Picking up and knitting stitches along the edge of garter stitch.

KNITTING Knitting techniques kd, Knitting tips kd 4 Comments 2 min read

Pick Up and Knit or Just Pick Up: What’s the Difference?

Pkcing up and knitting stitches on garter stitch

Soon after you graduate from basic beginner patterns, you’ll encounter a situation where you need to pick up stitches along the edge of your knitting. Most often, the instructions will say “pick up and knit”. But sometimes the pattern simply tells you to pick up, or more explicitly, “pick up but do not knit”. What’s the difference? And what difference does it make in the knitting? Let’s make a swatch and see.

Pick Up and Knit

When the pattern tells you to “pick up and knit,” you will be working a new row of knitted stitches into the edge of the existing piece. For the purposes of demonstration, I’m working into the side edge of a garter stitch swatch. I’m picking up and knitting one stitch for every garter ridge (one stitch for every two rows of knitting). I’m using a contrasting color for the pick up and knit so it’s easy to see.

Here’s how it’s done:

Picking up and knitting stitches
Pick up and knit, steps 1–2

1

Insert the tip of your needle through the edge of the knitted fabric from right side to wrong side. To prevent gaps along the line of the pick-up, catch 2 strands of yarn with your needle, not just one (Photo 1). Be consistent about where you’re placing your needle in each garter ridge.

2

Wrap yarn around the needle counterclockwise (just as if you were making a knit stitch), and pull the loop through the edge of the knitted fabric (Photo 2). Keep going until you’ve reach the end of the edge.

Pick Up But Do Not Knit

Picking up stitches without knitting does not involve the working yarn. You will simply slip your needle under loops along the edge of your knitted fabric. To prevent excessive stretching of these loops, use a needle a couple of sizes smaller than you’ll use for whatever comes next.

Picking up stitches without knitting
Pick up but do not knit, steps 1-2

1

Look closely at the edge of your knitted fabric and identify the loops you want to pick up.  Again, consistent placement is key to a good result. Choose the loops that sit right along the edge (Photo 1). Slip the tip of your needle into each of these loops.

2

Keep going until you read the end of the edge (Photo 2). As you can see, the loops on the needle are consistently spaced, and there is exactly one for every garter ridge. At this point, I’ll switch to my larger needle, join the contrasting-colored yarn, and knit the edging.

Comparing the Results

In both cases (the two sides of a single swatch) I worked six rows of K1, P1 ribbing, then bound off in pattern.

Swatches with stitches picked up and knit, or picked up without knitting
The top photo shows the right side, the bottom photo shows the wrong side. On the left, pick up but do not knit. On the right, pick up and knit.

The photos above show you the right side (top) and the wrong side (bottom) of my swatch. I prefer the look of the pick-up-and-knit edging on the right side, but it’s not particularly attractive on the wrong side. There is a distinct ridge of the contrast color showing at the base of the ribbing.

The pick-up-but-do-not-knit edge, however, looks nearly identical on both the right side and the wrong side. The join between the edging and the garter stitch base fabric isn’t quite as clean, but if I had not used a contrasting-color yarn, it would look just fine. For a truly reversible project, such as scarf, wrap, or blanket, where you want the wrong side to look just as good as the right side, pick-up-but-do-not-knit is the way to go.

What if the Pattern Just Says “Pick Up”?

If the pattern is not specific about which technique to use, then it’s knitter’s choice. Use your gauge swatch as a sample, try both methods, and decide which creates the look you prefer.


Thank you to Ancient Arts Yarns for providing the yarn used for these samples. This sample was made with Herlig.


Sandi Rosner is the technical content editor for all things yarn at Interweave. When she isn’t knitting, she usually has her nose in a book. You’ll find new technical content from Sandi nearly every week at www.interweave.com.


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  1. I really value these expert tips, thank you.
    I’d like to collect them in a binder – would it be possible to offer a ‘Print version’ button, for a neater document version (no adds, normal margins, and so on)?

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