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Norwegian Purling for Continental Style Knitters + Video

March 22, 2023 2 Comments

Learn how to do Norwegian purl to help improve your continental knitting tension with this quick tutorial. (Includes video!)

In my last tutorial, I demonstrated the differences between continental and throwing style knitting, including how to knit with each method. Interestingly, many knitters commented that purling, specifically tensioning the working yarn at the front of the work, was challenging to master in continental style. I also ran into issues with my purl tension, as well as minor finger pain, as I developed my continental knitting style. Between these issues and those mentioned by commenters, I did some digging, and it turns out, something called Norwegian purling can help.

What is a Norwegian Purl, and why is it worth a try?

Using this approach to purling has some advantages. Many continental style knitters find that being able to work purl stitches without jump-roping your yarn from the back to the front of the work is more convenient and results in more even tension. Norwegian purling is great for knit-and-purl stitches like ribbing, seed or moss stitch.

Is it just a Norwegian technique? Based on cursory internet research, it appears this purling method is popular in Norway, Denmark and Switzerland (but not Sweden for some reason?). If anyone who’s reading this can confirm or deny this, please let me know. I have great-great-grandmothers from all of those countries, but didn’t grow up seeing this purling method at all.

How to do a Norwegian style purl for continental knitting

Photo Tutorial

1. Going behind your working yarn, insert your right hand needle into the next available loop on your left hand needle. If you don’t begin by going BEHIND your working yarn, you’ll end up with an extra yarn over between stitches.

Learn how to do Norwegian purl to help improve your continental knitting tension with this quick tutorial. (Includes video!)

2. Bring the tip of your right needle around to the back of your work, still inserted into that first loop on the left needle. (Tip: Look closely at the reference image or check out the video if you’re struggling with this step.) Then, you’ll wrap the working yarn around the right needle.

Learn how to do Norwegian purl to help improve your continental knitting tension with this quick tutorial. (Includes video!)

3. Bring the right needle back around to the front, and draw the wrapped working yarn up through the first loop on your left needle.

Learn how to do Norwegian purl to help improve your continental knitting tension with this quick tutorial. (Includes video!)

4. Sweep it off the needle.

Learn how to do Norwegian purl to help improve your continental knitting tension with this quick tutorial. (Includes video!)

P.S. Here’s what getting ready to work a continental style knit stitch after finishing a Norwegian purl looks like – yarn remains at the back.

Learn how to do Norwegian purl to help improve your continental knitting tension with this quick tutorial. (Includes video!)
Working a continental (picking) style knit stitch.

Video tutorial

And here’s how to do this in video form, starting with a brief overview of the technique and including a slow motion section with repeats to help demonstrate the technique. If you’re finding you want the video even slower, you can click the sprocket icon at the bottom of the video (it looks like this: ⚙️) to use the built-in speed controls to make it super slow. :)

Animated GIF tutorial

This particular technique was well-suited to animation, so I thought I’d give it a go. If you’re like me, you might not be the most patient when you’re just looking for a refresher tutorial on something you’ve learned in the past. Hopefully this will be useful!

(We knitters would never be impatient… 😆)

Learn how to do Norwegian purl to help improve your continental knitting tension with this quick tutorial. (Includes video!)
How to work a Norwegian purl, in GIF form.

Useful resources:

  • Knit Stars: How to Norwegian Purl with Arne & Carlos – This was my first introduction to this type of purling, thank you for this!
  • The Norwegian Knit and Purl Revisited – A couple in-depth looks at the technique using video for those who want to learn more tips & tricks.
  • Norwegian Purl Photo Tutorial – Using 2 colors of yarn for clarity.
Learn how to do Norwegian purl to help improve your continental knitting tension with this quick tutorial. (Includes video!)

Filed Under: Knitting Tagged With: continental knitting, how to norwegian purl, Knitting, norwegian purl, norwegian purling, picking, video tutorial

About Heidi

Heidi Gustad (she/her) is a craft book author & designer specializing in yarn crafts. Her work combines vintage and modern design elements, prioritizing color and graphic motifs. Her first book, Latch Hook: 12 Projects for the Modern Maker, is out now.

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Comments

  1. Julie

    May 7, 2023 at 6:22 pm

    Thank you! My current situation preclude me from watching a video tutorial, so your written instructions were exactly what I was looking for and struggling to find.

    Reply
    • Heidi

      May 8, 2023 at 9:49 am

      Glad it was helpful! :)

      Reply

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Heidi Gustad from Hands Occupied / Craft Book Author and Knitting, Crochet, Latch Hook and Macrame Designer

Hi! I’m Heidi (she/her/hers), and I’ve been helping yarn crafters untangle various techniques on the internet since 2010. I got my start here, as a blogger, and since then I’ve shared more than a few tutorials here and on YouTube as I’ve grown as a pattern designer. 🧶 

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Heidi Gustad 🧶 knitting & yarn crafts

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Knitting & yarn crafts designer 🧶
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POV: Showing you how my new Bevelled Tank pattern POV: Showing you how my new Bevelled Tank pattern fits with no ease vs. 4” of positive ease. There’s a bit more length to the cotton (brighter color) sample, but both are cropped and feature shoulder seams designed to sit an inch back onto the shoulder instead of on top, giving it a little swing. Length is easily adjustable for folks looking for less of a crop. 
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Pattern: Bevelled Tank by @handsoccupied for @pompommag x @hobbii_yarn summer 2024. Available for free from Hobbii at the 🔗 in my profile.
Yarn pictured: @kelbournewoolens Skipper and Camper. 
Dress form is adjusted to a 36” chest and ~5’3”ish in height. 
Human has a 40” chest and is 5’5”.
Both skirts are vintage.
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#pompomxhobbiisummer2024 #handsoccupied #intarsia #handmade #knitting #colorwork
Let’s talk about fit and ease! . During the Beve Let’s talk about fit and ease!
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During the Bevelled Tank design process for @pompommag, I knit 2 samples using 2 different @KelbourneWoolens yarns. One was in Skipper (100% cotton, second photo) and the other was in Camper (100% 2 ply wool). The Skipper sample was knit for a 36” bust, which measures in at 40” with 4” of positive ease. And I knit the Camper Sample for my 40” bust with a 44” finished measurement. (BTW, I’m 5’5” for folks that find that measurement helpful in visualizing fit.)
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Based on the size chart for the Bevelled Tank, that means I knit one size 3 sample and one size 4. As designed, I conveniently fit a size 4 as intended with 4” of positive ease. When I wear the 3, there is no ease at all because the garment and my body are both 40” in size. Comparing the 2 garments, you can see how the fiber content (cotton vs. wool) and fit (no ease vs. 4” of positive ease) makes a difference in the look and feel of the finished garment. 
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These samples are a great way to compare what ease looks like on different bodies. While I can fit both a size 3 and 4, the garment with no ease feels more like pajamas or a bralette when I wear it. On the other hand, when I wear the one with 4” of positive ease, I feel comfortable enough to wear it to work, even as a crop top. Plus, it leaves me with enough room to layer it with a nice button down if I’m not feeling the cropped look one day. 
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I’m curious - how would you style this tank? Would you modify it with a few stockinette rows for added length? I’m so curious now that this pattern is finally out in the world. :) 
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#pompomxhobbiisummer2024 #bevelledtank #handsoccupied #knitting #intarisa #handmade #kelbournewoolens #croppedsweater #summerknits
After a 6 month hiatus, I am happy to say I’m ba After a 6 month hiatus, I am happy to say I’m back with a brand new pattern in 9 sizes, and it’s FREE as part of @pompommag x @hobbii_yarn’s summer design collection! (Link is in my bio.)
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In my December newsletter, I announced that I was soliciting test knitters for a pattern that had originally been selected for the summer ’24 issue of Pom Pom Quarterly magazine. However, the magazine ceased publication after its spring ’24 issue, leaving in-progress designs unpublished. (It happens.) As a result, I’d begun the long process of editing, testing, and photographing the pattern for independent release through the Hands Occupied pattern shop and Ravelry.
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Before I was done with that process, Pom Pom Quarterly’s former editors reached out with an exciting proposal for the pattern. Post-magazine, they’ve begun to partner with yarn companies to produce high quality pattern collections. They wanted to include designs from the would-be current issue of Pom Pom Quarterly in a new collection for Hobbii yarn, including my Bevelled Tank. I worked with the same technical editors I would have for the magazine on this one, and as you can see from the photos, Pom Pom’s team did an amazing job of styling the garment to the beautiful standards they’re known for.
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You can learn more about the pattern on my blog and get the free pattern from Hobbii yarn - links to both in my profile. I’ll post sizing info in the comments for quick reference too. 🧶
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#pompomxhobbiisummer2024 #knitting #intarsia #sponsored #colorworkknitting 
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Photos: @dianascarrunz 
Model: @angel.jade_
Here’s a nice throwback for you: my take on a vi Here’s a nice throwback for you: my take on a vintage knitting pattern from 1938 called the Fernlace Pullover. A pattern so nice, I knit it twice.
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Yellow version 💛: knit with Despondent Dyes’ Vintage Vixen Sport after attending a @squidneyknits vintage knitting retreat in 2019 & learning *so much*. Paired with a self-drafted circle skirt pattern. 
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Blue version 💙: knit with @eweeweyarns Ewe So Sporty in Sky Blue. Paired with the 1940s Boardwalk Duet sewing pattern from @decades_of_style 
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Head to my stories for 🔗🔗 to the handmade wardrobe blog posts I wrote about each take on the Fernlace Pullover, working with a vintage pattern, where to find vintage patterns (including the one I used), & some thoughts on sizing. 
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Image descriptions available in alt text. 
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Frogging is a word in the knitting world that mean Frogging is a word in the knitting world that means to rip out your knitting. It’s called frogging because frogs say “ribbit,” and when you’re tearing out your knitting, you will “rip it” out, and that sounds like ribbit. No really. 🐸 Did you know this fun fact? 
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P.S. I did like this design concept, but to make the pattern more knitter friendly as well as more wearable, I am making some tweaks to the construction. Excited to share when it’s ready! 🥰🧶
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Yarn: @blueskyfibers Woolstok North in Morning Frost & Highland Fleece 
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