My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

Discover knitting, crochet, scrapbooking and art and craft ideas on this forum.

Arts and crafts

What does this knitting abbreviation mean?

13 replies

WomanEqualsAdultHumanFemale · 05/05/2018 21:48

I’m a beginner. I have googled but I’m still confused.

The row instructions say: S1 *s1 k1 psso k2tog etc etc.

Until this point it has only said S1 which I have been interpreting as “slip 1 stitch” so what does the lower case s1 mean in this instruction?

OP posts:
Report
Mybabystolemysanity · 05/05/2018 21:51

Hmmmm... I'm a knitter and I don't understand anything other than slip the first stitch of the row, then work repeats between and to the end of the row. Is it just a capital S because it's the start of an instruction in the pattern?

You often see a slipped first stitch as it gives a nice smooth chain up the edge of a piece of work.

Sorry I'm not much use. Someone will be along in a minute to put us right!

Report
TeenagersandFurbabies · 05/05/2018 21:52

You need to slip the first stitch of the row only. Then ignore the big S1. Follow *s1 k1 psso k2tog for the rest of the row.

Report
HoldingTheLineWinston · 05/05/2018 21:52

I think it still means slip one, it's just lower case so as to define it as part of the block of pattern within the asterixes (this usually means that section is to be repeated, which I am sure you know, but just in case).

Report
finks100 · 05/05/2018 21:53

S1 is slip one, K1 is knit one and PSSO is pass slipped stitch over the one that was normally K2tog....ie you normally slip 1 then knit 2 together before passing the slippped stitch over the two that you knitted together.
That would be great read as S1 K2tog PSSO
Ie slip 1, knit 2 together then pass slipped stitch over the two you knit together
There are videos on you tube!

Report
LadyB49 · 05/05/2018 21:55

First stitch is slip one. The pattern starts properly at the asterisk *

The pattern than starts.......
Slip 1, knit 1, pass slip stitch over, knit 2 together etc etc

By the way, it is good practice to always slip the first stitch of a row. It makes a ticket edge.

Hope this helps

Report
MrsCatE · 05/05/2018 21:56

What every one else said

Report
Vebrithien · 05/05/2018 21:56

Slip the first stitch of the row, it gives a neater finish. Then, slip the second stitch, knit the third, and then pass the slipped stitch over the knitted stitch. Then knit the next two stitches togethr. The s1 k1 passo gives a different finish to decreasing, than k2tog.

Report
LadyB49 · 05/05/2018 21:56

Ooops...... A tidier edge

Report
WomanEqualsAdultHumanFemale · 05/05/2018 22:05

Thank you all. So for This row I am slipping the first two stitches?

OP posts:
Report
TeenagersandFurbabies · 05/05/2018 22:15

Yes

Report
QuiteCleanBandit · 05/05/2018 22:37

The first S1 is at the start of the row so you only do it once asMy said to create the edge you then repeat from * for the rest of the row.
s1 is also slip one

Report
WomanEqualsAdultHumanFemale · 05/05/2018 23:26

Thanks everyone. I’ve done it now. Job complete. Smile

OP posts:
Report
Jimwenttothedarklands · 06/05/2018 09:39

I didn't know the tip about slipping the first stitch. I will give that a try with my next flat project. Thanks!

Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.