Multi-Color Knitting Patterns - Introduction
If you see more than one color in the photo of a knitting pattern, you will probably be using at least one ball of yarn for each color. (There are exceptions, and I’ll talk about them later.)
The confirmation is in the Materials section of the header of the knitting pattern. You might see something like the following:
- CA: Black - 1 ball
- CB: Red - 1 ball
- MC and CC (for Main and Contrasting colors)
- MC and CA (for Main and Color A)
- A and B (for color A and color B)
- A, B, C, D, E would be for 5 colors. There is no hint as to which is used most.
- MC, CA, CB, CC, CD would be for a main color with 4 different contrasting colors.
- The MC and CC combination is only used for 2 colors, a Main and a Contrasting color.
In the Instructions Section
The knitting pattern will usually have the word WITH before whatever color code letters are used. Examples:- Row 1: (RS). With MC, purl across.
- Row 1: (RS). With A, K2. With B, K2. With A, K2.
The Exception: A Single Ball of Yarn with Multiple Colors
Once upon a time, if you saw a knitting pattern photo with lots of colors, you knew immediately that you would need balls of yarn in each of those colors.
These days, there is always the possibility that the pattern designer is taking advantage of one of the many multi-colored yarns that the manufacturers provide. They may be variegated, self-striping, or self-patterning. One type of yarn is especially designed for sock knitting, so that an interesting color pattern emerges as you are knitting.
You will know this to be the case when you see a reference to only one color in the Materials section of the header of the knitting pattern. And usually that will be a specific yarn. If you substitute yarns, you will likely not be able to duplicate the effect.
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