Artificial intelligent assistant

Please explain how to do the scalloped cast on in a round

if you're actually gonna be using your crochet hook through it so and the other realization is since I'm left right-handed I'm gonna start on this side of the loom so that I can have my crochet hook in the hand that I'm more comfortable with if you're left-handed you should be able to start at the other side and all you're gonna do is create your Slipknot but instead of putting on the peg we're gonna actually put it on our crochet hook give a little tug not to tub tight because you're gonna need to put a loop through there now we're gonna start with our crochet hook on the last outside of the last peg this is a pig I want to start with I want it on the outside of it if you want to start in more you would move it here if this was the peg you're gonna start with so again I wanna start right on the edge so I'm gonna start here and will it take to be my working I'm gonna hold a little bit of my straggler just to keep it from wiggling all over my crochet hook I'm gonna kind of hold it gently with my hand and now I'm gonna take and I'm going to put the working yarn behind the peg I'm gonna come in front and I'm gonna grab my working yarn twist it to bring it through that loop oops and there's one then actually go a behind little peg then grab it with your crochet hook excuse me give it a little turn to bring it through your loop loops and try that again I can hear you okay it's usually not this difficult once you get the rhythm down and you might be holding the Loom a different way so again behind it grab it in front and twist it a little bit so that you can bring it through again behind oops be careful this might not be the right size crochet hook I couldn't find my right one I wanted to use so again I'm going behind it then we'll bring in the yarn in front to grab it on our crochet hook and then pulling it through our loop go the next and this is kind of what you're gonna do it and really still depend on which way you want to pull it through the first part of the video you saw it was taken from the video I did showing how to do the scallop cast on as a flat-panel I now want to talk about how we're gonna do it in the round and I'm sorry for the shadows and that I'm doing this at night so my lighting is a little different now as you can see it already kind of worked just a small circle and around to show you and I'm gonna finish it off again doing the same part we did our same process I showed in the first part we're just bringing this behind grabbing it and pulling it through our loop that's all we're doing now I did notice what you should pay attention to is if you use a different loom either for the flat panel version or this that has a bigger gauge which again is the space between then you may need to use two strands of yarn so be very you know which means you're gonna end up with a different look here that you're gonna be knitting over because you're gonna have extra yarn so just make sure that when you're doing this that you realize okay which pegs you need to have the two on and like I said if you're using more than one strand of yarn because you're using a nifty knitter or another bigger gauge loom that's gonna change a little bit you do now when we get into this one like a turning peg if you're using a sock loom too or the on one loom this one I thought was a little too because I'm going behind like I'm supposed to but I also let's see if here if I get my stuff all the way here but I also have to kind of go around the corner so as you can see this time kind of go like this now what this does soothing and I actually didn't need to do this one oops let me back it up because this is a lot if you're going on corn you would do that but we're not gonna actually be going around the corner because if you notice I started this process here I need to keep a peg next to it so this is my starting peg you want your ending peg to be right next to it obviously and you want to empty and just like we did in the flat panel part we're gonna take this loop off and put it on but again I was just showing you that if you went around you would just continue doing that around so we're gonna do instead is we're gonna place this on this last peg so that we can join these two parts together okay so now that we have that on there we're gonna get both our working yarn and I straggler from earlier or from when I first put this on a little tug does we want it kind of snug now the thing is as you notice we still have what would appear to be two loops here correct but we only have one here and I kinda want to make sure you know as I've seen how if you'll do that you have still that same two loops I'm sorry for the focus kind of getting off focus there so what I'm gonna do what I want to join the first excuse me the first and last together in a round I wanna pull it tight but I want to bring the yarn in front of what would be my last peg just so it looks like this two on there just like the pegs before it make sure it's kind of snug so knitting over may be tricky and you're also gonna want to pull in this because you want it to be tight against or snug against as much as you can when you're joining this two together now again we're gonna go in front of the peg before so that we can have the two loops on it just like we do over ending before but we're not gonna do anything to this peg aside from that we are just gonna leave it alone and we're going to go over to the next one and then what I'm gonna do is I'll lower my camera a little bit so you can see a little better here see what I'm doing a little more okay so we have it my camera to focus for you guys here so we have it where we I bring it in front so this one can look like two and we're gonna bring it in front normally I do the e-rep but I've so under flattening here I think it's gonna be easier to work with again make sure your working strand from beginning it's tight and make sure you holding the sky tight and again you're gonna knit over both of them because this is gonna be the start of the next row so carefully knit them over again it might be really tough you can do it one at a time make sure you're not losing the yarn that you want to go over and knit it over and what that's gonna do is it's gonna join these two around and two around so you can do a little mini hat or something and it's also going to allow you to have the two loops on the peg right before you go into a round so I'm going to do just so you can kind of see the process when it's down a little further as I will go ahead and just do a basic ear app net around and bring this down a little further and cast it off so that you can see how it kind of look like if you did it in a round again when we do a flat panel I have the sample here from the first one you see it kind of makes that nice edge I just did a crochet cast-off just to have this as a sample and this is what it would look like a lot nicer than the evap so I'm gonna go work this down a little bit just so you can see how it looks when it's done and around and what you would normally do with your straggler is either hide it into the project when you're done or you could work it into the project as you're doing it but again I will go ahead and work this off-camera a little bit and come back so that you can see how this would look as a brim of a hat okay guys remember to as I showed in a flat-panel video but because we had to on there I see here the two when you go around to knit over and make sure you're grabbing both of those strands when you knit over I forgot to mention that before I went ahead and did it because remember how it looked like there was two loops on the outer outer side you want to make sure both of those are what gets over and it might be a little toggle I guess I tight to do so you're just gonna make sure to knit that over what you'll end up having just one loop on so again I'm going to go off and work this a little down a little further so you can actually see it and around I've worked it down a little further now one thing I will say is if you're right-handed like me it's a little weird to be wrapping it around the opposite way that I normally wrap I mean normally we go this way and around if you're right-handed but because we did our cat's on a slightly different way I actually had to go this way around to wrap and it really was actually kind of weird it takes a little getting used to but I just wanted to say that you know mention that that you would be wrapping it for the rest of the project a little different than you maybe doing it doing it for a normal scuse me back cast on but anyhow I've worked it down a little bit so you could see it kind of sticking out the bottom now so this and I would work this tail in to hide it but this gives us our little brim and as you can see if I can zoom in here you can see that it creates a nice cute little edge right around now the only situation I had was here was a little gap but I believe you could easily take you're working on if you haven't worked it in yet and use your crochet hook to kind of mimic joining these two together if they didn't quite join all the way I said I haven't done this cast on too many times but you could easily do something like that where you would be joining them together and then take your working tail and bring it through the project if you need it to bring it closer together hmm but again it's really cute and I think this ability you know I'm almost tempted to keep working on this as a very mini hat for like a doll that my daughter has or something but again I like this kind of edge that it has along here and again as you can see in the round it pretty much does the same thing you just might need to tweak where the beginning and end was but this is a great cast on that kind of replaces that you wrap a little bit if you want to give your products a little different of an edge

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