Picking up stitches for a perfect neckline // Technique Tuesday

Тәжірибелік нұсқаулар және стиль

This video explains how to calculate the number of stitches you will need to pick up and knit in each section of your neckline, how to plan for neckline symmetry (stitch counts and stitch pattern placement), the ratio of stitches to pick up along different types of edges (horizontal, vertical, and diagonal), and how to make corrections to your stitch count if you discover your stitch count is off after you've finished picking up stitches.
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My knitting designs: www.ravelry.com/designers/rox...
More videos on picking up stitches: • Picking Up Stitches
Playlist of videos on finishing techniques: • Finishing Techniques
Central Double Decreases and Twisted CDD: • Central Double Decreas...
Needles used in video demonstration: Signature Needle Arts fixed length circular needle, US size 7/4.5mm, 32'' length (discontinued)
Yarn used in video demonstration: Plymouth Worsted Merino Superwash Solids, color 56 (Turquoise)
The sweater was knit using as a basis a child's size raglan with V-neck from The Knitter's Handy Book of Sweater Patterns by Ann Budd amzn.to/45kaFKu
The stitch patterns for the front panel are from Twisted-Stitch Knitting by Maria Erlbacher amzn.to/3EZMsyz
Amazon links are affiliate links. As an Amazon associate, I earn a small commission on purchases made through the link, at no additional cost to you.
If you have questions about this video, or suggestions for future videos, please let me know down in the comments or on social media.
0:00 Introduction
1:37 Setting Up
2:53 Target Stitch Count
6:57 Pick up ratios
9:56 Pick up and knit
15:31 Correcting the stitch count
21:38 Finished result
Rox Rocks Ravelry group: www.ravelry.com/groups/rox-rocks
IG: / roxmpls
Twitter: / roxmpls

Пікірлер: 41

  • @patriciaharpell8967
    @patriciaharpell89679 ай бұрын

    You are a fount of knowledge, Roxanne. Thank you for sharing it with us in such an understandable way.

  • @catherinemelnyk
    @catherinemelnyk9 ай бұрын

    You are such a great teacher Roxanne. I learn so much from your channel. Thank you. 😊❤

  • @beth12svist
    @beth12svist9 ай бұрын

    I am making (slowly) my first self-designed sweater, and opened KZread with the thought of looking up your videos on the subject of sweaters; and the first video on my front page was a new one! Thank you. 😊

  • @asharp6591
    @asharp65919 ай бұрын

    Thanks Roxanne, this is very helpful. I appreciate your expertise !

  • @alexwelsh4336
    @alexwelsh43369 ай бұрын

    Thank you Roxanne. Picking up and knit has always been my pet hate about knitting and now I feel like trying it again 👍🧶

  • @jenniferrich5292
    @jenniferrich52929 ай бұрын

    Clear and precise as usual, with several tips I’ve never thought of, and it turns out, excellent timing. I’m working on a top-down sweater from a pattern, but using a different yarn weight so I’m doing lots of math to get the same dimensions as the schematic. I just put the sleeve stitches on hold yesterday and knitted a couple of inches of body, and now I want to finish the neckline ribbing before I go further, just to make sure all my math has been right so far. But I’ve been avoiding it today because goodness, I hate trying to knit neckline ribbing and getting it wrong the first three times. Roxanne to the rescue!🥰 I’ve been taking notes and I feel ready to go. Thank you so much!

  • @jjperry164
    @jjperry1649 ай бұрын

    I have two thoughts when I watch your videos. "Yes, I knew that" and "I really wish I had known that before this project" Thank you for the detailed video. Picking up stitches is something I have struggled with for a few months because I just haven't found anyone who explained it so well.

  • @nusratzaro152
    @nusratzaro1529 ай бұрын

    Thankyou sharing your expertise, enjoyedwatching it,

  • @nicolelafontaine1720
    @nicolelafontaine17209 ай бұрын

    Just on time, I am working my first bottom up sweater and I'll have to pick up stitches for neck and arms. Thanks so much !!!

  • @laurasharp7955
    @laurasharp79559 ай бұрын

    Thanks for that very valuable info 😉🧶👍

  • @ShehnazKhan1
    @ShehnazKhan19 ай бұрын

    I was just researching on how to pick up stitches for the neckline yesterday! Thank you! ❤

  • @xbaczewska4197
    @xbaczewska41979 ай бұрын

    Oh wow! Great teaching. Fabulous to know the different edge directions and their ratios. Plus so good to "knit along" with you to see each result. So many times a directive will say "do this..." & knitter's response is "...AND???" Thanks for clarifying ALL the steps.

  • @AmoCultumAlo
    @AmoCultumAlo9 ай бұрын

    Thank you! What a fantastic deep dive! I've been wondering for a while now how this all works, so this is wonderful!

  • @lynntimmer1620
    @lynntimmer16209 ай бұрын

    Brilliantly demonstrated and explained, as always! Thank you!

  • @mistyblue5312
    @mistyblue53129 ай бұрын

    The sharing of your prodigious knowledge of all things knitting is so appreciated by all of us! Thanks Rox - you totally Rock!👏👏👏💐

  • @DreamWeavr
    @DreamWeavr9 ай бұрын

    I always learn something new from your videos, and I have been knitting 43 years. Thank you.

  • @sharongrist4200
    @sharongrist42009 ай бұрын

    I have been knitting seriously for 30 years and learned a lot from this video! Thank you.

  • @user-ss5ro5mq3l
    @user-ss5ro5mq3l9 ай бұрын

    WOW, watching you is such a pleasure. Your teaching is phenomenal!!! Thank you.

  • @mariehansen2534
    @mariehansen25349 ай бұрын

    Thank you Roxanne you all go that extra mile to make sure that not have you said it properly but that we understand the process. I haven't knit a 'v' neck sweater lately but its good to know the intensity is there if I need it. Enjoy your trip, travel well and take care. See you when you get back.

  • @lindareid4546
    @lindareid45469 ай бұрын

    Excellent! Thank you❤

  • @lindagates9150
    @lindagates91509 ай бұрын

    Thanks you for this tutorial. I have used tips from past tutorials and things I have learned in my sixty mumble years of knitting to make my first sweater without a pattern 😅. I learned the long tail cast-on as a Brownie in the 1950’s thank you for giving me the tools to get the results that I want. I could rephrase my mother who said no recipe is written in stone my first sweater was a hot mess I gave the pieces to my grandmother in the seventies she blocked it instead of frogging it warts and all like the picked up stitches that were twisted. She was still wearing it even though the elbows had been mended multiple times in what ever green she had on hand. I know for certain that I was loved she must have felt my love each time she wore it wrapped in the arms I knitted.😢I am positive that your family feels the love that you give them with the hats, socks and sweaters 😊🌟🍀❤️🍀🌟🖖🖖🖖👵🏻👍👍👍🌟🍀❤️🍀🌟👋🏻🧝🏼🤚🏻

  • @majaglusniewska5002
    @majaglusniewska50025 ай бұрын

    Thank you Roxanne! I've just picked up stitches for my first self-designed collar and your explaining of each step eased my mind and anxiety :)

  • @leiterfam
    @leiterfam9 ай бұрын

    Timing is awesome! I’m almost ready for the neck on my FIRST top!

  • @OddlyElly
    @OddlyElly8 ай бұрын

    I'm working on an early 1940s knit jumper and have just sewed up the shoulders but I had no idea how to pickup the stitches to do the ribbing. This has yet again been incredibly helpful! Thank you Roxanne!! ❤ The pattern says to pickup across three double point needles with 42 stitches on each. I think I manage this now 😊

  • @kimbailey4785
    @kimbailey47859 ай бұрын

    Thank yiu for another great Technique Tuesday video. I enjoy all of your contect. Thanks to your help, I finally made a pair of socks that fit correctly!

  • @sheryltisdale
    @sheryltisdale9 ай бұрын

    Thank you Roxanne, very clear video, as always!

  • @feliciaweatherspoon2303
    @feliciaweatherspoon23034 ай бұрын

    Thank you Roxanne, for the tutorial!! ❤

  • @bethliebman8169
    @bethliebman81699 ай бұрын

    Thank you, Rox. I found this video very helpful. I hope to become as meticulous as you.

  • @andreabush1742
    @andreabush17429 ай бұрын

    Amazing tutorial!

  • @tammihackley4349
    @tammihackley43499 ай бұрын

    This was very helpful

  • @Sequoya
    @Sequoya9 ай бұрын

    Great episode!

  • @alanptaylor11
    @alanptaylor116 ай бұрын

    You can do a knit-back-front (kbf) instead of kfb to increase in twisted rib and maintain the pattern.

  • @elizabethborajkiewicz6100
    @elizabethborajkiewicz61009 ай бұрын

    So helpful.....thank you

  • @mongrain8934
    @mongrain89349 ай бұрын

    ❤❤❤

  • @serenityinstitches8236
    @serenityinstitches82369 ай бұрын

    I love your videos! Thank you for sharing your knowledge in a clear & concise way. Have you written any knitting books? And, I love how prominent your raglan increases are on the blue sweater. Are they M1, knit 2, M1? Seems like they must be something else. Thank you! Christina ❤ 🧶

  • @RoxanneRichardson

    @RoxanneRichardson

    9 ай бұрын

    The raglan sweater was knit bottom up, so those are decreases. They are worked so that they are twisted, in keeping with the traveling twisted stitch pattern in the front panel, and the twisted ribbing.

  • @serenahirn194
    @serenahirn1949 ай бұрын

    Fantastic video! I’m just curious why we use the stockinette gauge to determine the ratios. I’ve seen other videos that advise using the ribbing gauge (perhaps measured from the hem). I often have a hard time with measuring the gauge from ribbing because I’m not sure whether to stretch it out or not. So in the end, I almost always use the stockinette stitch/row gauge ratio and it has always worked out! I’d love to understand this concept though!

  • @RoxanneRichardson

    @RoxanneRichardson

    9 ай бұрын

    It depends a bit on what the ribbing is used for. Ribbing contracts when it relaxes, but it stretches to the same maximum amount that stockinette stretches. So for hems, cuffs, and necklines, where you want to take advantage of its ability to pull in, you also want it to stretch to the same amount as the stockinette adjacent to it. (Like at the PU edge, which is the largest circumference the ribbing will span.) In other cases, you may *not* want the ribbing to pull in and be narrower than the stockinette portion. You might want the edges to hang even with the stockinette. If you are knitting something that has very little ease, and you want the bottom ribbing to hang down straight, and not pull in, you would swatch to see what sort of stitch count you'd need to make that happen, and then use fewer sts for the stockinette portion. For buttonbands, you want something inbetween that. You don't want the band to be floppy, but you also don't want it to pull in too much at the top and bottom of the bands. In that case, you might use a slightly different PU ratio than the stockinette gauge, so that there are just enough for the band to need to be slightly stretched to fit the length, and then use techniques at the top and bottom of the band to prevent those dips you can get when ribbing pulls in too much.

  • @serenahirn194

    @serenahirn194

    9 ай бұрын

    thank you so much for that excellent explanation!

  • @marieny4748
    @marieny47489 ай бұрын

    Could you have left your back neck stitches on a holder?

  • @RoxanneRichardson

    @RoxanneRichardson

    9 ай бұрын

    The reason for binding off sts across the back of the neck (and across the front, if you’re doing a crew neck) is to provide lateral stability. The entire weight of the sweater hangs from the shoulders and neck. Depending on how heavy the sweater is, you might be able to get away with it without the sleeves pulling the neck wider and sliding down your arms. It just depends on what other structure you get from the stitch patterns and yarn.

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