| You've worked long and hard on a 
                            beautiful garment. What worse nightmare than to discover 
                            that it's been damaged? Not to mention any names, 
                            but I know a couple of cats that enjoy playing with 
                            wool, and a few dogs that like chewing on soft things. 
                            This article outlines techniques for common repairs 
                            to knitwear. Several things can happen, 
                            which require different types of fixes: seams coming 
                            undone, pulls, tears and holes. Before the Damage is Done There's a few things a knitter 
                            can do when creating the garment to make future repairs 
                            easier. Save a few meters of 
                            the yarn and the ball band for any garment you 
                            create, and store them together. The ball band 
                            is invaluable, of course, for washing instructions, 
                            but it can also provide hints for repair. And 
                            the spare yarn can be used for darning. Include 
                            them with any garment you give as a gift, or 
                            keep them filed away with the photos of the 
                            completed garment in your portfolio. (What, 
                            you're not keeping pictures of your finished 
                            objects in a "knitter's brag book"? 
                            Highly recommended both for the show-off value, 
                            and also as a good place to keep all your washing 
                            instructions, and design and construction notes 
                            in case you decide to make it again.) Several wise knitters have 
                            recommended sewing some spare yarn into the seams 
                            of the garment so that it gets washed and worn in 
                            the same way as the garment itself, ensuring less 
                            visible repairs. In my inevitable rush to finish and 
                            wear whatever I'm working on, I rarely manage this. 
                            I'm also skeptical about my own ability to remember 
                            where I sewed the extra yarn in, and to extract it 
                            neatly. Another solution is to attach the bobbin of 
                            spare yarn to the garment when you launder it.  I'm of the mind, however, 
                            that this is rather like making your own stock 
                            for soup, or freezing the home-made pesto you 
                            put together in August to use up all that extra 
                            basil from your garden... an excellent idea, 
                            but not something most of us have the forethought 
                            or inclination to do.  Other sources for yarn 
                            for repairs Check the ball band, and choose 
                            a yarn as similar in composition and weight as possible, 
                            so it looks the same, and behaves the same way under 
                            wear. That is, don't mend a superwash wool sweater 
                            with a non-washable wool.  Needlepoint yarn comes in 
                            a very broad variety of colors, and can be used in 
                            a pinch. Use multiple threads to match a heavier yarn. 
                            This is best for areas not very visible. You can retrieve yarn for 
                            repairs from the garment itself. If it has a turned-in 
                            hem or waistband, unravel a row or two and replace 
                            the yarn with something else, or just re-sew it into 
                            place. If you've got extra length in the garment or 
                            the sleeves, you can cut a row or two above the ribbing 
                            or border, take a few rows out of the main body, and 
                            graft the border back onto the main section.  Before you begin All of these techniques require 
                            you to sit under a strong light, with your bag of 
                            knitter's tools at your side: crochet hooks of various 
                            sizes, safety pins and darning (a.k.a yarn) needles. 
                            And after any repair, a good blocking or laundering 
                            can help tidy things up. Assume that wherever 
                            a verb appears in the text, the word "carefully" 
                            belongs beside it. This is surgeon's work.  
 Seams coming undone Generally the easiest 
                            to fix. If you made the garment yourself, you 
                            should have a good idea of how it was put together. 
                            Examine the seams in the garment carefully to 
                            get a sense of how they were sewn. If the seam 
                            was created with mattress stitch or another 
                            invisible seaming technique, this can be an 
                            opportunity to retrieve some of the original 
                            yarn for use in later repairs.  
 Pulls Another relatively benign 
                            form of damage in a knit fabric, a pull is when 
                            a strand of the yarn has caught on something, 
                            pulled out and distorted the fabric -- but is 
                            not actually broken.  
 Tug gently at the piece 
                            in all directions, and examine it closely to 
                            identify where the pulled yarn comes from. A 
                            pull causes the stitches in a row to contract. 
                            This is easily spotted on the wrong side of 
                            stockinette stitch, as two rows of garter bumps 
                            are tightly compressed together. Working on 
                            the wrong side and starting with the stitches 
                            closest to the pull, use a crochet hook to distribute 
                            the yarn back through the "squished" 
                            stitches.  
 You may need to go over the 
                            row a few times until you get the tension of the stitches 
                            right. If the yarn has broken, 
                            deal with the pull first, and then repair the 
                            resulting hole. 
 Tears and Holes -- 
                            Weaving Method (This is not my technique. 
                            I learned about it from Rena Crockett -- see 
                            Reference below for more info.)
 I highly recommend practicing on a swatch before you 
                            start working on the actual garment.
 Examine the hole carefully, 
                            and unravel it just enough to get a clear view 
                            of stitches that are now "open". Pin 
                            the piece you're repairing to a stable surface, 
                            and tuck the yarn ends underneath and out of 
                            the way. If the hole is only one row 
                            deep, a simple graft should do the job. Remember that 
                            the trick is in the alignment of the stitches. It's 
                            straightforward, as long as you get the stitches lined 
                            up correctly.  
 
 
 
 See pictures and your favorite 
                            reference book for more details. Use the ends of the 
                            grafting yarn to close up the opening on either side 
                            of the repair. Weave in the ends of the broken garment 
                            yarn, too.  If the hole is deeper than 
                            a single row, it's a two-step job. To anchor the stitches 
                            and for a guide, loosely graft the stitches at the 
                            top and bottom of the hole together with a contrasting 
                            color sewing thread. 
 You then need as many 
                            lengths of yarn as there are rows to be repaired 
                            -- each should be at least 3 inches/8cm longer 
                            than the gap you're filling. You're going to 
                            rebuild the stitches using those lengths of 
                            yarn -- one for each row.  Thread the first length of 
                            repair yarn onto your darning needle, and weave it 
                            through the stabilizing thread, under and over a whole 
                            stitch each time Æ that is, under two threads at a 
                            time. Repeat this for each row but the last, alternating 
                            the weaves. That is, on the first row, the repair 
                            yarn will be run under the first stitch, on the second 
                            row, the repair yarn should run over, and so forth. 
                             
 You'll then be able to take 
                            the crochet hook and chain stitch each column of stitches 
                            up to the top. Keep the crochet hook above and to 
                            the left of the anchor thread.  
 Once you've done that for 
                            all stitches, graft the final row closed with the 
                            last length of yarn.  
 Working from the wrong 
                            side, remove the anchoring thread. 
 Tear and Holes -- 
                            Duplicate Stitch Method This is a little simpler to 
                            do, but the mend covers a larger area, and is therefore 
                            more visible. It does have the side effect of reinforcing 
                            the area around the hole, which is of benefit if this 
                            is something like a sock that's got a hole due to 
                            wear, rather than a rip or a moth hole. Don't do any unraveling; 
                            you want as much of the existing fabric in place 
                            as possible. Again, use sewing thread to anchor 
                            the open stitches. The idea is to duplicate 
                            stitch over the region surrounding the hole 
                            -- a couple of rows above and below, and a couple 
                            of stitches either side -- and over the hole 
                            itself. The "shards" of yarn and knit 
                            fabric provide a good guideline for the stitches. 
                            See any of your favorite knitting reference 
                            books for instructions on duplicate stitch. Again, when you're done, 
                            remove the anchoring thread. 
 Socks Socks are a special case. 
                            Socks wear out, particularly the soles and heels. 
                            (Refer to my Socks 
                            101 article for hints on choosing a hardwearing 
                            sock yarn.)  Preventative maintenance is 
                            helpful. If an area of the sock is wearing thin but 
                            doesn't yet have holes, duplicate stitch over the 
                            area to reinforce it. Use a specific sock yarn for 
                            its resilience. Since sock yarns are of similar weights, 
                            and the area being reinforced is typically hidden 
                            in your shoe, it's not such a problem if you can't 
                            get a precise match with the reinforcing yarn. Even 
                            if the sock is knit from heavier or non-sock yarn, 
                            use sock yarn doubled or tripled for the reinforcement, 
                            to prolong wear. Sock holes get big quickly, 
                            so you're often dealing with a large area to mend. 
                            Anything larger than a few rows high and a few stitches 
                            wide gets difficult to weave or darn, and therefore 
                            the recommended approach is to reknit the section. 
                            Square off the hole with judicious unraveling. Pick 
                            up the stitches at the bottom of the hole and using 
                            spare yarn, knit a patch large enough to fill the 
                            hole. (Make sure to consult your design notebook on 
                            what size needles you used originally, or refer to 
                            the ball band.)  
 To close it up, graft 
                            the last row to the open stitches at the top 
                            of the hole, and seam the sides of the patch 
                            to the sides of the hole. If you're designing 
                            your own socks, you may want to investigate 
                            the "afterthought heel", which, by 
                            virtue of its construction, can be removed when 
                            it wears out and replaced. See Jill 
                            L. Schaefer's lesson from the Socknitters 
                            list. 
 More Drastic Measures If the damaged area is too 
                            visible or too large to mend; if you can't find a 
                            matching yarn, or if your skills just aren't up to 
                            the repair, there are other techniques to disguise 
                            the damage. It may not be quite the same as it was 
                            before, but it's better than throwing it away. These 
                            techniques also work for covering up stains. For damage on the body of 
                            a sweater, mend the area as well as you can and then 
                            apply a patch or pocket over it.  Damaged cuffs or ribbing can 
                            be entirely removed and replaced. Undo any seams, 
                            and carefully cut a row or two above the ribbing. 
                            Pick up the live stitches and work a new ribbing or 
                            cuff. You can reuse as much yarn as salvageable and 
                            simply have a smaller border, or use a different yarn 
                            entirely; after all, it's not unusual to see a garment 
                            with borders in a different yarn.  Fur cuffs and collars are 
                            enormously fashionable at the moment, so consider 
                            applying a novelty yarn to both the cuffs and the 
                            collar of the garment, either covering up a repair, 
                            or entirely replacing a damaged area. In the same 
                            vein, cover up damaged ribbing or borders with ribbon 
                            or fabric.  More radical surgery 
                            is also possible -- shortening the body or the 
                            sleeves of the garment, cutting a pullover into 
                            a cardigan, and so forth.  And of course you could 
                            always felt the damaged garment and make it 
                            into a pillow or bag. 
 Reference The self-published Flawless 
                            Knit Repair, by Rena Crockett, is an absolute 
                            marvel. It provides, with painstakingly detailed 
                            diagrams, clear instructions for unraveling 
                            and reworking knits using the weaving method. 
                            Order from your favorite online knitting book 
                            specialist.  |