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Purling is knitting the purl stitch.
Stocking Stitch (knit a row, purl a row, repeat)
If you mean stitches there is, Knit, Purl, Ribbing, Stockinette Stitch, Seed Stitch and Garter Stitch to name a few. If you mean actual knitting patterns then there are loads, for scarves, beanies, jumpers, toys, slippers and lots of other things. You can get patterns off the internet, you can buy them, and also get packs which normally come with wool and sometimes needles.
There are several sites that offer tutorials on how to get started at a purl stitch including Knitting Help and Knitting Daily. One can also go to a book store such as Barnes & Noble and read a knitting for beginners book.
how do yoy purl next stitch and the next yarn over
If you are alternating each stitch (knit, purl, knit, purl) the pattern is called ribbing. If you alternate each row (row 1 knit, row 2 purl) it is called stockinette stitch.
Usually it means to knit every stitch in a row, or if on the purl side to purl every stitch. Consider it synonymous with stockinette stitch.
slip 1 - insert needle into stitch as normal then just pull it off the left needle onto the right without knitting or purling it
With garter stich you either knit every row or purl every row. With knitting stich you're not using the purl stitch so I would say they are the same thing. I would say they are NOTthe same.
There are many kinds of stitches in knitting. There is normal stitch, purl stitch, garter stitch, stockinette stitch, ribbing stitch, seed stitch and lots more. Loads of stitches are actually made up of other stitches merged, chopped and changed.
The most common knit stitch used for beginners is... wait for it... the knit stitch! The other most common knit stitch is called the purl stitch. These are the two basic stitches in knitting and when they are put together in different ways, they create different patterns! When you knit every row, that's called the garter stitch and when you knit one row and purl the next row, that's called the stockinette stitch.
Seed stitch is also known as moss stitch. It is when you knit one purl one throughout but in the next row the purl stitches are above the knit stitches in the previous one (like a chequerboard) unlike ribbing where the knit and purl stitches stay in the same column.