Now that I know I will have enough yarn to make the sweater, I need to figure out exactly where to change to the next colorway. Since I’m working top-down, all the shaping starts right after CO, so I expect the first color to be used for quite a few more rows than the other colors will be, simply because those initial rows are so short.
Tag Archives: Charts
Need to Reverse Shaping?
Why did it take so long for me to get this chapter out, considering it’s been more than a month since “Motif Starting Points” was uploaded? Because this topic needs four separate versions. Whether you’re a traditional or mirror-image knitter, and whether you chart on paper or in the computer, there’s a version written just for you. Two options times two options is four combinations, so that’s why there are four versions.
While it’s true that there is quite a lot of overlap between the four versions, there are enough differences that it was completely impractical for me to write a single version and leave you, dear reader, on the hook to read at each point the exact information you need while skipping over the material for the three combos you don’t need. More work for me, less work for you!
I did quite the little merry-go-round with the four versions, making a change in one, then propagating it through the other three as needed. But it’s done, and I’m tired, so I think I’ll work on some of the part 4 chapters as a break.
As always, please e-mail me if (when!) you find errors or have a question.
Why Does a Knitting Blog Have Computer Tips?
I created my own knitting font, so the first thing I do is type up a project’s instructions as a chart (or charts, if necessary). Since I do my charts in my word processor, I always save early, save often as I’m typing them.