More Inspiration!
Powered by Squarespace

Welcome to The Purl Bee!

As a guest of The Purl Bee you are invited to browse our home page, view our projects, post comments and access our archives.  Enjoy!

Search The Purl Bee
Patchwork Project Journals
Knitting Project Journals
Category Archives
« Whit's Knits: Crocheted Garden Baby Blanket | Main | Molly's Sketchbook: A Trip Around the Wool »
Monday
07Apr2008

Whit's Knits: Circular Gauge Tutorial

CGwithtape.jpg

After years of knitting, I made the very useful discovery that I am a pretty loose purler and a kind of tight knitter. I know there are other imperfectly balanced knitters out there because I encounter your frustration and confusion all the time at Purl. You knitted your swatch, you carefully counted your stitches, you did everything you were supposed to do, and yet somehow your gauge took on a life of its own and now your sweater would fit a small hippopotamus!

The problem sometimes lies in having knit a flat gauge swatch even though you plan to knit in the round. In a circular knitting situation, the normal knit one row, purl one row swatch can be very misleading. Instead, to accurately replicate stockinette stitch in the round, you should make a swatch that uses only knit stitches.

Of course Elizabeth Zimmerman has figured out how to do that for us. It's perhaps a little unsatisfying in its untidiness, but well worth the affront to our sense of order!

CGmess2.jpg

Knitting a Circular Gauge

The basic idea here is to knit a big messy I-cord. (If you don't know how to make an I-cord, you may find our I-cord Tutorial a helpful companion to this tutorial.)

Begin by casting on to a circular needle. (I like to first knit a few rows of just normal garter stitch to help prevent the bottom edge from getting in my way when I measure the gauge.) Then, instead of turning the work around so you can purl the next row, keep the front of the work facing you and SLIDE it down the needle to the other end. The working yarn is now coming from the left side of the knitting.

CGgarterstitch.jpg

Bringing the yarn from the left end to the right end, leave a very loose loop of yarn behind the work and knit the first stitch of the row.

CGfirstrow.jpg 

Finish knitting the row. Then slide the work to the right end of the needle, bring the yarn from the left, leaving a big loop of slack, and knit the next row. Continue in this way until you have good size gauge swatch with lots of messy loops.

CGdone.jpg 

Don't worry about the side stitches being loose and uncooperative. Just ignore them!

CGsidestitches.jpg 

I know some peoples' eyes start to glaze over at the mention of gauge swatches, but I really hope this simple tip will save people from some major sizing woes. In my experience, everything miraculously fits a lot better since I started knitting circular gauges! -Whitney

Reader Comments (23)

Great post! Now I know why my sweaters never fit!
Amy
April 7, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterAmy
I can't tell you how brilliant this is.
April 7, 2008 | Unregistered Commenterkaren
I use this method! It is really annoying to have such a tangle, but worth it to get a more accurate gauge.
April 7, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterMandy
Great tip. It's much better than knitting a larger swatch on two circulars at once. I'll definitely have to try this the next time.
April 7, 2008 | Unregistered Commentererica
Brillant! The clouds have parted away and sweater knitting makes so much sense now.
April 7, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterStephknits
I'm totally in love with that yarn- anyone know what kind it is?
April 7, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterJenn
Thanks so much for the great tip! I am an avid swatch knitter but could never figure out how to get gauge for knitting in the round.
April 7, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterCaitlin
I use this method, but I've always wondered if you could just knit garter stitch flat to get your gauge for stockinette in the round. In both cases you'd only be knitting and not purling, so it seems like your gauge should be the same. Has anyone tried this? So far I've been too lazy!
April 7, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterJessie
Hi Jenn,
The yarn is Koigu's Kersti DK weight merino. You can find it at this link:
http://www.purlsoho.com/purl/products/yarndetail/869
April 7, 2008 | Registered Commenterpurl bee
Hi Jessie,
Garter stitch will give you a very different gauge than stockinette. Garter stitch pulls up vertically whereas stockinette does not.
April 7, 2008 | Registered Commenterpurl bee
Isn't EZ the BESTest ever?! I am like you and knit tight/ loose purl...took me a while to figure out how that traslates into knitting on circs vs. straights.
April 7, 2008 | Unregistered Commenterfarmgirl
I hadn't thought at all about how the fabric would hang! Thanks so much for the clarification! --Jessie
April 7, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterJessie
Wow...I've always thought I was the only one who had this problem! Is it more commonly a continental knitter's issue? I can see how the yarn, when I purl, has a different tension (coming from the front of work there's less distance to span...) but I have never been motivated to get the hang of english style knitting. I find that "throwing" the yarn is just too awkward for me. Thank you so much for this "pearl" of wisdom!
April 7, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterBarbara
I'm a huge fan of this method of swatching. Great post!
April 7, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterLizzie
Seems obvious now you've explained it! But I have had this problem and never thought of doing my swatch this way...
April 8, 2008 | Unregistered Commentertracing
yes!
i'm sharing this with the knitters i know. it's so helpful and simple. thanks!
April 8, 2008 | Unregistered Commenterwendy
WHich one of Elizbeth Zimmerman's books would you recommend as reference and where I can find these wonderful techniques?
April 9, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterCaroline
Interesting! Thank you :)
April 10, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterRachel
What a great tip! I don't knit in the round too often, but when I do I have to admit I'm a little to lazy to knit a gauge swatch in the round. Problem solved!
April 10, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterMelissa
I've done this but make the "loops" in the back extra extra long and then knit the next row from the loop. That only leaves a loop along the left edge with not as much slack. It seems a lot neater to me.
April 24, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterJennifer
That is brilliant, leave it to EZ to come up with something so simple and genius!
April 28, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterKelley
I don't get it, instead of doing this, what's the difference if I just knit a small circular tube and then measure for gauge?
August 30, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterKat
Hi Kat,
there really is no difference, this way you just get done more quickly and use less yarn.
August 30, 2009 | Registered Commenterpurl bee

PostPost a New Comment

Enter your information below to add a new comment.
Author Email (optional):
Author URL (optional):
Post:
 
All HTML will be escaped. Hyperlinks will be created for URLs automatically.