Wiggle Tapestry Knitting Pattern
This simple project is a beginner level stacked stitch project that will help you become familiar with the technique. It features stripes of wavy colorwork, a fringed edge, and a dowel for hanging.
What are Stacked Stitches?
The stacked stitch technique is made by piling up increases or decreases on top of each other to create vertical movement within a row. They make unusual shapes in knitting and extremely wavy striped colorwork without strands on the wrong side of the piece.
This pattern contains written instructions and photo guides for the stacked increase, stacked decrease, fringe and finishing.
Wiggle Tapestry Knitting Pattern (Copy)
This simple project is a beginner level stacked stitch project that will help you become familiar with the technique. It features stripes of wavy colorwork, a fringed edge, and a dowel for hanging.
What are Stacked Stitches?
The stacked stitch technique is made by piling up increases or decreases on top of each other to create vertical movement within a row. They make unusual shapes in knitting and extremely wavy striped colorwork without strands on the wrong side of the piece.
This pattern contains written instructions and photo guides for the stacked increase, stacked decrease, fringe and finishing.
Brioche Fade Coaster
This simple pattern is a fun and functional way to test out color choices for any brioche stitch pattern with a color fade. It is the same instruction found in the gauge swatch section of the Blooming Brioche pattern. While working this small project, you’ll learn how to work a slip stitch selvedge and create a color fade in brioche stitch. It contains written and charted instructions and a few video lessons. The pattern makes a coaster or trivet using scrap amounts of fingering weight yarn.
Leaf and Star
These patterns are designed to teach the Stacked Stitch technique and to help you get comfortable with the increases and decreases.
The Oak Leaf is a fun little introduction to stacked decreases. This technique can be used to create lobe shaped edging, flame stitch motifs, and shaping. You may have seen it in other patterns like Fox Paws which use the wavy stitch in colorwork. Stacked decreases are worked by slipping stitches back to the left needle to work them again.
The stars are a fun way to learn stacked increases. You may have seen these in the Fox Paws patterns and wondered how they work. You can use these fun stars to practice stacked increases before jumping into a more complex project, or just make them because they’re a lot of fun. Stacked increases are worked by slipping stitches back to the left needle to work them again.