Widdershins Purled I, Stringing It Low

I may not have mentioned this before (if I have, I can’t find where), but some years ago I discovered that I purl backwards – which is to say, clockwise, or Eastern Style.

I don’t know how long I’ve been doing it – if that was the way my mother taught me, being simpler, or if I just found it easier than the anti-clockwise way and decided in my youthful innocence that it didn’t make any difference.

Revelation: it does. When one knits continental style – the way I do – the yarn goes round the needle anti-clockwise. Like so:

Howtoknit.1
Although those of you who are keen on details will notice that the illustration describes this as “clockwise”. Purling the Eastern way, as I have been lo these many years, the yarn goes round clockwise (or as one might call it, anti-clockwise) instead, leaving the stitch sitting on the needle the other way around, and thus it becomes twisted when one knits into it (anti-clockwise or possibly clockwise) on the next row, going back the other way. This is called Continental Combination, which sounds like a rather delectable breakfast.

(Read this post for a full and detailed analysis of different methods and the combination thereof, if you are still confused, as who would not be.)

For the purposes of this discussion, I will not be calling clockwise purling “wrong” or anti-clockwise “traditional”, as there is no wrong way to create a purl (except one that results in a knit), and there are many traditions in the great wide world of knitting. Let us not be insular, even if we do live on islands.

Knitter of Taquile
And since I find it remarkably easy to get the terms clockwise and anti-clockwise confused (it’s that old ambidextrous left/right thing again), I shall refer to them as Eastern and Widdershins.

Yes, Eastern still creates a purl, and yes, it’s a lot easier, but you end up with a sort of rough textured tweedy look on what would otherwise be an expanse of even stocking-stitch.

All very well if that’s the look you’re going for, but recently I decided, like Henry Crawford, that “it would not do for a constancy.” I wish to have more than one purl to my string, you might say.

I freely admit that I tried and gave up. And then the Caped Gooseberry – taking up knitting again after a space of many years – got me to look up how to purl Widdershin for him, and just started doing it. Here is what it looks like:

Howtopurl
It turns out it can be done. It took a bit of finagling to get used to, but once I realized that the waft of my yarn-bearing finger with which I was wont to loop the needle was insufficient, I progressed. Now my yarn-bearing finger drops forward and down, to make sure that the yarn not only goes around the needle the Widdershin way, but doesn’t attempt to leap wildly off it, the second I turn my back.

So far, it appears to be working. I am therefore marking it down as a successful upskill. (Please do not ask me about purling through the backs of stitches.) At present I am only using this for the ribbing atop a sock, but in the fullness of time I have other projects planned which will now emerge with a smoother finish.

I regret that I was unable to discover a suitably licensed image of Eastern purl to show you. Instead, please accept this alternative which Google offered in its place: Purlovia Maxima. It is a therocephalian therapsid, and once you know that you know as much as I do.

Purlovia maxima
Its fossils were found in Russia, and should therefore presumably be approached in the Eastern, or clockwise, direction.

2 Replies to “Widdershins Purled I, Stringing It Low”

  1. I have done both sorts of knit and purl. For several years I knitted into the back of the stitch, and when purling I must have put the wool round the opposite way. (haven’t any knitting stuff with me to try this out right now). It all ends up the same when finished, as long as you do one version or the other

    1. Yes, the important thing for a smooth result is to knit and purl the same way. Doesn’t really matter which way, as long as they match.

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