I was about 10 or 11 when I learned to crochet. At some craft event at school when I was about 9 we learned to make a
crocheted chain with a finger and yarn. I can still remember that
thrill of having made “something” out of almost nothing. It took a year or two
before I picked up a crochet hook and took the next step from making chains to
that first row into the foundation chain. I’ve crocheted a lot of things over the
years; afghans, toys, candy dispensers, and even clothes.
I always wanted to learn how to knit because to me
crocheted clothes just didn’t cut it (crocheted clothes designs have come a
long way since then) but I couldn’t find anyone who knew how to knit. So when I
was sixteen years old I went to the library and checked out a knitting
dictionary and taught myself how to knit.
I had a rudimentary understanding of knitting and the
only method shown in that library book was American (English) style. It took
forever to knit something. I always joked that I could crochet a house in an
hour but it took six months to make a knit scarf. If I was in the middle of a
row of knitting I could not stop until I got to the end. Nothing could
interrupt my finishing that row or I was lost. Worse, those knit scarves curled
all up. Drove me nuts. My second knit project was a T-style sweater. Yeah, I
tend to jump in with both feet. I’d made a scarf, a sweater was a logical next
project. It turned out all right. Except it was a size 3X and I was a size
small at the time.
I never enjoyed knitting. I was only doing it because I
liked how it looked better than crocheted for some things. Well, many things. I
love my crocheting but it just doesn’t work as well for clothing, including
accessories. I remember when my mom made us crocheted mittens when we were
young. The crocheted mittens were forced upon us. She didn’t care that we
couldn’t move our thumbs or that there were holes letting cold air in, never
mind the fact that they were plain ugly. The crocheted mittens got lost very
quickly.
My knitting needles grew dusty. Somehow over the years a
few lost their mates also. Not sure how that happened but I have many knitting
needles that are all alone. I think I used them to push stuffing into sewn
dolls or toys and they never saw their other half again.
Then about six years ago I saw a show on PBS called
Knitting Daily. That show inspired me. Truly inspired me. The first time I saw continental
style knitting I had to learn it. Oh, what a difference it made! It took some
practice but it didn’t take that long to get the feel of it. I no longer had to
let go of the right knitting needle, take the yarn, put it over the needle tip,
pick up the needle again, knit the stitch, and start over again. All I had to
do was hold the yarn in my left hand and knit away. Ribbing was no longer a
nightmare that took me a month for 2” around a 7-8” circumference. To work
ribbing I just moved my first finger back and forth about an 1”.
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