machine knitting midgauge standard bulky machknit knit machine-knit patterns

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

DesignaKnit Lettering

Now, why didn't I think of this before?

I am making these scarves with words on them. The first one (black and white) I used lower case lettering and capitalized where appropriate. With two plain rows between lines of text, I had rows with just a few stitches in them and gargantuan floats. Think the bottom of a 'y' or a 'g' or the tops of 't' or 'h' for some examples. So, thinking I could get more stitches to appear across the row, I moved the text up so some things sort of overlapped. Still had gargantuan long floats, had to do a lot of wrapping with separate lengths of yarn, very very tedius. Looks ok on the front, but harder than machine knitting is meant to be. I didn't want to do dbj so felt I was stuck.

Then, while fooling around designing the second scarf, I did all the text in capital letters. There are two plain rows between each line of text. Voila' no trailers hanging down or sticking up!!! Such a simple thing and it will make knitting the scarf 10x faster!!! See the screen captures below:


Even if you don't use DesignaKnit but use some other method of inputting designs (text) into your knitting machine, I'm thinking this might help you.

3 comments:

rett og vrang said...

Very smart of you! Maybe an idea for Valentine, too! Synnøve

Mar said...

I don't know how smart...more of a happy accident. The content of the words lends itself to capital letters, so that helps too. It's college fight song words.

rett og vrang said...

I had a customer who bought CK35 - many years ago. She used the newspaper - she was knitting lots of stufs with this patterns. I don't know where she is now, but the idea was really good! Synnøve