Showing posts with label double.knitting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label double.knitting. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

Exploring the Mystery of Double Knitting

Hat rolled in up position
Some of the ladies in my Kansas Knits group wanted to know how I double knit. This is the answer I gave. You can find the pattern at http://alison. knitsmiths. us/pattern_ double_knit_ cap.html

The designer used a bigger needle and cast on a different number of stitches, but I find 72/144 on size 5 needles works for worsted weight yarn. Your mileage may vary depending upon how tightly or loosely you knit.

Double Knitting as I Do It: Basically you are carrying two unrelated items on your needles at the same time. The only thing the two parts of my hat have in common is the cast on row. After casting on, the front and back grow independently. I just knit them simultaneously. You don't knit one row, purl one row. You do them stitch by stitch -- one stitch knit, one stitch purl.

I know -- clear as mud.

I'll describe my hat. It takes 72 stitches on size 5 needles to go around an average head. Therefore I cast on twice that number of stitches in my alternate (inside) color. 144 stitches.

After joining the circle, I begin double knitting. I tie in the primary (front) color and knit every other stitch with the primary color. I carry this yarn in my right hand and knit American with it. At the same time, I purl the off stitches with the alternate color. I carry this yarn in my left hand and form the purl stitches by Continental knitting. The switching between American and Continental knitting is not required. It just helps me keep my yarns straight.



Knit one with primary color. Pull yarn to front.
Purl one with alternate color. Leave yarn in back.
Pick up primary color and form the next knit stitch.

The back side of each row goes to the inside of the hat, so it is important that you develop the rhythm for bringing your primary yarn to the front so it lays inside against the purl layer, and the alternate yarn to the back so it also rides between the layers. You don't want to wrap that loose yarn the wrong way or it will show on the outside layers of the hat. Continue around.

At first the hat seems way too big because you see all of the 144 cast on stitches. After a few rows are on the needles the two layers have separated and the hat miraculously fits a head. Half the stitches are riding behind the other half forming the inside layer of the hat.

Once you get the rhythm, it's fun to do double knit, but frustrating because everything takes twice as long to make. The last hat I made I wanted to have done for a birthday. I figured if I sat up watching a movie, I would finish it about 2 AM. I ended up watching 4 movies and saw the sun come up. The hat was finished at 8:30 AM. Expect double knit to take extra time -- oh and don't watch interesting movies. I think I lost track of the knitting in there somewhere and got engrossed in the shows. :)

Hat in down position
One comment about length. I rarely make the hat the length given in the original pattern. My son wants to roll the cuff twice over his ears for maximum warmth, so I generally have 9 inches (or more) between the cast on row and the first band of alternate color. The orange hat above is about that long. Perhaps I'll add a couple more inches next time so we cannot see the grandson make rude gestures with his mouth.

Wednesday, January 17, 2007

Double Knit Hats for the Boys of all Ages

This is a wonderful, warm hat pattern. I found it at the following site : http://alison.knitsmiths.us/pattern_double_knit_cap.html
It's so much fun to do double knit and watch both layers grow as you go! It is a standard watch-cap style ski hat. My husband, Pat, wanted a cuff that the original pattern didn't have, so I added two inches before doing the stripes. That means his hat is 7 inches to the first stripe instead of 5 inches.My son wants even more length because he wants to roll the cuff twice. I anticipate 9-12 inches before the first stripe on the next hat I make him. (Pretty soon I'll just make him a hooded sweater and be done with it. :) )

Many of the hats I have mader are made with two colors of Lion Brand Wool-Ease. I used needles that let me knit to gauge, but it still came out too large. The pattern says to cast on 164 stitches. I cast on 154 stitches. (That means the decreases begin at 5 not 7 later on.) It is still loose on Pat, so I plan to make the grandsons' hats 144 stitches in circumference. The hat in the photo was made of Red Heart acrylic using size 6 needles. I cast on 72/144 stitches for this hat. This number of stitches means you have six decreases evenly spaced 12 stitches apart (for the first decrease.) Easy math!
I've made the pattern twice now. My son, Joe, who is going to college at Emporia State University requested one last winter because his ears got so cold when the wind came whistling down between the buildings on winter days. He's a well-fed young man with a luxurious shock of hair. I made it to gauge, but still had to take out those ten stitches from the circumference the pattern. I made his hat from Red Heart acrylic yarn I had in my stash. I wanted something he could mistreat and keep on going. It's stood up well, but he is hinting he wants one like Pat's that has a longer body. It still doesn't cover his ears as far as he'd like. Personally, I think he really wants a double knit ski mask. Hm... wonder if anyone has a pattern for one of those?