Have you got a Bond, or an Ultimate Sweater Machine, or an Incredible Sweater Machine, or a Fashion Knitter?
These are 8 mm machines, that is, the needles are 8 mm from the center of one to the center of the next. This is a different spacing from Japanese machines, a Japanese tools and accessories don't fit.
Kris Basta makes garter bars for 8 mm machines, as well as stoppers, and now she has a new product, which she asked me to review. It's a cast-on comb. At last! I really wanted a cast-on comb for my Bond.
So basically my review is I just loved the thing. I thought it was so wonderful that maybe I lost all objectivity. I love that she manufactures things we knitters need and can't find elsewhere. I love that her stuff is well-made and polished so stitches slip properly and your fingers don't get cut. I love that the spacing is just perfect, and it's sturdy enough to not get bent easily.
If you're too busy to watch it, well, that's the executive summary.
However, before investing in a set, you might want my up-close evaluation of how it was made. You might wonder how best to use it. You might wonder whether to screw the two sections together (I didn't - I like them separate). You might even want to see what I did with it - I didn't film 100% of the cast-ons I did with it, but I did the quick utility cast-on, the e-wrap cast on, the latched cast-on, and the double-strand cast-on. The one in the video was the double-strand cast-on, which I really like and think we could all use more often. It's fast and easy, too.
I chose that one because I wondered if the 8 mm knitting "community" uses that cast-on. Besides, I'd love to draw them into my channel world where they can learn all kinds of MK techniques that work just fine on their machines.
Note: you will need some elastic thread for this item, just as you do for the vinyl "hem" that came with your machine. You can pieces of thread more than once, but you'll want to keep a spool of the stuff in your Bond things.
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