I am doing a test knit and someone suggested I use LBJ method for floats. I did a search and you popped up into my feed!!! What a treasure you are! Thanks for all the great videos!
Very helpful. I was thankful for the section about watching in the browser vs the app. I also prefer the browser as I can bookmark a video in one of my specific knitting folders. Thank you so much for your dedication to educating fellow knitters.
Suzanne, thanks to you ive been able to finish my first knitted sweater ever! thanks for your videos, they are great and i hope you keep uploading them, cheers
this is a great video....i always tell people that if you have access to the internet, you have access to the largest library in human history....and you can find most of the information for free....i learned how to knit completely from watching Suzanne and other channels on youtube....my roommate learned how to fix his friend's car from youtube....you can learn anything from youtube....no excuses
Thank you - here is the link to the interview with Romi - ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-s4uJ49Tnap0.html. Please consider subscribing to my channel if you haven't already.
Thank you for this! It was as helpful as your knitting videos. I would love to see one on navigating Ravelry. I didn't know you had another channel. I will check it out. Stay safe.
Hi Suzanne, I'm so happy I found your channel. Majority of the channels concentrate on crochet. I do crochet but I enjoy knitting however I lack the techniques. I think I found your channel when I was looking for the meaning of YRN & YON. i'm trying to learn how to make a baby cardigan and some of the abbreviation are not clear, also the pattern is missing some steps which I had to figure out on my own.Thank you for this tutorial. I thought I'm a tech savvy but I have learned so much from this video, Not worry i love long videos especially if I'm learning. I will be checking out your Off the cuff chan as well. 😊 Tina
I love your videos and wonder if you can answer a question for me... I typically use a provisional CO when I am knitting sweaters from the bottom up so I can block the garment and then decide at the end how long I want/need the ribbing to be. I also like to use the "Italian bind off" (which I learned from you!) after ribbing. A couple of times, I didn't use a provisional CO and I just picked up stitches from the CO edge at the end and ribbed that way and it seems to work just fine. Twice I actually just slid a circular needle into each cast on stitch and ribbed from there. Is there a reason not to do this (i.e., skip the provisional co and just pick up stitches for ribbing)? I searched the internet and the only thing I found was a post on reddit that claimed this would make the bottom of the knitting less stretchy than ribbing from a provisional CO. Do you know if this is true?
QUESTION. Hello Suzanne, I have tried to find if you have done a video tutorial on knitting V neck ribbing decrease with centre stitch. I cant seem to get my head around where exactly how many stitches before the middle stitch where to begin. My pattern is a double decrease. Rib to within 2 sts of centre stitch, K2 tog ( I presume includes the middle stitch and the 1 stitch BEFORE the middle stitch, both Knitted together knit wise), P1, K2 tog knitwise (not into the back loop) Next row: rib to within 2 sts of centre st, K2tog, P1, K2tog tbl, rib to end (K1, P1 rib in my case). So is this the stitch before the middle stitch or 2 stitches BEFORE the middle stitch? Im feeling a real dummy. Can you help please? I live in Australia and cant find any decent youtube videos.
For your pattern, that purl stitch is the center stitch. There are various ways to make the center stitch. Your pattern is using the k2tog on either side of that purl stitch as the decreases. So when the pattern says to rib within 2 stitches of the center stitch, that purl is the center stitch and is not included in the two stitches. Hope this helps you.