After you have just one loop on each finger, usually what i do is take the one loop on your pinkie finger and bring it up and over to be the top loop on your ring finger. Then take the bottom loop (the loop originally on that finger) and take it over to the middle finger. Take the bottom loop on your middle finger and put it on your index finger. Take the bottom loop on your index finger, take it over your finger and let go, keeping hold of your loop still on the finger. Take that loop off and cut the yarn from your wool ball and make sure it's long enough to reach your pinkie to your wrist. Now take that wool and put it through the loop and pull. It shrinks it slightly but not too much. I hope this helped :]
I don't think there is a process for "finger knitting."
What there is, is using fingering weight (also known as: size 0 or lace-weight), yarn to make a sock.
WikiHow has a guide to finger knitting which includes a video guide; see the link below:
There are many places where one can learn how to finger knit. One can learn how to finger knit at popular on the web sources such as Kyle Designs and Wikihow.
Yes, you can finger knit with anything that acts like yarn, including novelty yarns, cords, and ribbons.
You can knit a simple scarf, or a hot pad.
Basically, all socks should have at least one hole - the one you put your foot in. By saying, "Your sock has a hole IN IT" implies that there is a hole in the actual knit fabric of the sock (rather than just a hole that was pre-made in the sock in order to be of use at all to a wearer) .
Sometimes. You could finger knit.
A slouch type of socks are usually flat knit or rib knit socks that may or may not come with elastic. They are not as restricting as regular sock and are designed to be long or short. They are popular in Japanese style.
marionettes , hand puppets , shadow puppets , finger puppets , sock puppets
Hey, it took me just under 12 months =)
Part of knitting is managing the tension you establish for your style of knitting.Try wrapping your yarn around your yarn finger once or twice, in order to establish a knitting tension -- the slack or lack of it -- that you want. (Your yarn finger is on the hand that holds the needles, while you knit actively with the needle in the other hand.)
write tie shoes use a lighter use a scissors hitchhiker knit snap finger
THe crew length sock originated when the military decided that it had a standard length that was appropriate for all military socks. That length was 4.23 inches from the base of the foot. Coincidentally, the average length of the male ring finger.
Perhaps you are referring to sport weight yarn? It's 5-ply, so a little thicker than sock yarn. It usually produces 12 wraps per inch.
As you finger knit, you'll be removing one loop from each finger with each row. Pull the lower loop up and over the other loop and off the finger. At most, you should not have more than two loops on any finger at any time, so you should not run out of room on your fingers.