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Shadow knitting also called "illusion knitting" is a knitting technique that produces patterns that vary with the direction of viewing.

Contents

[edit] Method

Despite its impressive effect, shadow knitting is a simple technique. As in mosaic knitting, the knitter alternates between two colors. Colors with good contrast are preferred, but not needed. The knitter knits two rows of color A, then two rows of color B, then two rows of color A, etc. Only knit or purl stitches are used.

This is a basic shadow knitting pattern created in Microsoft Excel.
Each row in the pattern represents four rows of knit or purl stitches, and each column represents one stitch. To follow this pattern you would use black and white, white being the background color (BC), and black being the master color (MC).
  • Start at row one, this could be thought of as Row 1-1 and is a right-side row (RS): with BC, knit.
  • Row 1-2 (still following the pattern at row 1) (WS): knit the blank boxes, purl the ones filled in.
  • Row 1-3 (RS): change to MC, knit.
  • Row 1-4 (WS): purl the blank boxes, knit the ones filled in.
  • Move to Row 2 on the pattern and begin knitting the BC, this is row 2-1. Repeat for all rows and bind-off.

The visual effect of shadow knitting is due to the different height of the knit stitches on the wrong side rows. A knit stitch is flat, while a purl stitch is raised. Therefore, one can change which color (dark or light) stands out by changing from knit to purl. So the basic idea is to create a pattern in knit stitches in the colors one wants and purl stitches in the background color. When looking straight at the knitted piece, the stitches look approximately the same, but from an angle, only the raised purl stitches are visible.

There are no constraints on the position of the purl/knit stitches, so a nearly infinite variety of patterns can be made. The pattern will not be apparent from every direction of viewing, since one ridge may "overshadow" another. Knitters often enjoy watching when the picture created becomes visible. The stark contrast of alternating light and dark stripes is also visually interesting.

Extensions of the method include using more than two colors or using other stitches, e.g., lace knitting or cable knitting.

[edit] History

The exact origin of this method is unknown, although it appeared in a Japanese knitting magazine.

[edit] References

  • Høxbro, Vivian (2004). Shadow Knitting. Loveland, CO: Interweave Press. ISBN 978-1931499415. 

[edit] External links




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