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Knitspiration
↗️ Knitting Increases You've Never Heard Of
We're a little more than halfway through our exploration of stitches, and today I have something I think is really special.
Last week we talked about decreases, so this week it makes sense that we discuss increases.
But not just any increases.
These are increases you've probably never heard of, and not because they're obscure.
It's because they were just recently INVENTED.
As in someone sat down, used their big brain, and thought...hmm...
...what happens when you do something like THIS.
And not only did this person invent a new increase, they invented MULTIPLE increase stitches.
So who is this incredibly clever and talented knitter?
Knitting inventor Assia Brill
The longer you knit, the more you feel like nothing is new in knitting.
For thousands of years humans have been taking fibers, turning them into yarn, and making clothing with hooks and needles.
Even Elizabeth Zimmermann coined a phrase for documenting discoveries she came across in her own knitting. She claimed she "unvented" things because someone had almost certainly done it before.
But every once in a while someone really does introduce a fresh concept to the knitting world.
One such person is Assia Brill, a woman who has actually invented MULTIPLE new knitting techniques.
Not only has she developed a different method of double layered knitting called DiStitch, she's done amazing things with cables, AND created a few new increase techniques.
Those increases are what we're going to focus on today.
Let's dive in...
Twincrease
Pretty much ALL methods for increasing are asymmetrical.
This means that the stitch will lean either to the right or to the left.
With the Twincrease, that is not the case.
It uses something called a cow hitch knot to create two symmetrical stitches from a single stitch.
While it's not the easiest technique to master, it is a beautifully subtle way to shape your knitting.
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