Knitted Amigurumi Edibles: Basic techniques plus 5 veggies

Knitted Amigurumi Edibles: Basic techniques plus 5 veggies

Hansi Singh

Language: English

Pages: 35

ISBN: 1589239032

Format: PDF / Kindle (mobi) / ePub


These tiny, knitted edibles make fun projects for crocheters—especially if they happen to be foodies, too! Attention crafters, crocheters, and foodies! Have we found a fun and quirky project for you: Knitted Amigurumi Edibles. This booklet offers patterns for knitting different amigurumi (stuffed knit creatures), and these ones are all shaped like colorful foods. You'll find patterns for making knitted aubergines, tomatoes, carrots, garlic bulbs, cucumbers, and little peas in a pod. Detailed instructions are included. Have fun!

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*K4, K2tog, repeat from * to end of round—25 sts. Round 47: *K3, K2tog, repeat from * to end of round—20 sts. Stuff the body of the eggplant with fiberfill. Do not overstuff! Continue: Round 48: *K2, K2tog, repeat from * to end of round—15 sts. Round 49: *K1, K2tog, repeat from * to end of round—10 sts. Round 50: *K2tog, repeat from * to end of round—5 sts. Cut yarn, thread through final 5 sts and pull tight. aubergine. 5 61059 - Knitted Amigurumi Edibles_Int.indd 5 61059 - Knitted Amigurumi.

Edibles_Int.indd 5 (Text) 3/23/15 5:36 PM 3/23/15 5:28 PM Job:03-61060 Title:CLS-Knitted Amigurumi Edibles #175 Dtp:LY Page:5 Tomato Even in the middle of winter, tomatoes have a way of bringing back summer. This cute knit version is a great introduction to small diameter circular knitting, and makes a sleek, squishy ornament for your dining table year-round! yarn gauge Worsted weight MC (summer red): 50 yd (45.5 m) CC (spring green): 20 yd (18 m) 22 to 24 sts = 4" (10 cm) in stockinette.

1: Sl1, P2, K1. K2tog—16 sts. Row 2: Sl1, KRL, K2, KLL, K1—6 sts. Round 34: SSK, K12, K2tog—14 sts. Row 3: Sl1, P4, K1. Round 35: SSK, K4, M1R, K2, M1L, K4, K2tog—14 sts. Row 4: Sl1, [K1, KLL, KRL, K1] 2 times, K1— 10 sts. Round 36: SSK, K10, K2tog—12 sts. Row 5: Sl1, P8, K1. Round 37: SSK, K3, M1R, K2, M1L, K3, K2tog—12 sts. Row 6: Sl1, [K1, M1L, K2, M1R, K1] 2 times, K1—14 sts. Row 42: Sl1, SSK, K1, M1R, K2, M1L, K1, K2tog, K1—10 sts. Jo Row 43: Sl1, P2tog, P4, P2tog-tbl, K1—8 sts.

Wrap on the purl side of the fabric (the wrong side in stockinette stitch), insert your right needle from front to back under the wrap (1) and place it onto your left needle, allowing it to sit on the right of the stitch around which it was wrapped (2). Then, purl the stitch and its wrap together (3). Though this will produce a bulbous yarn loop on the purl side of the fabric, you’ll notice that the wrap will disappear from the knit side of the fabric, leaving an even, neat knit stitch (4). 1.

This will basically erase any line of demarcation between the old stitches and the new ones you are picking up (1). Picking up stitches from a cast-on edge From a Bound-Off Edge Picking up stitches from a bound-off edge is almost identical to picking them up from a caston edge. Pick up one stitch for every column of stitches on your edge. Pick up stitches invisibly from your edge, or pick them up in such a way that you create a clear demarcating line where you’ve picked up stitches. (continued).

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