Frankenknits will explore some approaches 
                                      -- both conventional and unconventional 
                                      -- that can breathe new life into 
                                      your old stuff: That sweater at the 
                                      back of your closet that you somehow 
                                      love but never wear. The thriftshop 
                                      coat that is almost cool. The "bad 
                                      idea" garment in a really great 
                                      yarn. 
                                     It will involve chopping things 
                                      up, ripping things out -- possibly 
                                      even power tools! Creating new from 
                                      old in a mad scientist way that's 
                                      almost always quick, inexpensive. 
                                      and lets you be the genius 
                                      behind the monster. Re-purposing tired 
                                      garments. Re-using yarns. Using up 
                                      those terrific bits of yarn that are 
                                      too short for any from-scratch project 
                                      but too long to simply throw away. 
                                      Some of these things may be hand knit 
                                      (by you or someone else), but other 
                                      projects will involve ready-made garments 
                                      that need a little knitterly love 
                                      before you're ready to trot them out 
                                      on the runway.
                                     Frankenknits will also give you 
                                      a chance to show your evil genius. 
                                      Be inspired, then send 
                                      us a snapshot of your finished 
                                      project. We'll share a few of our 
                                      favorites.
                                     This month's topic: Duplicate stitch. 
                                      Also called Swiss darning. Also called 
                                      "how to look like you've taken 
                                      the master's class in intarsia when 
                                      you can't even really purl unless 
                                      you're in a well-lighted room with 
                                      your chakras freshly aligned". 
                                      Indeed, truth be told, you don't even 
                                      need to know how to knit to do this 
                                      project, but it will help you become 
                                      a better knitter (more on that later).
                                     So say you want to monogram your 
                                      sweater. Or you want a row of duckies 
                                      marching across a baby blanket. Or 
                                      you want fuzzy multicolored polka-dots 
                                      on your scarf. you could map it out 
                                      on a chart and knit it in with intarsia 
                                      as you go. True intarsia is gorgeous 
                                      and lovely and knitters should be 
                                      doing more of it. But it can involve 
                                      having lots of daunting tangly strings 
                                      and bobbins hanging off the back of 
                                      your knitting. And a fair amount of 
                                      forethought, patience and knitterly 
                                      skill. But say you were hoping to 
                                      have "I heart Knitty" emblazoned 
                                      across your chest before next week. 
                                      Duplicate stitch is your ticket.
                                     

                                    Step 1: Choose your garment.  
                                     Something in stockinette stitch, which 
                                      you've knit or have found in the dark recesses 
                                      of your closet, works best. Choose something 
                                      in a gauge that you can see. The smaller 
                                      the gauge, the greater the amount of detail 
                                      you'll be able to capture, but the more 
                                      stitching you'll have to do. Somewhere around 
                                      4 to 5 stiches per inch is ideal. My survey 
                                      of second hand shops assures me that there 
                                      are many garments that meet these criteria 
                                      available. Maybe not in your favorite color 
                                      on the first day you go, but I have two 
                                      things to say about that: Surprise yourself 
                                      by wearing something you wouldn't normally. 
                                      Or start assembling some Frankenstash over 
                                      time and when the urge overtakes you, you'll 
                                      have some things to choose from. 
                                    
 Step 
                                    2: Choose your contrasting yarn (or yarns).
Step 
                                    2: Choose your contrasting yarn (or yarns). 
                                     You have a lot of choices here. Embroidery 
                                      floss for the smallest gauges, ribbons, 
                                      fuzz. Ribbon or tape yarns work particularly 
                                      well as they lie nice and flat against the 
                                      existing knitting and don't add much bulk. 
                                      Each offers a different effect, but choose 
                                      one that comes close to matching the gauge 
                                      of the existing garment or is slightly larger. 
                                      Too fine and you'll have incomplete coverage, 
                                      too bulky and your text or image won't show 
                                      up well and your design will develop unseemly 
                                      bloating. Obviously, if you want your work 
                                      to show, choose a yarn with high color contrast 
                                      to the existing garment. But you might also 
                                      chose a hairy or very shiny yarn with less 
                                      contrast to add a textural effect in stripes, 
                                      geometrics or polka-dots. 
                                     Step 3: Create your design.
                                     If you want to put an icon or word on 
                                      your garment, decide how much space you 
                                      want your image to take up. You might look 
                                      at t-shirts with logos on them to get an 
                                      idea of what will look right on your chest 
                                      (or back, or arm). Measure the space, then 
                                      multiply the number of inches by your gauge 
                                      per inch to get your number of available 
                                      stitches. Note whether your rows (height) 
                                      or your stitches (width) are the most significant 
                                      restraint to your working canvas. Let's 
                                      pretend that our sweater has 4.5 stitches 
                                      and 6 rows per inch and I have about 12 
                                      inches in width that I want to use. That 
                                      means I have 54 stitches in play widthwise.
                                     Depending on whether you're fonder of 
                                      pencils or pixels, you have two options. 
                                      Pencil people can use knitter's graph paper 
                                      to sketch out their designs. 
                                     The more pixelated will capture their 
                                      text or picture. Or write it out with the 
                                      font tool in an image manipulation program. 
                                      If your image has color, or anti-aliasing, 
                                      get rid of it. You want a very rudimentary 
                                      drawing here, with smooth clean edges. Sharpen. 
                                      Smooth. Despeckle. These are your friends. 
                                      You might be able to work in 8 colors without 
                                      going crazy, but not thousands or even 256. 
                                      Black and white is easiest. Think dot matrix 
                                      over state-of-the-art laser printer here. 
                                      If your image manipulation program has a 
                                      ñposterizeî option  --  use it. This will wipe 
                                      out any extraneous color patches and give 
                                      you a simpler image to work with. If you 
                                      want your image to be more colorful, consider 
                                      a variegated yarn to create haphazard shading. 
                                      More color. Less work. 
                                     
 
                                      
                                      worked in Colinette 
                                      Wigwam
                                     Now shrink your image so that it's within 
                                      the number of pixels available to you. Crop 
                                      your image very close to the edges and go 
                                      into the ñImage Sizeî dialog box. Set your 
                                      width to the number of stitches available 
                                      to you (in our example, 54) with the ratio 
                                      of width and height maintained. My image 
                                      ends up being 54 pixels tall by 54 pixels 
                                      wide. Great!
                                      
 
                                      
                                    
                                     But there's one more thing: Knitting stitches 
                                      are not square (pixels are exactly square 
                                      either, but they are much more square than 
                                      knitting stitches). If you duplicate stitch 
                                      your pattern pixel for stitch, your letters 
                                      will end up looking very short and squat 
                                      rather than how they appear on the screen. 
                                      So how do I account for that? A bit of math. 
                                      Say my gauge is 18 stitches and 24 rows 
                                      per 4 inches  --  a ratio of 18/24. A stitch 
                                      is 75% as tall as it is wide. So I can leave 
                                      my height (or row count) where it is and 
                                      shrink the width to 75%. But I want to keep 
                                      it as wide as possible at 54 stitches, so 
                                      instead, I will multiply the height by 24/18 
                                      or 133%. 
                                     
                                     Once I've done that, I've got an image 
                                      that's 72 pixels tall and 54 pixels wide. 
                                      It looks strangely tall, but that's what 
                                      we need to correct for our stitch-pitch. 
                                      Note that if you're fastidious you can go 
                                      back and noodle around with it until it 
                                      looks just right making some lines thicker 
                                      and some thinner, maybe changing the spacing 
                                      between letters a bit. 
                                     To make yourself a chart you have a few 
                                      options: You can view your Frankentext at 
                                      about 1200% so you can actually see the 
                                      pixels and just stitch by the computer (which 
                                      is fine if it's a quickie), or you can blow 
                                      it up and print it at that size, or you 
                                      can transfer it to graph paper (either plain 
                                      or knitter's) so you can carry it with you. 
                                    
                                     Step 4: Get stitching. 
                                    Once you've got your sweater, your sketch 
                                      and your yarn, get out a good yarn needle. 
                                      A nice fat blunt one is what you want. Don't 
                                      try to make do here, you will drive yourself 
                                      crazy with some other sort of needle that 
                                      is too sharp as you'll end up going through 
                                      stitches rather then around them. 
                                     The stitching itself is a lot like counted 
                                      cross stitch combined with weaving in ends 
                                      like an ace. Because here's the thing: the 
                                      same technique you will be using here is 
                                      the textbook way to weave in your ends. 
                                      They will be held solidly in place and would 
                                      be virtually invisible if you are working 
                                      with the same yarn as your project. This 
                                      is why this project will make you a better 
                                      knitter  --  or at least a better finisher.
                                     If you haven't read it already, go back 
                                      and look at Techniques with Theresa on Weaving 
                                      in Ends in the Fall 2004 issue of Knitty 
                                      for a great how-to. Her photos show you 
                                      what you'll be doing.
                                    Figure out where your image fits on your 
                                      garment. If you want it centered, then find 
                                      the center stitch on your sweater and the 
                                      center of the image. Count from there to 
                                      the edge to figure out where one side is. 
                                      (If this seems troublesome, go for off center 
                                      and simply start your design on one edge 
                                      of your sweater and work your way over... 
                                      you can even wrap your text around the side 
                                      of your garment if you like.) If you wish, 
                                      you can baste in some lines with contrasting 
                                      thread that delineate your working space 
                                      and make it easier to count. 
                                     You can start your stitching at the top 
                                      or the bottom of your image. Say we're stitching 
                                      our @ sign onto our 54 stitch space 
                                      and I want the top to hit in a certain spot, 
                                      but don't care so much about where the bottom 
                                      ends up. I'll start at the top. Looking 
                                      at my chart, I know that I need 12 stitches 
                                      in the top row, centered on the sweater. 
                                      I'll count over 6 stitches to the left of 
                                      center to start.
                                     
                                     Cut a piece of yarn about a yard long 
                                      and thread it onto your yarn needle. You 
                                      don't want to work with longer lengths as 
                                      you are more likely to get tangled up and 
                                      the yarn starts to get beat up. Take a moment 
                                      and really look at the architecture of the 
                                      stitches. On a single row, the yarn moves 
                                      in a sideways S wave interlocking with the 
                                      rows above and below. With your threaded 
                                      needle, you are going to mimic that shape, 
                                      essentially repeating the desired shape 
                                      with your contrasting yarn. 
                                     Coming up from the wrong side of 
                                      the work, poke the needle up at the 
                                      bottom of that 6th stitch 
                                      -- at the base of the V. From here 
                                      you are going to be following the 
                                      path that the piece of yarn in your 
                                      existing knitting takes across that 
                                      row. So from the base of the V, go 
                                      up the left leg of the stich and put 
                                      your needle through to the back at 
                                      the top of the same V. Go under the 
                                      two legs of the stitch in the row 
                                      above and bring the needle back out 
                                      to the public side of the work at 
                                      the top of the other leg of the V. 
                                      Put the needle back in at the base 
                                      of the V where you started. You have 
                                      just duplicated that stitch, and now 
                                      have one little V. Go under the two 
                                      legs of the stitch in the row below 
                                      to the base of the next V and repeat 
                                      the process. 
                                     On a single row, your needle will always 
                                      go under two legs. It will always go in 
                                      where it came out the last time and it's 
                                      always poking through the row above and 
                                      the row below the row you're working on. 
                                    
                                     
 When 
                                      you've completed the appropriate number 
                                      of stitches for that row, move on to the 
                                      next one. You've finished by poking the 
                                      needle to the wrong side of the work at 
                                      the base of a V. Come back out at the base 
                                      of the V at the end of the next charted 
                                      row. Work the next row in the opposite direction. 
                                      If your pattern has breaks between stitches, 
                                      simply hop over to the base of the next 
                                      worked stitch. If it's only a couple of 
                                      stitches, you can leave the tail and just 
                                      drag it along on the underside. If it's 
                                      more than a couple you might think about 
                                      cutting the tail so you don't have a lot 
                                      of floats on the back. Work each section 
                                      separately if you need to.
When 
                                      you've completed the appropriate number 
                                      of stitches for that row, move on to the 
                                      next one. You've finished by poking the 
                                      needle to the wrong side of the work at 
                                      the base of a V. Come back out at the base 
                                      of the V at the end of the next charted 
                                      row. Work the next row in the opposite direction. 
                                      If your pattern has breaks between stitches, 
                                      simply hop over to the base of the next 
                                      worked stitch. If it's only a couple of 
                                      stitches, you can leave the tail and just 
                                      drag it along on the underside. If it's 
                                      more than a couple you might think about 
                                      cutting the tail so you don't have a lot 
                                      of floats on the back. Work each section 
                                      separately if you need to. 
                                     It is easier to work horizontally across 
                                      a row than to make duplicate stitches in 
                                      vertical lines, so work as much of your 
                                      design as possible horizontally. You can 
                                      always come back and work the extraneous 
                                      stitches later if need be.
                                     Continue working your chart until your 
                                      design is complete. If something still looks 
                                      wonky, go back and add or subtract the necessary 
                                      stitches. This is one advantage of duplicate 
                                      stitching versus true knitted in colorwork 
                                       --  it's easy to go back and monkey with, 
                                      or even remove when your whims change.