To knit in front and back of the first stitch, you first knit the stitch as usual. Then, without dropping the stitch off the left needle, you bring the right needle to the back of the stitch and knit into the back loop of the same stitch. This creates an increase in the stitch.
This is a standard increase that turns one stitch into two stitches.
Yes, because you are knitting two stitches from the same stitch.
you are basically doing an increase, creating two new stitches from one old one. Start your knit stitch by inserting your needle right to left and out the front of the stitch, wrap your yarn and bring your right needle back out with the new stitch on it, but don't drop the stitch on the left needle yet. now insert the right needle into the back of the stitch from left to right, wrap the yarn and now you may drop the stitch from the left needle.
knit into the front and the back of the stich.
One front is an increase stitch done this way: Pick up the horizontal strand with the left needle from front to back between the last stitch worked on the right needle and the next stitch to be worked on the left needle. Then, insert the right needle into the back of the loop, and knit it.
To use the pin stitch to finish your cross stitch project, first thread a needle with a short length of floss. Insert the needle from the front of the fabric to the back, leaving a small loop of floss on the front. Then, pass the needle through the loop and pull tight to secure the stitch. Trim any excess floss close to the fabric. This technique creates a neat and secure finish for your cross stitch project.
To yarn over after a purl stitch, first complete the purl stitch as usual by bringing the yarn in front of the needle. After you've finished the purl stitch, bring the yarn over the needle from the back to the front, positioning it above the needle. This creates a yarn over, which will be a new stitch when you knit the next row. Remember to maintain consistent tension to ensure your yarn overs are neat.
The stitch width knob is usually located on the front of a sewing machine to determine the side-to-side motion of the needle as it stitches.
The word "post" in crochet is referring to the whole stitch--generally a "tall" stitch (such as a double crochet, triple crochet, etc).The reason the instructions refer to the stitch in the row below, is so the crocheter understands that you are to stitch around the stitch below--the "post" of the stitch. Otherwise, if the instructions stated that you were to double crochet the next stitch, you would understand that you would be double crocheting into the top of the stitch below, versus crochet around the length of the stitch.You also notice that the instructions will say to "back post double crochet (bpdc)" which means to bring your stitch around the post from the back position. So, "front post, double crochet (fp dc)" would mean to bring your stitch in from the front side of your work.
The abbreviation "FL" in crochet refers to "Front Loop." The Front Loop is referring to the top of the stitch--the one you crochet into to create the next row. Generally you pull your stitch through both loops on the top of the stitch, however, you can also just use one of the two stitch "sides." When you look at the top of a stitch, to me, it looks heart-shaped. There is a side of the "heart" that would be closer to you (the "front") and a side of the "heart" which would be further "away" from you (the "back" loop). I found a photo which shows the anatomy of a crochet stitch, which will probably explain and show what I'm attempting to put into words, much better that I seem to be managing in my "explaination."
Do you mean "slip the first stitch purl wise"? If so, that means slip the stitch to the right needle by inserting the needle through the front loop from top to bottom, then the yarn to the back and continue knitting.