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# end-to-end ("wale-to-wale") seam.
# end-to-end ("wale-to-wale") seam.


The '''Kitchener stitch''' is a common method for the third type of seam. The yarn follows the route of a row of ordinary knitting. This is often done when closing off a knitted sock at the toe. The technique is named after [[Horatio Herbert Kitchener]], though the technique was practiced long before. <ref>Knitting Tradition Magazine, Fall 2015, page 6</ref> Boo! -spooky
The '''Kitchener stitch''' is a common method for the third type of seam. The yarn follows the route of a row of ordinary knitting. This is often done when closing off a knitted sock at the toe. The technique is named after [[Horatio Herbert Kitchener]], though the technique was practiced long before.<ref>Knitting Tradition Magazine, Fall 2015, page 6</ref>


==See also==
==See also==

Latest revision as of 21:31, 18 May 2023

A close-up view of knitted grafting stitches

In knitting, grafting is the joining of two knitted fabrics using yarn and a needle in one of three types of seams:

  1. selvage-to-selvage seam,
  2. selvage-to-end ("wales") seam, or
  3. end-to-end ("wale-to-wale") seam.

The Kitchener stitch is a common method for the third type of seam. The yarn follows the route of a row of ordinary knitting. This is often done when closing off a knitted sock at the toe. The technique is named after Horatio Herbert Kitchener, though the technique was practiced long before.[1]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Knitting Tradition Magazine, Fall 2015, page 6
  • June Hemmons Hiatt (1988) The Principles of Knitting, Simon & Schuster, pp. 361–378. ISBN 0-671-55233-3
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