Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Zig Zag Cuff Tutorial

Stringing the beads

Thread your working yarn into a big eye beading needle. If you don’t have a big eye needle you can stop in and get one or call the shop and we can send you one. They are just $2.00 each. A dental floss threader or a regular beading needle with a loop of thread tied into the eye will do in a pinch. String 176 or 220 beads onto your working yarn. If you encounter a bead that will not slide easily onto the yarn, do not force it. You could break your needle or damage your yarn. Remove and discard that bead.












































Waste Yarn Cast on

Choose a smooth, light colored, fingering weight yarn. Cast on 32 stitches. Start with a purl row and work 6 rows of stockinette stitch. You will be able to reuse this waste yarn tab to make additional cuffs if you work at least two more rows of stockinette stitch for each additional cuff you want to make. End after working a knit side row. Cut waste yarn.







Join working yarn and start working from the graph.

Row #1 is a wrong side row. Read the chart from left to right.

Slip the first stitch as if to purl (shown as “I” on the graph).

Join the working yarn and knit two stitches (two empty boxes on the graph).

Slide 1 bead up the yarn until it is flush against the right hand needle and knit one stitch (“B” on graph). The bead should be trapped on the horizontal strand between two stitches.












Knit one stitch (one empty box on graph).

Place a bead and knit a stitch (“B” on graph).

Knit three stitches (three empty boxes on graph).

Place a bead and knit a stitch (“B” on graph)

Knit one stitch (empty box on graph)

Place a bead and knit a stitch (“B” on graph)

Knit sixteen stitches (empty boxes on graph)

Place a bead and knit a stitch (“B” on graph)

Knit three stitches (empty boxes on graph)

This completes row #1







Row 2 and all right side rows are not shown on the graph. To work row 2 slip one stitch as if to purl with yarn in front. Bring yarn between the needles to the back and knit remaining thirty-one stitches.

Continue working in this fashion. Place beads according to the graph on the wrong side/odd numbered rows and work plain on right side / even numbered rows.










Repeat the graph 4 times for the small size, which will fit most women, or 5 times for a larger size.








After completing row 23 of your final repeat, cut the working yarn leaving a tail about 24 inches long.

Second Tab

Join waste yarn and work 6 rows of stockinette stitch starting with a knit row. Bind off all stitches or thread them onto their own tail. You will be unraveling these stitches as soon as you complete the graft.







Duplicate stitch grafting.

Thread the long tail of working yarn onto a tapestry needle.

Bring the beginning and the end of the cuff together with the beaded side out and the two waste yarn tabs held knit sides together.

Using the tapestry needle and working yarn exactly trace over the bottom, right leg of the first waste yarn stitch on the lower tab





and the top half of the first waste yarn stitch on the upper tab.













Then trace over the bottom half of the second stitch on the lower tab










and the top half of the second stitch on the upper tab.










Work across the row in this fashion.





Pay special attention to the edge stitches. Tighten the new duplicate stitches to the same tension as the surrounding work.







Unravel the second waste yarn tab. It should unravel completely and pull free of the cuff.











If you accidentally sewed through the waste yarn as you were sewing the duplicate stitches you may need to carefully snip part or all of the waste yarn to get it free.


Pull on the cuff gently to check for any loose or missed stitches. If any stitches are dropped and starting to run, unpick the graft. Pick up the cuff stitches and make a new waste yarn tab.

Remove the first waste yarn tab by snipping the tail where it is joined to the cuff and unpick the last row of waste yarn one stitch at a time.






When all waste yarn has been removed from the cuff, double check that the edge stitches are secure and weave in the tails of the working yarn.


Thursday, May 19, 2011

Beaded Cuff Tutorial





Our 2011 LYS Tour one-skein project is the Zig-Zag Beaded Cuff. We will be posting a tutorial with step by step photos as soon as possible after the tour concludes. If we're really organized, it might be up before the conclusion of the tour. But it's coming soon!