the short rows.
Hello! You can simply drop the stripes you don't want to continue with and work your end-of-round stitches in your main color: ua-cam.com/video/c7QRehYUd-k/v-deo.html
I’m trying this for the first time. I have an even number of stitches. My 3 slipped stitches are always before the BOR, so I’m ending up with a lump of the same color just before the BOR, which is not shifting position. How do I prevent that?
Hi Olivia! You can use the needle length of your preference - we used magic loop here so that we could make a smaller circular swatch. Happy helical knitting!
I am helix knitting a sleeve with 4 colors with each row a different color repeated. I have to increase up the arm. I started with 10 stitches per color but as I increase the number of stitches will vary per color. Does that matter?
Hi Susan! Great question! It shouldn't make a difference, as where you start your next color is totally arbitrary, and your round marker is really just keeping track of how far in to make your increases. Just keep chasing your stripes around! (Let us know how your project turns out!)
Great question! For a smooth bind off, we recommend ending your stripes and transitioning back to a single color before binding off -simply stop working the “stripe” color and overtake the join point with your main color, then continue knitting as usual.
Hi Joy! You absolutely can! Basically you'll divide your round into sections, start each color in a separate section, then keep spiraling the colors around in sections as you go. Purl Soho (one of our wonderful stockists) has an excellent Helix Knitting Tutorial video that demonstrates this with four colors.
I’m working on a sweater and the sleeve has garter stitch, the rest is stockinette. I’m having issues when I’m doing helical with purling. Any tips? Also, what about helical when you have to increase? Sometimes the increase has to happen within the 3 stitches that need to be slipped. Thanks
Hello, thank you for your question! I asked my team if they had any advice, and this is what my teammate Allison had to say: "I usually just fudge. I'll slip two or four instead of three to avoid an increase or decrease. The garter on the sleeve may be hard. It's okay to have longer stretches between switching, so maybe she could just set herself up to skip over the garter and never have that be the point of alternating?" All of this to say - it's really up to you and what you're comfortable with! -Mary
If you are knitting helical striping and want to continue to knit with only one color. How do you knit the last round? Second question: is it the best way to start the helical knitting at the beginning of a round & do you have to stop knitting the stripes at the end of a original round. Let's say you are knitting socks cuff down using helical knitting.
Great question! To end, you just need to stop working the “stripe” color and overtake the join point with your main yarn, then continue knitting normally with one color. As far as a starting point, it’s arbitrary. Starting at BOR is easy and clear, but not totally necessary, since once you get going the BOR is completely arbitrary for your color changes. It only remains there to give you a sense for when to work shaping, etc.
okay but how do I start it and how do I avoid there being a jog for each color at the top and bottom where the spiral stops and starts? It's easiest to see at about 11:06. I'd rather just never do one-row stripes if there's not a way to hide that better. Maybe that sounds unreasonable to some folks but I'm learning to knit after 20 years of crochet, and crochet easily can do either spiral or alternating stripes without a big gross looking jog like that so I feel like there ought to be a way. This isn't jogless and I'm getting really mad about the last eight videos in a row claiming to show how to do jogless one row stripes being a lie
Hi Lesika! You may find TechKnitter's informative 3-part series on jogless stripes useful: Part 1: techknitting.blogspot.com/2011/02/article-and-video-on-jogless-stripes.html Part 2: techknitting.blogspot.com/2011/03/helix-barberpole-stripes-part-2-of.html Part 3: techknitting.blogspot.com/2011/03/jogless-stripes-pretty-picture-version.html Happy knitting!
This is CRAZY!! I learned something new today!
This is BRILLIANT! I used this technique to blend variegated yarn to keep from color pooling
Yes! Such a great use for this technique!
I have avoided hand dyed yarns because of the pooling issue. Thank you for taking this fear away and showing me how easy it can be! Genius!!
Thank you for this. I really appreciate the diagrams you drew, too, as they helped me to understand the “how” of it all in a more 3D way. Also appreciated the tip re hand-dyed yarns.
Thanks for watching! We're so glad you found this helpful.
This tutorial is awesome! I finally got why this technique works thanks to your drawing and your explanation!
So glad you found it helpful! Happy helical knitting!
Best video I’ve seen on helical striping. So clearly and simply explained. Thank you!
Hi Tracy! Thanks so much for watching - glad you found the tutorial helpful!
@@BrooklynTweed_Official btw I’ve never used DPNs but that really clarified for me exactly what’s happening, thanks for demonstrating that. 💡
This is fantastic. After confusion, there is light. HAPPY ME Brilliant video. You are a great instructor. Thank you🤓
So glad you found our tutorial helpful! Happy knitting!
Such a beautiful and clear tutorial! Thank you very much for sharing it ❤
You are so welcome! Happy knitting!
Thank you very much for these excellent tutorials.
Thanks so much for watching! Happy knitting!
Thank you! That was a wonderfully succinct and effective video!
You are so welcome! It's such a cool technique!
Fascinating. I will definitely try this. Thank you
It's really fun! Let us know how you get on with it!
Thank you Jared (and your team) for this clear demonstration and instruction. I particularly appreciated your little graphic of the simultaneous spirals...the picture provided a leap in my understanding of this method.
Glad it was helpful!
thanks for the clear video! Tracie Knits recommended it.
Glad it was helpful!
You really explain very good and it easy for me to try and thank
Thanks so much for watching!
Such a wonderful explanation! I wish I had watch BEFORE I made socks with a horrible jog.
Hi Judy! Isn't this a cool technique? (Now you can try it on your NEXT pair of socks!)
Best demonstration of this I've seen - thank you!
You're very welcome! Happy knitting!
I have just been thinking about doing this when your video popped up. When I knit in the round I usually use two pairs of circular needles so I can see how easy it would be to do the helix stripes. It will be great for socks, especially as I have lots of leftover bits of sock yarn. Thank you for your video.
That's a great idea! Thanks for watching!
Thanks so much!
Greetings from Portugal!
You're very welcome!
Thank you for such clear beautiful knitting tutorials! Jared Flood - you are knitting guru! Just wondering - maybe you could advise on specific way/technique on how to incorporate neatly short rows in helical striping in the round?
Great suggestion - we'll add it to our list!
thank you :)
This is wizardry ❤
Isn't it neat?
This is the best explanation I've heard for this technique. Thank You!
Brilliant. Thank you :)
You're very welcome! Happy knitting!
So simple thank you for great video
Glad it was helpful! Happy knitting!
Absolute genius!!! Thank you for sharing this!!!
You're very welcome! Happy knitting!
Great explanation.
Thanks so much! Happy knitting!
Thanks! You’ve explained it so well!
Thanks for watching! Happy knitting!
Excellent tutorial, thank you.
Glad it was helpful!
OMG!! This is genius!
It's such a cool technique! We were super excited to share this one!
Very clear. What if you are doing 3 row stripes? Thank you.
Asking same question for two row stripes! Answers?
Great question! For multi-row stripes, you'll need to use a "jogless stripes" technique - Purl Soho has a good tutorial here: ua-cam.com/video/GUxFy_DKTeM/v-deo.html
Great question! For multi-row stripes, you'll need to use a "jogless stripes" technique - Purl Soho has a good tutorial here: ua-cam.com/video/GUxFy_DKTeM/v-deo.html
Amazing! I'm relatively new to knitting - how might you decrease on the round to make a hat while maintaining the helical stripe? 🤔
Great question! You can decrease as usual (K2tog, SSK, etc) with this technique, just make sure your color change isn't happening where your decreases are (you might need to change color a few stitches sooner or later). Happy striping!
Thank you for this simply and easy tutorial! I'm going to incorporate it tonight since this came at just the right time...
Glad it was helpful!
Would love to see how you switch colors through raglan increases. Love this technique but got to where a color change was happening at the Increase point and froze
Hello! In this case, you can shift your color change to a couple of stitches before or after your raglan increases - with a 1x1 stripe it will hide pretty well!
Thank you for sharing this Jared! I used this method on the Ginn I knit for Tolt but do have a question for you. I seemed to have a probably finishing my helical knitting. Could you show how you stop using one yarn? Because basically you have 2 spirals you're knitting, right? But when you want to stop using a yarn, you have to jump up to the next row to keep working...at least that's what I found. Hmmm...would love a tutorial that shows how to stop using this method while knitting. :).
Wow...can't wait to try this! Thanks
Brilliant ❤
Thanks for watching! Happy helixing!
Thank you! How did you get the edge to lie flat rather than curl up? It all looks like plain knit.
Sneaky video trick - we always steam our swatches to make them look nice & flat before we film!
Thank you!!
You're very welcome! Happy knitting!
Great video.I used it and it works a treat. What do I do with the slip stitches when the pattern wants me to K2tog (crown shaping a dolls hat)? 🙏🏻❤️
Hi Caro! Great question! You can shift the BOR so it's between decreases as you start the shaping - as with many things in knitting, it might take a little trial and error to decide where you want everything to line up. Let us know how you get on!
So it uses more yarn, right? We should figure yards needed differently in patterns?
Hello! Since you're only knitting with one color per round, it won't use any additional yardage.
@@BrooklynTweed_Official yes. I thought you were carrying the yarn, but you're leaving it to pick up later or the next round.
Hello, how do you bring all the yarns back to end on the same round? I've been knitting the body of a sweater with 3 skeins of the "same" color. Now I need to split for the hem and want to use one skein for the short rows.
Hello! You can simply drop the stripes you don't want to continue with and work your end-of-round stitches in your main color: ua-cam.com/video/c7QRehYUd-k/v-deo.html
I’m trying this for the first time. I have an even number of stitches. My 3 slipped stitches are always before the BOR, so I’m ending up with a lump of the same color just before the BOR, which is not shifting position. How do I prevent that?
Took me a minute, but I’ve figured it out! Enjoying learning a new technique.
Awesome! Happy knitting!
If you're on circulars - do you have to do magic loop or can you simply user a shorter needle length? Thank you
Hi Olivia! You can use the needle length of your preference - we used magic loop here so that we could make a smaller circular swatch. Happy helical knitting!
I am helix knitting a sleeve with 4 colors with each row a different color repeated. I have to increase up the arm. I started with 10 stitches per color but as I increase the number of stitches will vary per color. Does that matter?
Hi Susan! Great question! It shouldn't make a difference, as where you start your next color is totally arbitrary, and your round marker is really just keeping track of how far in to make your increases. Just keep chasing your stripes around! (Let us know how your project turns out!)
Hi. What about binding in helical striping?
Great question! For a smooth bind off, we recommend ending your stripes and transitioning back to a single color before binding off -simply stop working the “stripe” color and overtake the join point with your main color, then continue knitting as usual.
Hi, can you do this with more than 2 colours like 3, 4 or 5?
Hi Joy! You absolutely can! Basically you'll divide your round into sections, start each color in a separate section, then keep spiraling the colors around in sections as you go. Purl Soho (one of our wonderful stockists) has an excellent Helix Knitting Tutorial video that demonstrates this with four colors.
I’m working on a sweater and the sleeve has garter stitch, the rest is stockinette. I’m having issues when I’m doing helical with purling. Any tips? Also, what about helical when you have to increase? Sometimes the increase has to happen within the 3 stitches that need to be slipped. Thanks
Hello, thank you for your question! I asked my team if they had any advice, and this is what my teammate Allison had to say: "I usually just fudge. I'll slip two or four instead of three to avoid an increase or decrease. The garter on the sleeve may be hard. It's okay to have longer stretches between switching, so maybe she could just set herself up to skip over the garter and never have that be the point of alternating?"
All of this to say - it's really up to you and what you're comfortable with! -Mary
If you are knitting helical striping and want to continue to knit with only one color. How do you knit the last round? Second question: is it the best way to start the helical knitting at the beginning of a round & do you have to stop knitting the stripes at the end of a original round. Let's say you are knitting socks cuff down using helical knitting.
Great question! To end, you just need to stop working the “stripe” color and overtake the join point with your main yarn, then continue knitting normally with one color. As far as a starting point, it’s arbitrary. Starting at BOR is easy and clear, but not totally necessary, since once you get going the BOR is completely arbitrary for your color changes. It only remains there to give you a sense for when to work shaping, etc.
Excellent! Thank you. Very easy to knit helical stripes. Really appreciate it. I will give it a try one day.
okay but how do I start it and how do I avoid there being a jog for each color at the top and bottom where the spiral stops and starts? It's easiest to see at about 11:06. I'd rather just never do one-row stripes if there's not a way to hide that better. Maybe that sounds unreasonable to some folks but I'm learning to knit after 20 years of crochet, and crochet easily can do either spiral or alternating stripes without a big gross looking jog like that so I feel like there ought to be a way. This isn't jogless and I'm getting really mad about the last eight videos in a row claiming to show how to do jogless one row stripes being a lie
Hi Lesika! You may find TechKnitter's informative 3-part series on jogless stripes useful:
Part 1: techknitting.blogspot.com/2011/02/article-and-video-on-jogless-stripes.html
Part 2: techknitting.blogspot.com/2011/03/helix-barberpole-stripes-part-2-of.html
Part 3: techknitting.blogspot.com/2011/03/jogless-stripes-pretty-picture-version.html
Happy knitting!
What kind of needles are used here?
Hi Josh! Those are Jared's favorite Skacel addiClicks. Thanks for watching!
@@BrooklynTweed_Official aw nice! I wish I liked addi as much as Jared!
This may be a stupid question but why is it called 1x1?
Not at all! "1 x 1" here refers to each stripe being one round high. Happy knitting!
Je kunt de video langzamer afspelen door te vertragen. Bij instellingen= het radertje
It is not necessary to slip three stitches when we change the yarn
Agreed. And if it were, why three?
Maybe not but it’s more seamless than just joining; but there’s always someone who knows more than everyone else!😊
I have learnt thou trials, that I only need to slip 2 sts. Doesn't mean I know more than any one else. That was a rude comment to make
This is stockinette... and why this is not curling up at the bottom?
Being knit in the round helps - and we always give our swatches a nice steaming before they appear on camera!
@@BrooklynTweed_Official Thank You ❤️😊
Beaucoup trop rapide !!
Merci pour votre commentaire! Nous garderons cela à l'esprit pour les prochains tutoriels.