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When I finished knitting the 210 very long rows of my Volt shawl, and it was time to commence the applied I-cord edging, it was frightfully exciting. 

Grace Anna Farrow’s instructions for Volt instruct, in the elegantly economical way that I have come to expect of her patterns, how to do the I-cord edging along the live stitches as a bind-off, and on the side edges (the row ends) via the pick-up-a-stitch-and-attach-it-as-you-go method.

I’ve applied miles of 3- or 4-stitch I-cord in a similar manner to all kinds of projects needing a tidy, smooth edge. I love it so much it’s ridiculous. I don’t just love applied I-cord in the casual sense of  “I find this technique quite useful and good.”  I love it in the way that I love a small mixed-breed terrier or candied orange peel or the quilts of Gee’s Bend.

I do not want to contemplate a life that does not include attaching I-cord to things on a regular basis.

The concept of applied I-cord is this: you cast on 4 (or 3) stitches and begin to knit an I-cord, and apply–or attach–it to the edge of a piece by knitting the last stitch of each round of I-cord together with a stitch on the edge of the main piece.

I do applied I-cord the same way, whether my “edge stitch” results from a live stitch sitting there waiting to be bound off, or from picking it up. For a 4-stitch I-cord, it goes like this:

K3, k2tog (the last stitch of the I-cord with the edge stitch) THROUGH THE BACK LOOPS, slip all 4 stitches back onto left needle.

[Note: I use two straight needles for applied I-cord. Ann advocates using double-pointed needles to avoid having to transfer the stitches back to the left needle on every round. With double-pointed needles, you can just slip the stitches to the other end of the needle. Both methods are legit, so it’s a matter of personal preference.]

Here’s how the Volt instructions say to do it: K3, slip 1 (the last stitch of the I-cord), yo, k1 (the edge stitch), pass the slipped stitch and yarn-over over, replace stitches onto left-hand needle.

That slipping-the-yarnover business struck me as fiddly, and I wondered what it accomplished. I tried it out on my Volt, and saw that what it accomplishes is this: it hides that edge stitch, which in this case is in a contrasting color to the I-cord, in a neat and tidy manner.

But my way, a plain old k2tog through the back loops, does the same thing. And to me it is easier and even a bit neater (because you don’t have to pass a slipped stitch and a yarnover over, which can lead to an irregular or elongated stitch, although you probably get real good at it and stop having this problem in the course of a whole shawl’s worth of I-cord).

Here’s how it would look if you did a k2tog the regular way:

See (on the left) how that grey stitch stands up straight and calls attention to itself? We’re not having any of THAT. That is abhorrent to all right-minded knitters, an affront to our ideals of workmanship. We will avoid it at all costs, including, if we have to, passing over a slipped stitch and a yarnover.

Here’s how it looks the way I do it, working a k2tog through the back loop (the section of I-cord on the right):

The gray edge stitch is neatly tucked under the I-cord.

Here’s how it looks on the wrong side:

The neatness of the join on the wrong side gives me unspeakable joy.

I-cord is all about the neatness, but there is more than one way to do neatly. 

12 Comments

  • I found my way to this entry from today’s (1-17-17) about your Hap Happiness, and enjoyed reading and studying it – can’t wait to use it, and will try your knit-through-the-back-loops method. And since there were no comments – how could there be no comments on such a clever and useful tutorial – I decided I would leave one to say thank you. So – thank you!

  • Beautiful! This has always had me baffled about how to do this soooo neatly. I see this getting worked into a new project. Hmmm I wonder what it will be?

  • Found this article when Googling ‘neat i-cord’. Your explanation is great, however all the pictures are missing except the first one of the shawl. Would love to see the examples; that said, I immediately started using your technique anyway.

  • Like the previous commenter: I don’t get the pictures except the first one. Could they be re-posted or something? Pretty please??

    • Running to fetch them, please stand by….

      • Thank you Thank you! I’m psyching myself up to start the Volt, have the kit and everything, so I just needed some encouraging photos! (PS wondering if you did yours with all the increases on the right side like so many knitters on Ravelry did?)

  • This was perfect timing. I saw this link today on facebook (6-19-18) just when I was needing a stretchy icord edging for a shawl. By incorporating the YO into the stitches I give myself just a bit more give in that edge. So that is worth the slightly extra amount of time it takes to do it for me.

  • K2tog though back loop is definitely the wtg (a non-knitting instruction).

  • Such neatly tucked and hidden stitches ! Only way to go !

  • Do you knit the I cord with the right side facing you?

  • Found this today (7/22/19) doing a google search for attached i-cord. I REALLY love your explanation & am ridiculously excited to try this out. This is by far the best explanation for attached i-cord on the entire internet! Thank you so much!

  • Beautiful. How do I do this to a large baby alpaca squares Afghan as an edge

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