Posts Tagged ‘eastern european knitting’
Understanding Eastern Knitting and Western Knitting Styles and Knitting Faster
Understanding Eastern Knitting and Western Knitting Styles and Knitting Fast
In this article I will explain the difference between the Eastern and Western styles of knitting and how not to get confused. There will be some instruction in how to do them, yet while this is not so much a knitting lesson, what you learn here may be of great use to the beginner or transitioner. Read the rest of this entry »
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The Secret of Correct Yarn-overs in Portuguese Knitting
Knitting Backwards Without Twisting Stitches
A subscriber to this blog, a gentleman from Oregon, asked me how not to twist stitches when knitting backwards and forwards, meaning without turning the work. Without careful examination it’s easy to mess up. This article will give you an exact understanding of loops and what they do when you do things to them.
This will also help you understand what it means in any instructions when you are told to “knit into the back of the loop,” which is a rather hazy instruction if you ask me.
While knitting backwards is certainly a challenge to one’s skills I think Read the rest of this entry »
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Worsted Weight Socks That Don’t Hurt
I’ve worn my share of heavy socks and found that its like walking on beads or gravel. If you are tender footed like me and need heavy socks for cold weather you know they are a bit uncomfortable, especially when you first start walking around in them. It feels like something is gnawing at your soles. Even after you get used to it the irritation is still Read the rest of this entry »
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Eastern European Knitting Note
POST UPDATED May 9, 2010
One snag I found with knitting this style is that MY knitting in the round resulted in twisted stitches. I checked with Gail at Gail Knits and she pointed out that you have to watch the loop you are working on. I learned that if you always work with the side of the loop nearest the tip you won’t get a twisted knit or pearl. With EEK you need to watch this, but regardless of your knitting style you always have to understand which way to wrap the yarn and what will twist and not twist the loops. When I asked Gail she said you can’t knit in the round with EEK. But now I wonder what style of Eastern European knitting she is using. Apparently there are different ones.
I also learned from Gail that k2tog and ssk are kind of reversed with EEK. Ssk is just k2tog through the back of the loop, and k2tog is slip and turn 2, slip back to the left and then k2tog through the front loops. So remember that if you are switching to or learning EEK that some stitches will be done differently.
Since I use both, i find swapping between EEK and PK is like speaking two different languages. You have to change how you think. Practice!
UPDATE: I had written in a previous version of this post that couldn’t knit in the round with EEK, but Cyndi commented a few days ago that I was misinformed. So I watched more videos on Eastern European knitting and tried it again and found I was NOT getting twisted stitches in the round. I don’t know what I was doing before, but it was wrong, and maybe Gail is doing a different method of Eastern European knitting.
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Eastern European Knitting, a.k.a Combined Knitting?
Last Sunday I went to my nearest local yarn/knitting shop, Gails Knits, to take advantage of their summer sale and bought yarn for my first project, the cabled scarf with seed stitch border you see in the page header (That’s a pic from the book – I haven’t started the scarf yet, but I did pick red. ) and as I was checking out I told Gail about the Portuguese Knitting DVD and how much I liked the style. I showed her the basics, and she in turn showed me her style, which is eastern european knitting (EEK). Apparently, it’s pretty rare. She said there was an article some years ago in a knitting magazine that listed the top ten styles of knitting, and it was number 9.
It turns out it is a bit faster than Portuguese knitting, seemingly having one less step in that you don’t have to flick the yarn over the needle. That’s not a big chore, but when I was watching Gail demonstrate it she was amazingly fast. I’ll have links to videos and pages here soon. It’s a variant of continental knitting, a pick style, and is quite worthwhile.
I’m still practicing but I did find that it wasn’t so great for a bulky yarn. I am doing a cossack hat from the Folk Hats book by Vicki Square and even with my nice and pointy new Options Nickel Plated circulars didn’t work so well on the thick, bulky Wool-ease yarn by Lion Brand when using EEK. I couldn’t catch the yarn and pull it through. So I tried the Portuguese knitting and it was much easier.
That’s interesting and handy to know. Now we have more tools with which to knit. I’ve learned one should choose carefully from knitting style, yarn material, yarn thickness, needle material and pattern. When I started out I would never have thought it mattered.
Here’s what the hat will look like when done:

The cossack hat in the book.
The hat is from Folk Hats by Vicki Square, pages 88-90. This one uses a bouclet yarn which seems to emulate shearling. I may do one with black later. For now I’m just re-using the yarn from the crochet scarf I killed playing with my new ball winder.





