Socks : Fixing a Felted Cuff - 30 September 2024
Back in June I wrote a post update about the bright yellow socks I knitted and gave to a friend. She put them in the long wash and the orange ribbing cuff shrank. This meant that she couldn’t wear the socks anymore because they were too tight.
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Before and After
As I’ve had the socks in my ‘to fix’ pile for a while I thought I’d better tackle them and try to fix them.
The first step I took was to identify where I was going to cut the knitting. I used a recent post where I was trying to lengthen a sock cuff. The principle is the same and luckily I used two bright colours so it was easy to determine where I should make that first cut.
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I can only imagine how difficult this process would be had I used the same colour or a very dark colour. I only needed to cut a couple of times and then with the same knitting needle I started pulling each orange stitch out. This was only difficult because that colour had felted because it was 100% vintage wool.
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I continued pulling the orange colour stitches and releasing the first row of the yellow stitches slowly but surely.
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You can see the felted cuff in the background
The yellow stitches ‘behaved’ well and so I didn’t have to struggle to put the same size needles into each stitch.
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I soon had the right number of stitches distributed in the three double pointed needles (dpns) and was ready to continue with the ribbing. This time I used a 2 x 2 rib and used yarn I had available but it wasn’t a solid colour - it was definitely not wool either.
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I used a stretchy cast off method I learnt here :
Although the sock doesn’t look as bright and new now, it still has a few months of life left in it. I call this a successful upcycle.
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I used the cardboard blockers I made again so they looked a bit less creased
Here are the other posts I've written about this pair of socks:
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