I have 15 cats and my favorite color is Yes.
Do you like stripes? Try using dice to plan your color changes! Random is beautiful!
A drone captured the image of 31 men banding together, using their bodies to form an SOS in the dirt yard of the Bluebonnet immigration detention facility.
Just days ago, dozens of Venezuelan…
A drone captured the image of 31 men banding together, using their bodies to form an SOS in the dirt yard of the Bluebonnet immigration detention facility.
Just days ago, dozens of Venezuelan…
Send some of the yarn when you give handmade gifts! Why? Because the hardest part of repairing damaged knit and crochet items is finding matching yarn!
I'm repairing this family heirloom blanket and this is the best yarn match I could find.
What did Executive Order 14087 do?
It lowered drug costs for Americans on Medicare and Medicaid—working class Americans.
This only benefits big pharma.
What did Executive Order 14087 do?
It lowered drug costs for Americans on Medicare and Medicaid—working class Americans.
This only benefits big pharma.
hire them. It's REALLY hard already for visibly trans people to get jobs, even before this shit.
Support places that have trans people working front of house, and make sure owners know that's part of why you're there.
If the pattern says "end with wrong side row", it means end by DOING the wrong side row. And vice versa for the right side.
If you write patterns, please make this clearer! Even some experienced knitters can find this one confusing.
Imperial boomerang in action.
www.axios.com/local/salt-l...
Imperial boomerang in action.
www.axios.com/local/salt-l...
Don't wear a shirt you HATE when yarn shopping.
So often, we find that customers buy yarn that matches their shirt. Why? Maybe because you always see it in your peripheral vision? But it is a THING! Wear colors you like when yarn shopping!
When beginning a piece in the round, of course you check to make sure it's not twisted. BUT I want you to check AGAIN at the end of the first round, because it's easier to see at that point, AND you can untwist it with no consequences!
Speaking of left-leaning decreases, if you want them to lay flatter, but don't want to twist a stitch? On the following row, pick up the lower purl bump of the ssk/skp and pull it hard, then drop it again.
Brought to you by my autism
When beginning a piece in the round, of course you check to make sure it's not twisted. BUT I want you to check AGAIN at the end of the first round, because it's easier to see at that point, AND you can untwist it with no consequences!
Speaking of left-leaning decreases, if you want them to lay flatter, but don't want to twist a stitch? On the following row, pick up the lower purl bump of the ssk/skp and pull it hard, then drop it again.
Brought to you by my autism
ssk and s1-k1-psso (sometimes written skp) are the same decrease! They are different ways of doing the untwisted single left-leaning decrease.
If you prefer one over the other, you have permission to do it that way every time.
When beginning a piece in the round, of course you check to make sure it's not twisted. BUT I want you to check AGAIN at the end of the first round, because it's easier to see at that point, AND you can untwist it with no consequences!
Speaking of left-leaning decreases, if you want them to lay flatter, but don't want to twist a stitch? On the following row, pick up the lower purl bump of the ssk/skp and pull it hard, then drop it again.
Brought to you by my autism
ssk and s1-k1-psso (sometimes written skp) are the same decrease! They are different ways of doing the untwisted single left-leaning decrease.
If you prefer one over the other, you have permission to do it that way every time.
What's the fastest, easiest bind off? The p2tog bo!
P 1, return stitch to left needle
*p2tog, return stitch to left needle
Repeat from * to end.
You're welcome.
Speaking of left-leaning decreases, if you want them to lay flatter, but don't want to twist a stitch? On the following row, pick up the lower purl bump of the ssk/skp and pull it hard, then drop it again.
Brought to you by my autism
ssk and s1-k1-psso (sometimes written skp) are the same decrease! They are different ways of doing the untwisted single left-leaning decrease.
If you prefer one over the other, you have permission to do it that way every time.
What's the fastest, easiest bind off? The p2tog bo!
P 1, return stitch to left needle
*p2tog, return stitch to left needle
Repeat from * to end.
You're welcome.
Do you slip knitwise or purlwise and with yarn in front or back? Here's the rule:
ALWAYS slip purlwise without moving the yarn, with these two exceptions:
1. If the slip stitch is part of a decrease, in which case slip knitwise
2. If the pattern says so
Easy, right!?
ssk and s1-k1-psso (sometimes written skp) are the same decrease! They are different ways of doing the untwisted single left-leaning decrease.
If you prefer one over the other, you have permission to do it that way every time.
What's the fastest, easiest bind off? The p2tog bo!
P 1, return stitch to left needle
*p2tog, return stitch to left needle
Repeat from * to end.
You're welcome.
Do you slip knitwise or purlwise and with yarn in front or back? Here's the rule:
ALWAYS slip purlwise without moving the yarn, with these two exceptions:
1. If the slip stitch is part of a decrease, in which case slip knitwise
2. If the pattern says so
Easy, right!?
If there is one thing you can do to improve your knitting, it is this - trust your fingers. If a stitch feels off, it usually IS OFF, even if it looks fine. When a stitch feels wrong, take the right needle out and find the reason it feels wrong.
What's the fastest, easiest bind off? The p2tog bo!
P 1, return stitch to left needle
*p2tog, return stitch to left needle
Repeat from * to end.
You're welcome.
Do you slip knitwise or purlwise and with yarn in front or back? Here's the rule:
ALWAYS slip purlwise without moving the yarn, with these two exceptions:
1. If the slip stitch is part of a decrease, in which case slip knitwise
2. If the pattern says so
Easy, right!?
If there is one thing you can do to improve your knitting, it is this - trust your fingers. If a stitch feels off, it usually IS OFF, even if it looks fine. When a stitch feels wrong, take the right needle out and find the reason it feels wrong.
Do you slip knitwise or purlwise and with yarn in front or back? Here's the rule:
ALWAYS slip purlwise without moving the yarn, with these two exceptions:
1. If the slip stitch is part of a decrease, in which case slip knitwise
2. If the pattern says so
Easy, right!?
www.science.org/content/arti...
If there is one thing you can do to improve your knitting, it is this - trust your fingers. If a stitch feels off, it usually IS OFF, even if it looks fine. When a stitch feels wrong, take the right needle out and find the reason it feels wrong.
If there is one thing you can do to improve your knitting, it is this - trust your fingers. If a stitch feels off, it usually IS OFF, even if it looks fine. When a stitch feels wrong, take the right needle out and find the reason it feels wrong.
Within the next 15yrs in Australia, before 2040, there WILL be violent confrontation between environmental protesters and the corporate agriculture water thieves raping our rivers, and it will happen on the Murray Darling-Baaka river system first 💦
www.motherjones.com/environment/...
www.nber.org/papers/w28494
www.nber.org/papers/w28494
Like, I can hear them scratching around under there when I'm in the bathroom. But they're opossums and opossums are good, right? Or like chaotic good where they're good but the chaos might be too much?
Anyone? Anyone? Bueller?