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Cast On, Bind Off Blog Tour

When I attended the Knitter’s Review retreat back in 2010, part of the weekend included a trip to Storey Publishing!  I was so excited to be contacted to participate in the Cast On, Bind Off blog tour! They sent me a copy of this new little resource to review and giveaway, isn’t that nice?

So what do I think of this book? My first thought was that it was so small! This book is only 6″ x 7″, just right to have tucked into your project bag or sitting nearby when you start or finish your project.  The pictures are fantastic, which for me is HUGE. There is also a spiral binding so the pages will lay flat while you are working (why why why don’t more knitting books come like this?!) I am a self-taught knitter, and left-handed to boot. Good photographs and descriptions help me reverse what I need to do in order to achieve the right results.

 Each technique has the cast on or bind off name, aliases, and a brief description of the characteristics and when you would want to use it. There are photos of the front and back of the edge. Then you are taken stepwise through working each technique and tips to “Get it Right”. The front cover has an index of the cast ons and the back cover has the index of the bind offs, clever!

 My default cast-on is usually the long tail cast on, but from this book I am now in search of a project that would require something else – I love the look of the “Tricolor Braided Cast On”. I have been meaning to try a color work project, and never thought that the cast on could be multicolored as well! I also find that even after knitting for 10 years, I still need to look up how to Kitchener and I-Cord bind offs. This book will be staying close by my work area especially for those photos and steps.

Would you like to receive a copy of this book for your own resource library? Please leave a comment with a way to get in touch (either email or Ravelry id will work). Do you know of a color work project on which I could try this Tricolor Braided Cast On? Is there a cast on or bind off that stumps you? A winner will be drawn next Thursday, July 26!

You don’t have to take my word for it, I’m just one stop on this blog tour. Check out what these bloggers and designers have to say about Cast On, Bind Off too!

7/9         Picnic Knits
7/10       Knit and Tonic
7/11       Zeneedle
7/12       Rambling Designs
7/13       Rambling Designs (pt. 2: Leslie Ann guest post)
7/14       Neo Knits
7/15       Knit & Nosh
7/16       Knitting at Large
7/17       Rebecca Danger
7/18       Lapdog Creations
7/19       Nutmeg Knitter
7/20       Yarnagogo
7/21       Weekend Knitter
7/22       knitgrrl
7/23       It’s a Purl, Man
7/24       Whip Up
7/25       Knitspot
7/26       Under the Humble Moon
7/27       Knitting Daily
7/28       Knitting School Dropout
7/29       Hugs for Your Head

7/30       The Knit Girllls

56 thoughts on “Cast On, Bind Off Blog Tour

  1. I never knew there were so many ways to cast on and bind off. I would love to have that book in my knitting bag. I am Knittingkidd (two d's) on Ravelry.

  2. All cast on/bind offs stump me other than the ones I first learned, so this looks like a great book! email jeanine dot ash at gmail dot com.

  3. How cool is that Tricolor Braided Cast On. Use it with colorwork mittens or a baby hat. Fun. Hope I win. I'd love to try it too! Rav amchart

  4. I don't know of any projects to use the tricolor braided cast on for, but it looks and sounds fun. I'm with you, I didn't realize a cast on could be multi color. I onky use about 4 cast on methods and I'm not sure I'm using the right one at the right time, so this book sounds great. Gt4936 on ravelry or email newg4936@gmail.com

  5. That tricolor cast on would look cute on a pair of mittens. I'd love to try it. Thanks for the chance to win! My ravelry id is ssummerer.

  6. That book looks great! I would love to learn some new techniques for casting on and binding off – and even more than that, why a specific edging is going to be best for my project. I also love good photos and spiral binding – it looks like a fantastic book!mrscollinhobbs on Ravelry

  7. I used to do the long tail cast on, but then discovered the German twisted which is much more elastic. I use it all the time. Then there’s some sort of rib cast on that my LYS owner just taught me but I can’t for the life of me remember how to do it. This book would be very handy! I'm museshand on Ravelry.

  8. I haven't experimented enough to be stumped, but it did take me two whole days to cast on a sweater last month, using the provisional cast on for a picot hem. I'm sure this book would broaden my horizons – would love to have it as a resource. :)Rav ID eledixon

  9. I never knew there were so many cast on methods! I almost always use the long tail cast on…sooooo many to learn!I hope I win cause I want this book really bad!!!On Ravelry I'm – spinnerknitter

  10. The only cast on I've used is the long tail method, but I would like to learn more as my knitting skills grow. That tri-color cast on looks interesting.

  11. That Tricolor Braided Cast On would be great on mittens. This looks like such a great reference book and I would love to add it to my knitting library.I'm Teal on Ravelry.

  12. I am always struggling to find the perfect cast on for projects and sometimes struggle to find the most comfortable way to do what youtube tells me. This sounds like a great book! I'm shelleygupta on Ravelry.

  13. I'd love to try that tri-color cast-on – I just knit a sweater with navy, green and white – it would look so cool with this cast-on.

  14. Beautiful review. The size of this book does sound delightful!Tricolor? Hmmm…I'm new to knitting so I wouldn't have the foggiestidea. I'm stuck with the long tail cast on. Perhaps it would make a beautiful edge for a purse?I'd love to learn all these other wonderful techniques. I'm mtnbikechk on ravelry.

  15. This looks like a great addition to my knitting skills – that tricolour braid would be such a fun touch without a lot of fussing! Rav id : meppybn

  16. I had NO idea there were SO many options for casting on and binding off until I started reading some of the reviews of this book. I do know, though, that I need to learn some new ones. I have seen patterns I'd like to try until, as I read through them, I see that they require something like a "3 needle bind-off," and I say "oops! I can't do that!" If I had this book, I could learn how. Thanks for the opportunity to win it.

  17. I'm a long-tail cast on kind of girl and I use the same standard bind-off for most projects, unless the pattern gives specific directions for a way to bind off. Even on a simple dishcloth, a fun cast-on or bind-off could be a way to jazz it up. Thanks for the chance to win this book!

  18. I like the idea of trying a different cast-on. Long tail is what I use and it works, even though it is a bit tedious. A very stretchy cast-on for socks would be great. Thanks for a chance in your giveaway. LynnIL ravelry

  19. I really like that tri-color cast-on. I always use only one cast on (the only one I know…the one I learned when I started knitting, just three months ago), so I would love to learn more! My email: jenn(dot)teichmann(at)gmail(dot)com

  20. That tri-color cast on looked really cool! I'm always in search of good easy cast on! Like you, my default has always been the long tail, but it's nice to know other ones!And I think you know where to fine me 😉

  21. Oh I love that tri-color bind on. Wouldn't that be lovely at the top (or bottom) of a cardigan with a colorwork yoke? This book would be a wonderful present for either of my knitting daughters. g

  22. I would love to win this book. The ONLY cast on I know is the long tail and I just recently learned how to do it all by myself. (yay me):)kiley.focht@yahoo.com

  23. I was first taught long-tail as a two-color cast-on, but tricolor looks like a ton of fun. What has me stumped right now is provisional cast-ons of any kind. And I do rather need to master one, soon! (tinygiraffe on rav)

  24. I'd LOVE a copy of this book! I was just thinking 'Somebody should really collect all the cast ons and bind offs into one place so I'd have a resource!'

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