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My First Cable Chart

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Before you begin, you will need the following:

  1. calculator (preferably hand-held).
  2. Aire River Knitting Symbols Font (or another font without grid lines around the symbols).
  3. a draft of your chart.

c4f.png

Although this technique can be used to explore cables, it is best used for creating final drafts, meaning you already have a 1st draft of your chart before you open Inkscape.

Unlike the previous sections of the Knitter's Guide to Inkscape, this is a lesson, complete with videos and how-tos. I thought about quizzing you, but decided not to under the assumption you will be working along with me. Comments, tips, and suggestions are welcome and appreciated. If you have questions, please post them as a comment as others may have the same question you did. I may email you privately for more details, so please use a valid email address in your comment. (I'm the only one who can see it.)

Always save after every step and while you're working.

Steps:

  1. Create and Number Your Grid.
    Layers: 2 (Layer 1, Numbers)
  2. Quick Sketch the Cable Fronts.
    Layers: 3 (Layer 1, Numbers, Line)
  3. Add Your Purl Stitches.
    Layers: 4 (Layer 1, Numbers, Line, Purls)
  4. Add Your Cables.
    Layers: 5 (Layer 1, Numbers, Line, Purls, Cable)
  5. Make Your Chart Pretty.
    Layers: 6 (Layer 1, Numbers, Line [invisible], Purls, Cable, bg)
  6. Add a Key and a Title.
    Layers: 7 (Layer 1, Numbers, Line [invisible], Purls, Cable, bg, key)
  7. Finalize and Use.
    Layers: 7 (Layer 1, Numbers, Line [invisible], Purls, Cable, bg, key)

What is...

Layer

Think about peeling an apple vs. peeling an onion. An apple has everything on the surface. Once you peel it, all you have left is the core of the fruit. Onions, on the other hand, peel apart in edible layers and you can see the next layer through the one on top. Layers in Inkscape (or any graphics program for that matter) are like onions. It is a series of images stacked one on top of the other. If you delete one layer, you still have the rest of your picture.

In charting, we use separate layers for nearly everything. Each stitch type, the grid, background, numbering, and key have their own layer. Why? Because turning the visibility (the little eyeball symbol beside the layer name in Layer > Layers view) and locking them so we can't accidentally move things we've already finished is both a time and a sanity saver.

layers.png

Guide

A guide is a non-printing element used to align printing elements. So all the blue lines you see in Inkscape...you won't see them in the final version.

Cable Front

This is the non-technical term, I use to refer to the knitted stitches that cross over the front of the fabric. It is particularly important because what charted cables actually show is what crosses over the front. The back stitches meet the front and the front continue while the back disappear.

fronts.png

Stitch Type

Each individual symbol is a stitch type. For example, purl is different from make 1 right. When you work, work all purl stitches in their own layer. Then, work all of each additional stitch type in a separate layer intended for that stitch type. Why? Because different fonts have different kerning (the amount the font hangs over the edge of the block). This is particularly true for knit fonts. And knit fonts also don't have fixed character widths either. This means you may need to adjust your vertical guides for each stitch type.

SVG

SVG stands for scalable vector graphic. It is a scalable image that will not degrade regardless of how big or small you make it. They are a recommended web format and are considered superior to other image standards. There is some debate as to whether svg are superior to Adobe's .ai format. I've personally never noticed a difference in appearance, but consider this. Open a layered svg file in Illustrator and it is still a layered svg file. Open a .ai file in nearly any program except those created by Abode and it's flat. From an interoperability perspective, I consider svg superior because I know I can send to someone and they will be able to open and edit it without purchasing an expensive software suite.

Don't rush to convert your graphics to SVGs yet. It's no surprise that Internet Explorer does not include SVG support. However, SVGweb http://code.google.com/p/svgweb/ can add support for your website, but it's not always perfect. Stick with pngs for the near future.

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