Short row (knitting) Information & Short row (knitting) Links at HealthHaven.com
advertise
add site
services
publishers
database
health videos
Bookmark and Share

search wiki for    ?
web dir firms image gallery news pdf wiki shop video 
about
toolbar
stats
live show
health store
more stuff
JOIN/LOGIN
Featured Results:
 Row ing Machines - Exercise Row ing Machine, Row ing Machine Fitness, Magneti
Rowing Machines - Exercise Rowing Machine, Rowing Machine Fitness, Magneti
gyms4home.com
  Row ing Machine, Argos Sports Folding Row ing Machines, Buy Magnetic
Rowing Machine, Argos Sports Folding Rowing Machines, Buy Magnetic
argos-sports.co.uk
  Row ing Singles, Row ing Dating, Row ing Clubs
Rowing Singles, Rowing Dating, Rowing Clubs
fitness-singles.com
 Buy Thai Boxing Short s Thai MMA Short s Thai Silk Short s Fountain Valley
Buy Thai Boxing Shorts Thai MMA Shorts Thai Silk Shorts Fountain Valley
bear-fight.com
 

In knitting, a short row is a row that is not fully knitted; the work is turned before reaching the end of the row. Just before the work is turned, the yarn is generally passed around the next unknitted stitch, to prevent a hole from forming at the turning point.

The typical bobble provides a simple illustration of short rows. The extra bobble stitches are knitted back and forth several times without knitting the entire row.

Short rows may be used to bend a flat ribbon of knitting, which requires more fabric on the outside of the curve than on the inside of the curve. Short rows introduced on the outside edge will cause the ribbon to bend.

Similar to increases and decreases, a common use for short rows is in shaping, e.g., in making sock heels or French darts near the bust point. Short rows introduce extra rows ("courses") of knitting, whereas increases introduce extra columns ("wales"). In principle, any shaping possible with other increase/decrease method is also possible with short rows. However, such shaping is often harder to visualize.

Short rows are also useful in making more attractive bound off edges over multiple rows, e.g., in a raglan armhole, in a sleeve cap, or over a shoulder slant. The stitches to be bound off can be "held in reserve" on the knitting needles without being knitted using short rows. At the end, all the stitches can be bound off at once, producing a more continuous edge without the typical "ladder" of decreases.


[edit] References

Gibson-Roberts, Priscilla A. (2004). Knitting in the Old Way. Colorado: Nomad Press. 

Hiatt, June Hemmons (1988). The Principles of Knitting. New York: Simon and Schuster. pp. 175–182. 

Stanley, Montse (1999). Knitter's Handbook. Pleasantville, NY: Reader's Digest Association. 




Product Results (view all...)

search wiki for    ?
web dir firms image gallery news pdf wiki shop video 



↑ top of page ↑about thumbshots