ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Everyone needs contact comfort sometimes. Not everyone has ample opportunities for this in facetime. So here is a chance for a cuddle party in cyberspace. Virtual cuddling can help people feel better.

We have a
cuddle room that comes with fort cushions, fort frames, sheets for draping, and a weighted blanket. A nest full of colorful egg pillows sits in one corner. There is a basket of grooming brushes, hairbrushes, and styling combs. A bin holds textured pillows. There is a big basket of craft supplies along with art markers, coloring pages, and blank paper. The kitchen has a popcorn machine. Labels are available to mark dietary needs, recipe ingredients, and level of spiciness. Here is the bathroom, open to everyone. There is a lawn tent and an outdoor hot tub. Bathers should post a sign for nude or clothed activity. Come snuggle up!

Re: Cuddles!

Date: 2019-02-23 09:05 am (UTC)
fyreharper: (Default)
From: [personal profile] fyreharper
I tried poking around the internets for what-is-this-thing, so I now have at least some notion of how one might pair extra-layers-for-warmth with decorative-with-holes in. I would love to hear about what kinds of things they’ve got you doing / if there are bits you find particularly interesting though!

Re: Cuddles!

Date: 2019-02-24 04:58 am (UTC)
ng_moonmoth: The Moon-Moth (Default)
From: [personal profile] ng_moonmoth
So here's a quickie summary of the course today.

Double-knitting is a way of knitting two pieces of fabric that lie purl sides back-to-back -- on the same needles, at the same time. How one handles the yarn determines how and where the two pieces of fabric are connected. The simplest form of double-knitting connects the pieces at the edges, and nowhere else.

The important thing that makes double-knitting work is that whatever is done to one "layer" (piece of fabric) must be done on both layers. So if you do a stitch manipulation on one layer, you must immediately do a corresponding stitch manipulation on the other layer. And in this context, all lace is is a sequence of stitch manipulations that make patterns.

Now with two layers, if you are going to make holes in one layer, something is going to show through. Depending on what you want to accomplish, that might be a hole in the other layer or the purl side of the other layer. So now you get to decide how to handle the yarn when you make a hole. You can create a hole in the other layer or not; you can connect the pieces of fabric so the manipulations, be they holes or other fabric changes, line up better, or you can just let them be. In the end, you can get fabric that looks pretty much the same on both sides, or something that looks a little different, or something where one side is just a solid color with some patterning to match the lace.

The master trick, if you will, was understanding how to separate the layers of fabric so one could manipulate each layer independently. When one works double-knit, the stitches alternate layers every stitch: one from the top layer, then one from the bottom layer, top, bottom, ... In order to combine stitches or create new stitches, one must undo that, put all the stitches from each layer together, then work each layer independently and come up with the new stitches for each layer: first the top, then the bottom, one after the other. And that's what I learned how to do today.

Re: Cuddles!

Date: 2019-02-24 05:37 am (UTC)
technoshaman: Tux (Default)
From: [personal profile] technoshaman
Wow! I could see where two things would really come in handy with that.

One, a really good concept of spatial orientation.

Two, a computer. :)

Re: Cuddles!

Date: 2019-02-24 08:18 am (UTC)
ng_moonmoth: The Moon-Moth (Default)
From: [personal profile] ng_moonmoth
>> That sounds absolutely batshit. <<

Well, some of the manipulations can be a bit tricky. But I got the hang of it by understanding it as practice related to the two fundamental theoretical principles:

1. You must separate the layers before changing the stitch count;
2. Stitch count must change in both layers simultaneously.

Each manipulation concentrates on one thing or the other, and putting them together into yarn moves create the fundamental building blocks.

>> I am in awe. <<

Me too. What the instructor worked out is a long way away from where I am as a knitter right now.

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ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
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