Given how much I enjoy knitting socks, encourage others to try knitting socks, and basically never stop talking about knitting socks, I thought you might all appreciate the project notes from my first
Given how much I enjoy knitting socks, encourage others to try knitting socks, and basically never stop talking about knitting socks, I thought you might all appreciate the project notes from my first ever socks.
What heel is for you?
I'm all about German short rows. So much so that i've been making a German short row pinwheel blanket... with sock yarn... it's basically a never ending garter stitch short row heel.
For someone like me who found this post from All, how would I get started knitting my own socks? Is there a simple and idiot proof guide you’d recommend?
For a beginner I always recommend you start with something square/rectangle, as the roundabout with socks is an intermediate difficulty. Scarves or baby blankets make lovely gifts, and are very beginner friendly.
Once you are confident in the basics of how to knit, you can kick it up a notch by trying socks.
Honestly most every beginner knitting guide on the internet is great. There's YouTube guides for whose who want videos and written guides for those who prefer standstill photos and text. And if you really need a physical teacher, try to find a local MakerSpace in your city - yarn wizards are plentiful in those spaces and we get EXCITED at bringing a newbie into our world!
Assuming you already know how to knit and just have never knit socks, I recommend making a pair of baby socks first. They’re the same shape and technique, just a lot smaller.
@meggied90@lemm.ee has perfect advice (the others are great too, but that's the one that resonated with me).
Make sure you're good with knitting (and purling) first. If you've never done it before DON'T start with a sock. Do something like a scarf - it's much simpler, you can do it much faster, and you can still turn out something that you like and will use. If you want to go even more simple, pot holders / hot pads are "fast" and easy.
I may or may not have a pair of socks that I dived into with fingering weight in 2019 that's still mocking me. Though I did do two more rows when I saw this post out of shame.
Haha, you can TOTALLY do it, go go complete those socks! Just think how amazing it'll feel to have that weight off your shoulders! And you never know they might even fit and be comfy 😆
My first pair of socks (top-down, four needles) I knitted inside out. I was halfway through sock one of pair two when I realised. I'm still not sure how it happened! Dozens of socks later I'm in Team Toe-up, with a fleegle heel, on two circulars. The next challenge is to learn to knit two socks at a time...
The socks that the notes in the OP are about, I was doing them two at a time toe-up. And about two inches in, I also got mixed up and somehow knitted them both inside out for a while without noticing. Literally, to this day, no idea how I managed it.
Team top down except for that one time I started at the heel. I was not convinced that it was going to work. I felt the need to sacrifice a chicken to make the dark magic work correctly. I'm currently contemplating a toe up pattern. It's a helix rib without a heel... The idea being I don't have to make a new sock when my munchkins outgrow the ones I just finished 🥴. Anyone have any experience with heelless socks?