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How To Fix The Jog For Loom Knitters

Hello loom knitters and welcome to our color series! 


Color is everywhere...it affects our mood, inspires us and makes us feel more creative!




This is the 2nd in a series of blog posts and accompanying videos discussing different methods of using color in your loom knitting. This topic was squeezed in on request from one of my favorite loom knitters (Leisa, you know who you are girl!) Check back for future articles or subscribe to our mailing list to be the first notified of the new posts in this series. This post will teach you how to fix the jog when knitting stripes in the round.

The series will include




  • Topic 1: Beginners! Simple Colorwork on the loom including, self-striping, variegated yarn, stripes and color changes, vertical and horizontal colorwork
  • Topic 2:  How to fix the jog when knitting stripes.
  • Topic 3:  Fair Isle loom knitting
  • Topic 4:  Intarsia on the loom
  • Topic 5:  Mosaic & Skip/slip Stitch Loom Knitting
  • Topic 6:  Finding color inspiration
  • All the topics will include video links where applicable.




Are you tired of the Jog when knitting in the round?
Do the back/sides of your striped hats, stockings and socks look terrible?
How do the pros have such neat color changes, even on the back of their loom knits?
Today I'm going to let you in on a secret!Here's how!

jogless stripes, loom knitting, fixing the jog, knitting in the round, how to stop the jog,


First, why does the jog happen?

Most knitters believe that their rows of stitches are stacking perfectly one on top of the other. The truth is, they are not. If you can visualize it, when knitting in the round you are knitting in an endless spiral, your stitches are not truly stacking. See image below.

Spiral chart, jogless stripes, loom knitting, loom, loom knitting instruction

How do we interrupt this?

We eliminate a stitch by doing a skip1, this will pull up your row of stitches when doing it correctly.

  • Everytime you change colors, skip the 1st stitch of the 2nd row of color. Place your working yarn behind peg 1 and move on to peg 2.
  • Always place the non-working yarn on top of the working yarn at the beginning of the first two rounds of a color change, pull the yarn snug to lift the row of stitches and prevent holes in your knitting.
  • Your 2nd round would read like this if it was written in a pattern (assuming you are knitting in stockinette):  Skip1 wyib, knit to the end of round.

Here's an example, using the chart below, assuming the color changes every 4 rows:


Rnds 1-4:  Knit in red.
Rnd 5:  Knit in white. (at the beginning of rnd, place the non-working yarn (red) on top of the working yarn (white) pull snug after knitting 1 stitch to pull up row of sts)
Rnd 6:  Skip1 wyib, knit to the end of rnd. (at beginning of rnd, place the non-working yarn (red) on top of the working yarn (white) pull snug to pull up row of sts)
Rnds 7 and 8:  Knit in white.
Rnd 9:  Knit in red (at the beginning of rnd, place the non-working yarn (white) on top of the working yarn (red) pull snug to pull up row of sts)
Rnd 10:  Skip1 wyib, knit to end of rnd.  (at the beginning of rnd, place the non-working yarn (white) on top of the working yarn (red) pull snug to pull up row of sts)
Rnds 11 and 12:  Knit in red.
Continue in this manner.

stripes knitting chart, how to loom knit jogless stripes, jogless stripes, loom knitting

This will be your result!

I hope I'm your favorite loom knitter today for fixing this problem, (lol). Please leave a comment below if this tutorial has helped you or if you have any other questions. Here is a video link for how to fix the jog:  VIDEO I'm sorry for the technical problems in this video, the camera fell a couple of times. I pieced the video together as best as possible.
loom knitting tutorials, jogless stripes on the loom, fix the jog, This Moment is Good

Have a great day!


20 comments

Leisa said...

Nicole!
Thank you so very much for clearing this up for me...and for doing it so quickly. You are amazing! Now the socks I am striping in different colors won't look terrible. You are so great to help!

Nicole F. Cox said...

You're welcome Leisa! Glad I could help!!

Damaris said...

You are amazing!!! Thank you very much.

Nicole F. Cox said...

Thank you so much Damaris!

Bert said...

Wow! Thank you so much, this is great!

donna said...

Thank you soooo much for this. Those irritating jogs disturb me to no end. Now I won’t have to avoid stripes anymore!

Ronda said...

Thank you for all your hard work and taking the time to help us . Your color series has been so helpful.

Nicole F. Cox said...

I'm so glad you are all finding these posts helpful! Please let me know if you are having any other problems that need solving so I can consider them for future blog posts.

janfer said...

I kept wondering how to fix this 'jogging' problem. Thank you so much for your help.

Nicole F. Cox said...

You're welcome +janfer! I'm glad you found it helpful.

Unknown said...

How can I fix it with a different type of stitch? I'm working on a project that uses the "3 step" stitch which is very open and meshy looking.

Nicole F. Cox said...

There are so many variables with different stitches that you may just have to experiment using the principles from this tutorial. I am also not familiar with the 3 step stitch so you may want to consult the creator of the stitch. Thank you :)

Rainbow said...

How did you join the new color in the first place? Do you cut off the yarn in between or do you switch every time? Does this work for three colors at once?

Nicole F. Cox said...

Hello Rainbow! You can cut the yarn leaving a 5" tail or run the colors up the inside of your knitting depending on the project. I think cutting and weaving the ends in later keeps the inside of your work neater but it's knitter's choice. I'm not sure what you mean by "3 colors at once" as I've never used that many separate colors held together.

Viv said...

How do you fix the jog in a finished project? I love my hat, but have noticed the jog on every stripe now that I've seen it, and don't know how to fix it without frogging it (which would not be practical)

Nicole F. Cox said...

Hello Viv, thank you for visiting the blog! You could try using duplicate stitch to blend in the jog a bit better but the best way is to prevent it as you work. I know it can be frustrating to see the jog but it's normal when working in the round to have a jog and I'm sure your hat is beautiful :)

Beth said...

Hi, how do I prevent a ‘hole’ when changing stitches. It happens when I go from a retap to the figure 8 stitch .. I know the figure 8 is more open but my first stitch is more open. Hope this makes sense and thanks for any help!

Beth

Nicole F. Cox said...

Hi Beth, I'm not understanding what you mean by a "retap" is this a typo? I've never experienced a problem with stitches being loose when you change from one to another so I do need more information from you to help. You may be changing your tension and not realizing it.

Anonymous said...

This is still unclear. I need a video that you explain it better in visual. Skip a stitch on which row. I am so confusing especially first color to second color, so which color to skip for?

Nicole F. Cox said...

Hello Anonymous, please read the step-by-step explanation. It clearly tells you what color to use step by step. If you need a video, may I suggest using the search feature on YouTube. Thank you for stopping by!-Nicole

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