To complete many of the delicate openwork and embossed patterns, you need to master the double broaching (broaching). In this case, on the front side of the knitted fabric, a pattern is formed of stitches knitted together, and the upper bow usually lies obliquely to the left. Such successive slopes emphasize the openwork elements, framing them (rhombuses, leaves, triangles, etc.). In various knitting guides, a double broach may also be referred to as a “throw-over”.
It is necessary
- - two straight or circular needles;
- - yarn.
Instructions
Step 1
String the first stitch of the row onto the right (working) knitting needle. In this case, the bow must be removed as in knitting, and the working thread must be located at work.
Step 2
Please note: if you need to remove an untied loop, like a front loop, then the knitting needle should always enter its wall with a movement from left to right. When, in the knitting manual, it is required to “remove the crocheted stitch on the right knitting needle”, the knitting needle should move from right to left.
Step 3
Knit the next pair of loops together with the front one. The resulting loop must be pulled through the previously removed thread bow.
Step 4
Now try double broaching in a different way. To do this, remove two loops of the working row from the left knitting needle at once, like the front ones. The thread should be pulled behind them.
Step 5
First, knit one stitch with the front one, and then put on the removed pair of loops from the right knitting needle.
Step 6
Practice lowering the stitches so that the middle bow is always at the top and lies right in the center between two adjacent stitches. To do this, the first loops of the current row must also be put on a knitting needle, as in knitting.
Step 7
Slip the first loop you removed back onto the left (non-working) knitting needle; then return the second loop you removed to it. Now you can knit all three loops together.