So glad I found your tutorial. I used this stitch to join the edges of a knitted pillow I made. This stitch makes the edges look really tidy and professional. Love it. Thanks for posting.
Thku sooooo much for this. I absolutely love 💗 all your tutorials. Always so well presented and easy to follow. I used it to join a beanie that was K2 P2 rib almost looked like it had been done in the round! When I reached turn up at the bottom, I just turned the beanie inside out and worked the magic seam on the right sides so it matched the rest of the beanie. Thku all the way from South Africa where it is ❄️ now and we are wearing beanies! 🇿🇦
I just finished pair of writers with this edging. Now I have a great way to finish them. Love all your videos. You have been a main source of help and information for me. Keep up the good work.
Holy cow!! This is fantastic. Mattress seams are so bulky. I don't like that bulk with dropped sleeves or on sampler-square afghans. And at times I have to join a worked edge with a bound-off or cast-on edge: this will work for that situation so very nicely.
I shared this with a FB group. I am saving this for when my hand heals, sure look forward to using this, THANK YOU EVER SO MUCH! It looks like to me if one did it inside out it would actually be a pretty design feature, just my thought.
Thank you for sharing this tutorial with your friends. And thanks for the clever suggestion. I completely agree - the wrong side of this seam is not "wrong" at all :-)
I've been trying different methods of joining the shoulder seams of a bulky knit top. They all made a big lump on the wrong side of the work. This looks like just what I was looking for! Thanks so much.
Thank you for this tutorial. It has made the slipped edges of my sleeves so easy to sew even with the increase rows. Makes my sweater look more professional! 🙂
Would this method still work if you slip the first and last stitches on the right sides of the work and purl the first and last stitches on the wrong sides?
to make the side chain, do you always slip the first st as if to P and P the last stitch? I am searching your tutorials but so far cannot locate this basic notion ... this is so beautiful I don't want to mess it up on a hat that I am knitting in simple ridge st which has a bunch of garter rows punctuated by 2 K rows. Since it is so easy I want to concentrate on construction.
Yes, Barbara, I slip the first and purl the last stitch of every row to make the slip stitch selvedges. The full tutorial about this method is at www.10rowsaday.com/slipstitch-selvedge Happy knitting :-)
Having literally no sewing skills, and having to sew pieces of a knitted vest together, This technique is perfect for what I need. Thank you!
So glad I found your tutorial. I used this stitch to join the edges of a knitted pillow I made. This stitch makes the edges look really tidy and professional. Love it. Thanks for posting.
I love this! Thank you so much, you have an answer to EVERY knitting question i have.
Thank you so much, Jeanne :-) Happy knitting!
Wonderdul, clear and very useful. Many thanks.
You are most welcome, Kate :-) Happy knitting!
What a perfect seam. I love it!! Very timely too. I will use this to seam a bolero I'm making for my daughter. Thank you!!!
very useful tutorial!! will definitely be using this on my next project.
note to self: 6:10
Thku sooooo much for this. I absolutely love 💗 all your tutorials. Always so well presented and easy to follow. I used it to join a beanie that was K2 P2 rib almost looked like it had been done in the round! When I reached turn up at the bottom, I just turned the beanie inside out and worked the magic seam on the right sides so it matched the rest of the beanie. Thku all the way from South Africa where it is ❄️ now and we are wearing beanies! 🇿🇦
Thank you, Ruth. I'm so happy this seam worked well for your beanie. Enjoy wearing it and stay warm :-)
Thankyou i found this tutorial very helpful
I just finished pair of writers with this edging. Now I have a great way to finish them. Love all your videos. You have been a main source of help and information for me. Keep up the good work.
Holy cow!! This is fantastic. Mattress seams are so bulky. I don't like that bulk with dropped sleeves or on sampler-square afghans. And at times I have to join a worked edge with a bound-off or cast-on edge: this will work for that situation so very nicely.
I shared this with a FB group. I am saving this for when my hand heals, sure look forward to using this, THANK YOU EVER SO MUCH! It looks like to me if one did it inside out it would actually be a pretty design feature, just my thought.
Thank you for sharing this tutorial with your friends. And thanks for the clever suggestion. I completely agree - the wrong side of this seam is not "wrong" at all :-)
I've been trying different methods of joining the shoulder seams of a bulky knit top. They all made a big lump on the wrong side of the work. This looks like just what I was looking for! Thanks so much.
Exactly what I was looking for, thank you for sharing🧶💓
Your videos are the best! Thanks.
I much prefer this seam. Thank you!
Brilliant seaming technique! Thank you! I enjoy all of your tutorials. They are very clearly presented and easy to follow. Happy New Year:)
Thank you, Nancy :-) Happy New Year to you too!
Thanks!
Thank you so much, Catherine 🙏
Thank you for this tutorial. It has made the slipped edges of my sleeves so easy to sew even with the increase rows. Makes my sweater look more professional! 🙂
perfect! I've tried to do mattress on slipstich edges in the past & you're right it's too loose, and slightly ugly too
Awesome! love your tutorial. Thanks 🙂
Thank you - what a great tutorial
Happy New Year and thank you for another fabulous tutorial!
Thank you, Chris :-) I'm glad you like this little technique. Happy New Year!
Very pretty seam! Thank you. 💞
Beautiful, can I use this stich in sawing a cardigan?
Of course. Whenever you need to seam edges formed by slip-stitch selvedges, this is a great method to use.
Love this. Thank you.
Excellent, I'm highly thankful to you. Pl make a video of attaching lace edging to Shawl or scarf.
You can use baseball stitch explained in this tutorial - www.10rowsaday.com/baseball-stitch Happy knitting :-)
@@10rowsaday Thanks Ma'am.
Thank you.
Fabulous tip! Thanks
Thank you!
Thank you! A great help!!
Would this method still work if you slip the first and last stitches on the right sides of the work and purl the first and last stitches on the wrong sides?
Because the selvedges you described are also slip-stitch selvedges, I think this method should work fine.
excellent !!!!
Many thanks!!
to make the side chain, do you always slip the first st as if to P and P the last stitch? I am searching your tutorials but so far cannot locate this basic notion ... this is so beautiful I don't want to mess it up on a hat that I am knitting in simple ridge st which has a bunch of garter rows punctuated by 2 K rows. Since it is so easy I want to concentrate on construction.
Yes, Barbara, I slip the first and purl the last stitch of every row to make the slip stitch selvedges. The full tutorial about this method is at www.10rowsaday.com/slipstitch-selvedge Happy knitting :-)