Yarn falls off my needles
I have been knitting. Even though I have not been posting, I have not been slacking. That fact is that despite a week in DC (technically, Northern Virginia) getting up to speed at my new job, I have almost finished another object. Said business trip cut into my knitting time, although I did manage a little in the hotel in the evenings.
I’m having a problem with my current project. The project is knit in the round. It is large enough that I’m presently using six dpns. There are enough stitches on the needles that they’re spreading out the full length of the needle and falling off both ends. I have recovered the last stitch or two from my non-working needles many, many times today. The most problematic stitch, however, is the stitch at the far end of the needle I’m working the stitches from. I’m losing that stitch about every other needle. I am knitting with crochet hooks and extra needles on standby.
One solution would be to switch to circular needles which I don’t have – but may end up owning much sooner than anticipated. What are good ones? I see these kits that have eight or ten different sizes of needle and three or five different lengths of cable. Are they any good? How are the joins? I’m going to be using very soft handspun alpaca, so if it can catch on the joins, it will catch on the joins.
I have plastic stoppers – point covers – whatever the proper name is – for my larger needles. I haven’t found any small enough for the size one and two DPNs I’m using. Do such things exist? Where should I look for them?
Right now, believe it or not, I am tying the stitches onto the needles using pieces of scrap yarn. I wrap the yarn around the stitches right below the needle – basically gathering the stitches – and tie it so the stitches can’t spread out enough on the needle to fall off the ends. It works, but it’s a royal pain to tie one needle and untie the next every time I change needles. It’s better than grabbing the crochet hook and fishing a stitch that’s run several rows in dark, handspun, alpaca, but it’s still a pain.
Help. There has got to be a better way? Suggestions?
6 comments
As for the point protectors for dpns, what I usually do is fold the project so that the needles line up and put one protector on all the needles. I've also used a pakage of mechanical pencil/pen erasers for individual needles, and they worked well, however, I had the ones that were intended to erase pen and I think that the grit in the eraser was hard on the tips of my needles, YMMV. Cork also works well, but can be unweildy for one needle unless it's cut down. I've been meaning to pick up an eraser stick, intended to refill one of those eraser pens, and cut my own point protectors out of it but haven't stirred my lazy self enough to do it. :)
If nothing else, I'd think a rubber band might be a reasonable replacement for the yarn ties in your current method.
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11/18/07 08:13:20 pm,