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  • I remember "finger knitting" a lot as a kid but I didn't know how to make a new row so would just sit for hours making hilariously long chains. And I'm pretty sure it was more finger crochet, but honestly not sure as I can't remember how I was doing it.

    My grandma knitted for a while but had absolutely terrible taste, all the grandkids dreaded being gifted something so that probably put me off for a fair while!

    Ended up learning for real in early 2013, I'd just moved in with my now-husband and must have felt secure enough to start a yarn stash after years of moving around between different rentals every few months. Basically just googled for tutorials and followed them as best I could, which did result in me knitting everything through the back loop for a while due to one ambiguous image in a tutorial somewhere. Within a couple months I'd done a full size adult jumper and a lace shawl, just jumped in at the deep end with no fear whatsoever.

    These days I'm with you OP it's pretty much new things as and when I see a pretty pattern using them. And then most of the time, modern patterns are going to have at least a brief explanation of any unusual techniques included, so you often don't even need an external resource at all! On those occasions when I do I'll look for written with photos first, video if the pics weren't clear enough. And then of course sometimes I just make it up and if it looks close enough to the pattern photo I'm happy 😆

  • YouTube on both counts. I've tried knitting a few times and it just didn't work for me. Tried English and continental. Finally stumbled on Portuguese and it just worked perfectly. I've only knit a few things since learning, but my main problem now is that anything beyond knit and purl I have to try and translate into Portuguese, and it makes it a bit difficult sometimes.

  • I tried to learn knitting as a kid from my uncle (lol) but I think my left-handedness got in the way so I gave it up for 30 years. This year I started taking my mom to a knitting meetup as she's been an avid knitter for most of her life. At first I was just gonna make her company, maybe crochet something, but since I was there I said why not try again? I picked it up quickly, at least knit and purl and then I fell into the rabbit hole that is Ravelry and with the help of Youtube tutorials picked up more techniques.

    There's been a few quirks. I've recently learned that the way my mom, and honestly everyone here, knits is called combined continental and while it works really well in the flat, it doesn't so much in the round where there's no 'wrong'/purl side to untwist stitches. So thanks to Youtube I've learned continental for in the round knitting and keeping the style I was taught for flat.

  • The internet, to both questions. I didn't know anyone irl who knitted, and I was too shy to go learn from a class or group.

  • I did try to learn from my grandmother when I was a kid but it didn't stick. I don't think I had the manual dexterity, when I looked it up on YouTube as an adult I didn't have too much trouble with it.

    I had forgotten learning from my grandmother but I found some of my old notes and things at her house the other week that been stored away for the last 30 years or so.

    Now I learn from YouTube and certain books. How to knit socks that fit, jumper knitting handbook type stuff and the Japanese knitting stitch Bible.

    I started with crochet and moved onto knitting. Now I much prefer it and how versatile it is

14 comments