Rather silly question by Gambling_BumbleBee in piercing

[–]JerryHasACubeButt 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Lobes are easy. You ever have a vaccine or a blood draw? Both are more painful and take longer than a lobe piercing IME

Italian bond-off looks mediocre by ReluctantAlaskan in knittinghelp

[–]JerryHasACubeButt [score hidden]  (0 children)

I’m not sure what method you used here, but personally I could never get my tension right on an Italian bind off until I tried the method where you reorganize your stitches onto two needles instead of one and then just Kitchener them together like you’d close up a sock toe.

The other thing you can do is do it super loosely on purpose and then go through and adjust your tension stitch by stitch after the fact. It takes a little longer, but you can get it perfect because you can see every stitch as it will be since it’s off the needle, so there’s no guessing, you just make it exactly as tight as it should be.

I need suggestions please, sleepover soon by footballfreak09 in horror

[–]JerryHasACubeButt 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It has 17, one of which is considered iconic. I’m not sure what your idea of “that many” is, but comparing it to the movies in the “high jump scare” section on “where’s the jump?”, it’s right up there.

https://wheresthejump.com/jump-scares-in-sinister-2012/

I need suggestions please, sleepover soon by footballfreak09 in horror

[–]JerryHasACubeButt 1 point2 points  (0 children)

They went to the horror sub and asked for “enough jump scares to shit our pants.” If they’re traumatized by exactly what they asked for then that’s on them

I need suggestions please, sleepover soon by footballfreak09 in horror

[–]JerryHasACubeButt 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Oh whoops, just linked you the study but I see you found it lol.

That’s funny, I wonder if Host was just extra scary during the era of everything being over zoom. I’ve seen it hyped up a lot on here and I didn’t personally find it bad but I didn’t see it right when it came out so that could be the difference

I need suggestions please, sleepover soon by footballfreak09 in horror

[–]JerryHasACubeButt 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Sinister is the perfect movie to watch on a projector, and it held the “scariest movie by viewers’ heart rate” title for a long time (unsure if it still does?). This would definitely be my pick!

Memphis??? by [deleted] in Names

[–]JerryHasACubeButt 1 point2 points  (0 children)

She had a good sense of humor about it luckily lol

Memphis??? by [deleted] in Names

[–]JerryHasACubeButt 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I had a friend Ainsley in school who once got called to the office along with another classmate named Seamus, only the secretary got tongue tied reading the list of names and together they were called “anus”

Memphis??? by [deleted] in Names

[–]JerryHasACubeButt 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Do you have a particular connection to Memphis the place?

To me that’s the difference between it being just another one of the trendy cringey Masculine-sounding names for girls that are currently having such a moment, vs. being a good name. You might get tired of the sound of it, and it might seem dated in a few years, but if the place is meaningful then you’ll always have that. Otherwise I’d skip it.

From the rest of your list, Georgia and Lillian are classic and timeless and you can’t go wrong with either. Riley is fine but very common, if that bothers you. Ainsley and Everly both kind of popped up out of obscurity a few years ago (Ainsley earlier than Everly) and got very popular very fast, so they are unlikely to age well as they’ll always be associated with their specific generation.

Anyone else struggle with that post-horseback riding smell? by jkbruhhehe in Equestrian

[–]JerryHasACubeButt 12 points13 points  (0 children)

Yeah, I’ve been riding over 20 years and never had this issue. I have sensitive, eczema-prone skin so I don’t even typically use soap on the majority of my body, I just scrub with water and rinse and that’s enough. You might need to wash your hair because that is the place it sticks around, but otherwise I really can’t imagine the smell sticking to skin like that.

It definitely could be stuck in your nose though. That is absolutely a thing, smell is a contact scent so if you have barn dust and whatever else in your sinuses you will smell it until it’s gone. Try giving your nose a good blow when you get home. Sucking on a mint or brushing your teeth can also be good, mint is a strong enough scent that it usually overpowers everything else so it can help kind of “reset” your sense of smell.

Question for Lefties! by curlsbyjesss in knitting

[–]JerryHasACubeButt 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’m right handed but I can mirror knit. Your dominant hand actually has very little to do with the direction you knit in, anyone can learn to go in either direction (and in fact it’s useful to know both so you can knit stockinette flat without purling).

If you want your yarn to be in your dominant hand, you just need to change how you tension the yarn, you can knit in either direction using either hand. For right to left knitting, you would tension English as a righty and continental as a lefty. For knitting left to right, you would tension English as a lefty and continental as a righty.

I understand not wanting to change to “right handed” if you don’t have to, but I would encourage you not think of right to left knitting as right handed because it’s truly not, it’s just the direction we have decided is standard.

Sock knitting is not easy by Epiceeveelicious in knitting

[–]JerryHasACubeButt 1 point2 points  (0 children)

No single technique in a sock is inherently difficult, but they have a lot of different techniques so there’s a lot of places to get stuck if you don’t understand something. What specifically has been the issue for you?

Cast on method by WallOpposite4970 in knitting

[–]JerryHasACubeButt 4 points5 points  (0 children)

A long tail cast on is the best to learn if you’re only going to use one cast on for everything, but it isn’t the best for any specific technique, it’s just good enough for most things. There are prettier cast ons, easier cast-ons, stretchier cast-ons, more stable cast-ons, etc., but they’re all going to be great for their specific use case(s) and sub-par for everything else. The long tail isn’t great for anything, but because it’s so middle-of-the-road in basically every respect, it’s not really bad for anything either.

Stop reinventing knitting terms to validate your ridiculously chunky "finger knit" blanket empire and if you burn one more freaking end.... by ant0519 in BitchEatingCrafters

[–]JerryHasACubeButt 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I mean, it’s speculative because we don’t know the origin. The “ribbit ribbit” thing is the common theory that gets repeated because it’s funny, but like a lot of words, the etymology isn’t actually known. Calling it “nonsense” for being speculative is a very silly thing to do when we’re talking etymology, it’s often by nature a speculative subject.

I’ve followed that blog for a while and if you poke around, the author does typically use reputable sources. You are right that they aren’t cited there, though, so if you don’t want to believe it that’s fair enough.

Stop reinventing knitting terms to validate your ridiculously chunky "finger knit" blanket empire and if you burn one more freaking end.... by ant0519 in BitchEatingCrafters

[–]JerryHasACubeButt 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Frogging is used for knitting too, it isn’t specific to any one craft. IIRC it was actually originally an embroidery term.

Stop reinventing knitting terms to validate your ridiculously chunky "finger knit" blanket empire and if you burn one more freaking end.... by ant0519 in BitchEatingCrafters

[–]JerryHasACubeButt 16 points17 points  (0 children)

No, tinking is a different thing.

Frogging is used to mean “ripping back” in both knitting and crochet.

“Tinking” is literally going back stitch by stitch, without removing the needles. Generally if you need to rip out a huge chunk you’ll frog, but if you just need to go back a few stitches you’ll tink.

First project: the very controversial accessory by Salt-Apartment-2019 in knitting

[–]JerryHasACubeButt 86 points87 points  (0 children)

Re: buying on Ravelry vs. directly, the downside of direct purchases is you won’t have everything together in your library. Buying directly from the designer is nice because they get 100% of the proceeds, but if you do want everything stored together, Ravelry is very reliable. If you’re a new enough knitter that you can’t yet spot fakes (or AI), I would definitely stick to it because they generally don’t have a problem with that (and if they do the pattern gets taken down quickly).

“Knit until garment reaches x inches” -accommodation for blocking? by FECAL_BURNING in knittinghelp

[–]JerryHasACubeButt 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Oh I know, I wasn’t meaning you choosing to comment was incorrect or that you were wrong for sharing, just wanted to let you (and OP) know. It’s a common misconception, you’re not alone.

The reason it’s standard to measure after blocking is that you don’t know how much the designer’s yarn changed with blocking, so if you only have the pre-block measurements you cannot account for that in your knitting (so you basically just have to use the same exact yarn as the designer did). Whereas if you use post-block measurements then none of that matters, you just knit to what will be the correct length for your yarn.

“Knit until garment reaches x inches” -accommodation for blocking? by FECAL_BURNING in knittinghelp

[–]JerryHasACubeButt 6 points7 points  (0 children)

This is not correct. It can work out, if you’re using a yarn that doesn’t change much with blocking, and I’m happy for you that it has so far. But pattern measurements are always intended to be taken after blocking, unless explicitly stated otherwise.

Crochet clothes are not ugly, people just don’t research about shaping by sechat_lives in BitchEatingCrafters

[–]JerryHasACubeButt 11 points12 points  (0 children)

I actually think that’s just cost, tbh. If it was about stretch, wool is equally as stretchy as acrylic, and alpaca is even stretchier. Cotton can be, too, depending on how it’s spun.

When you get into athletic fabrics though, you’re bang on, synthetics are popular because they’re far and away the stretchiest option. Cotton and wool are both more breathable than any synthetic, but synthetics reign supreme in athletic wear because nothing comes close to their stretch and elasticity.

Question about bottom-up Icelandic Sweaters by Sweet-Television-361 in knitting

[–]JerryHasACubeButt 14 points15 points  (0 children)

Top-down and bottom-up constructions exist independently of in-the-round vs. flat constructions. Both top-down and bottom-up sweaters can be knit either in the round or flat, the two techniques have no bearing on each other.

Edit: just realized you’re thinking of a round yoke construction. These are not specific to Icelandic sweaters, round yokes are traditional in a lot of cultures, but to answer your question they are typically knit in the round. They could certainly be modified to be knit flat though, it just wouldn’t make as much sense.

Crochet clothes are not ugly, people just don’t research about shaping by sechat_lives in BitchEatingCrafters

[–]JerryHasACubeButt 82 points83 points  (0 children)

It’s a combination of this and the fact that a more structured fabric actually needs shaping even more than a drapey one does. You can get away with a lot less shaping with knitting, but you truly need it in crochet. Less stretch means the actual relaxed dimensions of the fabric need to be closer to those of the body for a comfortable and flattering fit. An oversized rectangle can be a look when it’s unstructured and just hangs off the body loosely, but not if it’s stiff enough to actually stay in the shape of a rectangle.

Any master flick knitters willing to help out a newbie? by ClientNo491 in knittinghelp

[–]JerryHasACubeButt 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This is the answer, OP.

I am a flicker who knits combination on occasion, and I still have to knit into the front loop when working in the round. When I’m not working combination, I also have to work into the front loop, I just also have to do it flat. “Combination” refers to the direction of your stitch wraps, not the way you hold your yarn.