April
2003
5
Ways to combat long tail cast on complications:
- If
your cast on seems to be too tight (especially important for
neck down garments and hats) try casting on to a needle one
or two sizes bigger than what you will actually be knitting
with. This works for any cast on method, not just long tail.
-
If you are using particularly small needles (for sock cuffs)
try holding two needles together while casting on, then slip
the extra one out when complete.
- A
good rule of thumb is to allow somewhere between 3 times the
width of the piece or 1" for every stitch when determining
tail length. The same is true to determine how much to leave
when binding off.
- If
you are doing an afghan or other especially long cast on, try
tying yarn from two skeins together, then work the long tail
cast on with one strand from each ball. When you have completed
the cast on, you can cut one of the strands and leave as a fringe
end and use the other for your first working row. This does
mean weaving in more ends if you are working on a garment BUT
it does guarantee that you won't run short on the 210th stitch
when you need 225.
-
For a better understanding of just what goes on when doing the
long tail cast on, try the two stranded version above using
two different colors
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