How to Knit with Many Colors: Step by Step to a Fair Isle Sweater
76Trefoil Design Sweater
Yes, You Can Knit an Amazingly Colorful Sweater
Many knitters are content to knit in one color, or to knit simple striped patterns. Such knitting is relaxing and produces beautiful, useful items that last for years. Perhaps you have seen a beautiful fair isle sweater in a knitting magazine or department store, but have never entertained the thought of making one yourself. I am here to encourage you to give multicolor knitting a try.
Rather than plunging into the most challenging pattern you can find, I propose a series of baby steps that improve your knitting skills and move you gradually toward your masterpiece fair isle sweater. These steps worked for me in my own knitting education; I hope you enjoy this learning process as much as I did!
First, accumulate some knitting books that will inspire you to learn new techniques. Two of the most amazingly colorful sweater books I've seen are: Glorious Knits by Kaffe Fasset and The Sasha Kagan Sweater Book. Check your public library for books by Alice Starmore and Meg Swanson as well. Once you see what is possible using only yarn and pointy sticks, you will be eager to increase your knitting skills.
Knitted Christmas Stockings
Yes, You Can Hold Two Yarns at One Time
The key to efficiently using two colors or more in one row is to become ambidextrous. When you learned to knit, you probably learned either Continental style, in which a right-handed knitter holds the yarn in the left hand, or English style, in which the right-handed knitter throws the yarn with the right hand. This brings us to:
Step One: Learn to knit in the style you do not currenly use.
Once you can knit in both styles, try holding one color of yarn in each hand. Knit two stitches in one color, then two stitches in the other. Carry the yarn not in use very loosely across the back of the work. Make a swatch in this fashion and see how you quickly become comfortable switching between the two methods of knitting.
The books of the late Elizabeth Zimmerman are the best resources for learning all sorts of knitting techniques. Her instructions are clear, her writing witty, and her projects engineering marvels in their clever, yet simple construction. Follow her directions as you make practice swatches and develop skill.
Step Two: Your first two-color project
Find a pattern for a hat knitted in the round using only two colors. Such a project knits up quickly and is sure to fit somebody even if your gauge is off! Make several small projects as you refine your skills at carrying the yarn behind the work. Beginners commonly carry the yarn too tightly, creating a tight garment without enough stretch. With practice, you will relax and your knitting will have the requisite stretch.
A Christmas stocking is a great first project, since it will be a success even if it turns out a little too big or small. The stockings pictured were made using a Doreen Marquart design (Love of Knitting, winter 2011, page 11). I rendered the pattern in only two colors instead of three, then reversed the colors and made another stocking with the leftover yarn.
Step Three: The basic, two-color Norwegian sweater
You may approach your first sweater with trepidation. Take heart! My first two-color sweater was made from a trefoil pattern I found in a Cadette Girl Scout Handbook from 1963. Yes, this sweater pattern was deemed an appropriate project for girls in junior high school. I knew I was capable of anything a young teen Girl Scout could do, and so are you. Make a swatch, check your gauge, and swatch with different needles until you are getting the same gauge as the pattern requires. Once your gauge is correct, the rest is easy.
Yes, You Can Boldly Knit With as Many Colors as You Please
Once two-color knitting has become almost as relaxing and comfortable as knitting a garter stitch scarf, you may proceed to your first project in three or more colors. Again start with a hat; Elizabeth Zimmerman referred to these practice hats as "swatch caps." Move on to the sweater, feeling free to substitute your own colors for those suggested in the pattern. Use graph paper and colored pencils to copy the pattern chart and determine your color scheme.
After making several sweaters, you may even use graph paper to design your own color patterns. Just think, you were once afraid to try multicolored knitting!
How do you knit?
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See results without votingColor Knitting Techniques
- Color Knitting Techniques - Yahoo! Voices - voices.yahoo.com
Color blocking, stripes, duplicate stitch, fair isle, and intarsia are color knitting techniques every knitter should learn. Try each method on a swatch, then use it for a sweater or other large project.
Books on Fair Isle Knitting
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Fair Isle Basics & Beyond How To Knitting Book Knit NEW Hats Mittens Scarves
Current Bid: $12.39
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The Fairisle Cat Pattern Book for Electronic Knitting Machines on CD
Current Bid: $19.99
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Fearless Fair Isle Knitting - Pattern Book with 30 Designs!
Current Bid: $12.95
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I love the colors and the pattern. For years I've had a pattern for Fair Isle mitts, but have been afraid to make them because I'm a basically competent knitter, at best. I find Fair Isle patterns patterns intimidating.
I've experimented with a couple ways of managing the yarn with two-color knitting and definitely find the two-handed method easiest to control. It's a little slow getting the hang of English style, but I'm making progress :-)
I'm making a pair of Lativan style mittens for my first colorwork project. It's a nice challenge.










Christa Dovel 9 months ago
While I usually knit continental style, I find it so much easier to maintain the proper tension with two (or more) colors knitting English style.