this post was submitted on 23 Sep 2023
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Knitting

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What was your first project? I've been dying to learn how to knit, with the eventual goal of making socks, but can't decide where or how to start.

I would consider myself an advanced beginner to intermediate crocheter, but when my mom tried to teach me to cast on for knitting I went cross eyed.

Where's a good place to start? What would you recommend needles-wise?

Edit: Thank you so much everyone for the advice!

I ordered size 7 circular knitting needles (bamboo) to start. I'm going to try a hat so that I can get some practice knitting in the round.

My needles don't get here until Tuesday, and I can't walk at the moment, so I'm practicing casting on with chopsticks!

Thanks again

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[โ€“] thegiddystitcher@lemm.ee 0 points 1 year ago (1 children)

There's basically two ways you can go as a beginner:

1) Play it safe. Practise the basic stitches until general holding the yarn and tensioning gets to feel more natural. For this, something like a dishcloth can be a good shout as even with a few beginner mistakes in it, it's still going to result in something usable. A scarf can work too but as Anna says, they do take a long time so they can get boring. Hats etc complicate things because they're in the round, but you'll be used to that from crochet so it's probably fine.

Since you are already a crocheter though going back to cotton cloths probably sounds insufferable which brings us to...

2) Jump in at the deep end. Find a pattern you really like, and just set about learning what you need to learn to get there. I wanted to make a whole jumper as my first thing, so made a sort of sample rectangle with all the stitches I'd need and then just went for it! Didn't quite fit in the end, but hey, the horrible acrylic yarn only cost about a tenner in total ๐Ÿ˜‚

Behold my "first project" sampler rectangle, this must have taken me about a fortnight but it did teach me a lot!

Yarn and needles-wise it's similar to learning crochet. You want a light coloured yarn in something like worsted/aran weight, and generally a 5mm needle is a good place to start to work with it.

[โ€“] Timecircleline@sh.itjust.works 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I actually started my crochet journey with Christmas stockings for my pets lol.

I'm thinking I might try a hat to start out (after I spend some time actually learning the stitches of course!)

Thank you for sharing your first project. Your socks are partially what inspired me to want to make my own! I just can't picture crochet socks being as comfy as knit

haha, I'm glad I'm not the only dork who crocheted Xmas stockings for my pets

[โ€“] CrayonMaster@midwest.social 0 points 1 year ago (1 children)

A scarf is probably the best place to start. Easy stitches, straightforward pattern. Socks will probably work as a second project, but I wouldn't start there.

Good call! Socks intimidate me. My first crochet pattern I ever tried was Christmas stockings and then I didn't pick up a hook again (except begrudgingly everytime we adopted a new animal- can't have them without a stocking) for years.

[โ€“] QTpi@sh.itjust.works 0 points 1 year ago (1 children)

My first project was a garter stitch scarf. I picked a yarn and bought the needles listed on the band. Pros: super forgiving Cons: I had no concept of gauge so my second project (a hat) was baby sized.

I've become partial to wooden needles. I have metal and wood. Metal needles are so slippery that stitches slide right off (when you don't want them to). For some yarns, sliding right off is a plus but it is a matter of personal preference. I love interchangable needles which I learned about AFTER I built a fairly large straight needle collection. I almost never use my straight needles these days. Circular needles are more versatile and more easy to use when on a crowded commuter ferry.

[โ€“] thegiddystitcher@lemm.ee 1 points 1 year ago

The best thing about circular needles is you can use them to knit flat anyway, so you only need to buy each size once instead of each size in straight, circular and DPN form! Yes I am cheap, yes I stand by it.