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I found this info online
Sometimes I look at the widest row, knit the row of sts, remove from needle and measure how much was used for that one row. Then I multiply that by number of rows needed to work. I sometimes have extra after that area is done, but that is okay.
Other times I just fill the bobbin, when it is empty, refill. When there is a large area, this is the best way.
On large areas I am also known to just have a strand a couple yards or so long and let it just hang, not using a bobbin.
I used bobbins on the one blanket that had intarsia. Ugh! Big blanket, big bobbins - 6 or 8 bobbins across - and as much time spent/wasted untangling as actually knitting. I HATED it long before it was done!
If ever I do any intarsia again, I’ll do as Kaffe Fassett suggested in one of his books: individual lengths of yarn, 6 to 8 feet long left hanging until needed. No, I don’t enjoy weaving in ends, but it’s better than endlessly untangling skeins and bobbins.
sounds like shorter lengths, not using bobbins and being prepared to weave in ends is the way to go!! post pictures of your project when you can |
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