CROCHETING - Joining yarns and working with colour
Joining in a yarn
You will often need to join a new ball in the middle of the work, when the
old ball runs out. Then just as you make the final ‘yarn over’ to complete a
stitch, simply drop the old yarn, make a loop with the new one, pick this up and
draw through to complete. Hold down both short ends temporarily until you have
worked the next stitch. A knot or splice is unnecessary. To ‘join in’ yarn
because the pattern has involved fastening off in one place and rejoining in
another, or to begin an edging, insert the hook into the appropriate place. Loop
the yarn over the hook, draw through and make 1 chain (Fig.144). However if you
feel it would be more secure, make the first loop with a slip knot as though for
starting a base chain.
If you are making a solid fabric (double crochet shown here), lay the new yarn
in advance across the top of the stitches ahead and work over it (Fig.145), and
after the change work over the end of the old yarn (Fig.146). This saves later
‘darning in’ time.



Changing colour
When you are joining in, or changing from one yarn to another for reasons of
colour (treble shown here), you drop the old colour and pick up the new one
before you complete the last stitch in the old colour (Fig.147) so that the loop
on the hook afterwards is already in the new colour (Figs 148 and 149).



When you are working whole rows in different colours, make the change during the
last stitch in the row, so the new colour for the next row is ready to work the
turning chain.
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