“My Kniterate is Here! Now What?”

Even if you’ve read the Kniterate manual and all the support pages, it’s difficult to remember the exact answer when you need it or to figure out where to look when all you want to do is get knitting. Based on the most common issues I’ve heard, I’ve provided a little quick guidance for anyone who’s set up the machine but can’t manage to get the knitting started.

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O! Jolly!
A Good Tuck, Part 2

Tuck stitches can be created on any type of machine — manual, punch card, and electronic machines. They are often used in combination with other techniques, such as slip stitches, cables, and colorwork, to create complex and intricate patterns.

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O! Jolly!
A Good Tuck

Fabrics made with tuck stitches are typically wider and shorter. Knitting tuck loops on a needle over several rows will create added depth. With different color feeds, they can be a great way to hide and reveal colors. 

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O! Jolly!
Unexpected Swatches

Both of these swatches were knitted on a Kniterate. Each was a surprise in its own way. As I see it, unexpected swatches fall into two categories.

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O! Jolly!
A Little Lace

“Lace is composed of three elements: openings, lines, and solid areas,” state Susanna Lewis and Julia Weissman in A Machine Knitter’s Guide to Creating Fabrics. Frankly, my experience with “true” lace, the type made by transferring stitches laterally, is limited. Creating those openings means making transfers, and transfers can be tedious on a hand knitting machine. Before Kniterate, I stayed away.

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O! Jolly!
Texture for Days

I truly admire beautiful colorwork in sweater knits, but my main interest has always been developing texture. So after my initial adventure with jacquards on the Kniterate, I was excited to see what textures I could produce.

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O! Jolly!
Double Jersey Jacquards

Programming a double jacquard pattern for the Kniterate is as easy as drawing the design in the browser-based app or importing a premade .jpg or .png file into the app. There can be up to six colors per row.

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O! Jolly!
First Swatch

My self-imposed mission was to see how quickly and easily I could come up with a viable swatch. I had already knitted elements from the Kniterate sampler — garter ridges, a basket weave, and pointelle — but I had never used the proprietary design app.

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O! Jolly!
The Reboot — This Time with Kniterate

Welcome to Knitting in the Fast Lane! On this hot August day in these rapidly evolving and often uncertain times, I’m so fortunate to be standing here in my home/studio/office in front of my Kniterate knitting machine. If the name of this blog sounds familiar, you’ve been following me for a long time, and I thank you!

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O! Jolly!