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Neaten the Last Stitch of Your Bind-Off (Flat Knitting)
Neaten the Last Stitch of Your Bind-Off (Round Knitting)
Every single time you’re binding off in the round, use this trick to make the join completely disappear. No one will be able to tell where you started and where you stopped.
Blog Post: How to Neaten the Last Stitch of Your Bind-Off on Flat Knitting

This is a simple move to neaten the last stitch of your bind-off every time you finish a project. It’s a little superstar trick that you do at the very end that will square up your edges, especially if your side stitches tend to get stretched-out.
Read Post »Blog Post: How to Neaten the Last Stitch of Your Bind-Off in the Round

Every single time you’re binding off in the round, use this trick to make the join completely disappear. No one will be able to tell where you started and where you stopped.
Read Post »Blog Post: How To Pick Up Wraps On The Purl Side: Wrap and Turn

If you use the same technique to hide purl wraps as you do to hide knit wraps, it doesn’t look good on the right side of the work. This is the very trick you need in order to pick up wraps on the purl side of your short rows and keep your work neat and tidy.
Read Post »Blog Post: How To Purl Backwards And When To Do It

Knowing how to purl backwards is optional, but take a look and see if you feel comfortable trying it on your next sock heel. It will save you a lot of time because if you know how to do it, you don’t have to turn your work back and forth every row.
Read Post »Blog Post: How to Knit Backwards

If you just need to knit a few stitches and don’t feel like turning your work, you can always knit backward. This will create purl stitches on the side of the work facing you.
Read Post »Blog Post: Garter Stitch In The Round Without Purling

Read Post »
Blog Post: When You Run Out Of Tail – Tricks For Casting On And Weaving In Short Ends

Sometimes, when casting on tons of stitches you run out of tail right before end. Don’t worry – you do not have to start your long-tail cast-on over. Use the backwards-loop cast-on or any short-tail cast-on to add the last few stitches.
Read Post »Free and Premium Videos
Garter Stitch in the Round Without Purling
Free VideoPick Up and Hide Purl Wraps – Wrap and Turn on the Purl Side (Short Rows)
Free VideoIf you use the same technique to hide purl wraps as you do to hide knit wraps, the right side of your work will be a mess. The problem with the “intuitive” way of picking up purl wraps is that it places the wrap in front of the stitch. The challenge is to find an easy way to get that wrap in the back, which is exactly what our trick does.
How to Do Kitchener Stitch Without a Tapestry Needle
Free VideoYou might not have a tapestry needle handy when you get to the bind-off on your top-down socks. This video shows you how to do Kitchener stitch using a spare knitting needle instead of a tapestry needle so you can wear your top-down socks without waiting another minute!
How to Knit Backwards
Premium VideoNeaten the Last Stitch of Your Bind-Off (Flat Knitting)
Free VideoYou should be doing this easy bind-off trick at the end of every project. See the results for yourself below – I think you’ll agree.
This is a simple move to neaten the last stitch of your bind-off every time you finish a project.
It’s a little superstar trick that you do at the very end that will square up your edges, especially if your side stitches tend to get stretched-out.
Neaten the Last Stitch of Your Bind-Off (Round Knitting)
Free VideoEvery single time you’re binding off in the round, use this trick to make the join completely disappear. No one will be able to tell where you started and where you stopped.
Purl Backwards
Free VideoTo purl backwards, insert the left-hand needle from front to back through the first stitch on your right-hand needle. Wrap the yarn around the left-hand needle counter-clockwise (towards you), and then pull the stitch on the right-hand needle over the wrap and off the needle.
Testimonial: You Enriched My Knitting!
I truly enjoyed all the tips and tricks I’ve learned from your incredible courses.The main reason I’m writing is to thank you for the most invaluable tip of how to keep 2 balls of yarn from snarling when making 2-at-time toe up socks!!!I had tried last year to make this type of sock, and in my excitement and haste to get started did NOT watch or read all the way through. When the balls of yarn kept on snarling, my temper went the same way. With the pandemic sweeping the globe, and so much free time, I took up those troublesome socks again with one very important difference … I watched and read through the instructions to the end.OMG Liat! You are a wunderkind, as my German mother would say!The tip you provided for keeping the balls of yarn to themselves was awe inspiring after all the trouble I had with them previously.I think throughout the courses I’ve purchased from you, it's those subtle tips and tricks that have helped me the most! Everything you suggested I tried out, and to my delight DID make my knitting faster, easier on my hands and mind, and enriching!That’s what I want to thank you for MOST, you enriched my knitting!
– Steve M.