you thread a thin waste yarn (I like unwaxed dental floss) through the stitches. If you make a mistake you can frog back to the lifeline and easely pick up your stitches. :) Hope that helps.
Hey Shel, I had the hardest time trying to reply... oh well. What I do, and I have no clue if this is correct, but I thread my blunt finishing needle and slip it through the row I just completed. I've tried threading it through live stitches, but wind up knitting it into the row, major pain picking it out. ;-)
I put a piece of dental floss through the little hole in my Option needles...and then just knit the row. The only thing I have to be careful of is that it also goes through my markers, so I have to adjust them (usually do this on the next row) It takes a few minutes but saves hours of time if you have to frog several rows.
Permalink Reply by Rae on August 26, 2008 at 3:51pm
Jillied, What's an Option needle? I was taught to do a lifeline by using a blunt needle to thread something, I use crochet cotton, through the live stitches. I'm currently working on an afghan in the round with about 1,000 stitches on it, headed to 1,400. I've stopped bothering with that long ago. Your system sounds better.
How do you get the markers off the lifeline? Are you using round jump rings or split rings? I have all my markers on the dental floss and do not see a way to get them off.
I am a self taught knitter, and have just started working on lace. I bought the Elizabeth I Patterns and have completed two of the scarves and love knitting lace! but I have never heard of a lifeline and would like to know what it is, also what does 'frog' mean in knitting?
A lifeline is a bit of thin waste yarn--dental floss was suggested above, and that's a good idea--that you run through the stitches on your needle to hold them if you should have to rip back to that point.
There are two types of ripping back: one is to tink back, tink being knit spelled backwards and to match the sound each stitch makes; this is when you undo one stitch at a time while still on the needles. To frog it is to take the project off the needles entirely and "rip it, rip it," a pun on the sound a frog makes.
Ok, I get the humor in 'frog-ing". Pretty good. Thanks for the info. On the lifeline, if I understand correctly there are two techniques. One is to" knit" a strand of unwaxed dental floss into your project, by holding it with your yarn and knitting the two together for one row. So if you have to un-knit you have a saved, correct back up point. The disadvantage to this method is that it is difficult to remove from the knitted article. The second method is to use a blunt needle to run the unwaxed dental floss or lighter weight yarn thru the loops that are on the needle before knitting the next row. The disadvantage of this technique is that it is a bit more time consuming. Is this right? How often is a lifeline inserted into a pattern? At the end of the pattern repeat would seam logical, or more often if it is a longer pattern repeat. Again thanks for the info! I appreciate everyone’s willingness to share their knitting wisdom!
If you knit the dental floss with the yarn, won't it unravel along with the yarn if a stitch is dropped? I run my dental floss thru the live stitches, either by using the hole in the Options needles, or with a tapestry needle if I am using small needles which do not have the hole because they are not interchangeable. Lifelines are an incredible time saver. If I am doing something intricate, I use one as often as every other row.
It will indeed unravel with the yarn if knitted together with it; running it through the loops is what works. How often to do this is totally up to the knitter.
One trick to finding immediate boo boos is to place a stitch marker after each sequence of stitches, that way if you watch the tv and loose count and make a mistake, you will see it immediately. Once I started doing that, I didn't need the lifeline because within that 13 stitch pattern sequence my mistake became glaringly obvious when I didn't have enough stitches or had to many. Also, if you use wool (noro dk) you can finger felt the ends when you start a new ball and can't even tell it was joined. You will LOVE this book so much, you might consider purchasing a copy from Amazon.com. You can usually pick them up cheaper...but this book is worth full price!!