What is the best way to knit socks: Cuff down or toe-up

So which is the best way to knit socks - cuff down or toe-up. As with most things in life, as well as in knitting, the answer is: It depends.

It depends on what you want to achieve, who you are knitting for and the style of sock that you are knitting also comes into play. Both ways of knitting socks have their pros and cons.

Cuff down socks: These are often suggested as the way to start your sock knitting journey for a variety of reasons but it does mean that you have to navigate the twisty cuff and couple of inches of ribbing first before you can settle into the good plain knitting section of the leg. To avoid the dreaded instruction ‘join to knit in the round, being careful not to twist’, I have a handy tip for that.

That being said, it is very easy to estimate the leg length when you are working this way and it works for a variety of heel types. Once past the heel you can pull the sock on as needed to check the foot length and decide where to start the toe decreases. An obvious disadvantage for some is the need to graft the toe closed (not everyone’s favourite procedure) although you can get around this by knitting a rounded toe (for example).

Gift knitting - if knitting socks for others I tend to opt for cuff down purely because it’s a little bit easier to get a reliable length for the foot. There are standard foot length charts available and that tell you exactly when to start decreasing for the toe. When working toe-up there is always the slight element of chance - depending on the kind of heel you are working.

Toe-up socks: It’s often said that it’s easier to try on socks that are knitted toe-up although I have to say that I’ve never had any particular issues trying on socks whichever direction they are knitted in. Toe-up socks certainly offer a faster start and there are very few things as satisfying in my knitted life as sitting down with fresh needles and yarn, and 30 minutes later having a fully functional sock toe and several inches of happy plain knitting ahead of me.

For this reason I often start a sock toe-up as it lends itself well to travel knitting and other times when you want to knit on the go. I’ve even started a toe-up sock in the cinema before now - although I wouldn’t recommend it. I’ve been known to have a sock toe, on the needles stashed around the house in case I need to grab a quick, travel friendly project in a hurry. You never know when you might need it and there’s no harm in being prepared…right?

There is sometimes concern over when to start the heel for toe-up socks and a common mistake that people make is to have the foot too big - ie starting the heel turn too late. When deciding where to start the heel it’s always best to bear in mind that socks need a little negative ease for a good fit and so slightly stretching the sock (whether on a sock ruler on your foot) is needed to make sure that you get that all important negative ease. My advice is always to slightly stretch the foot, and then stretch it a tiny bit more. It’s very unscientific I grant you but it works for me. THIS blog post has some tips that can help.

Working toe-up, of course means that there is no tricksy grafting and once you’ve worked the leg it’s just a bit of ribbing and you’re done. As long as you make sure not to cast off too tightly then you should have a perfectly lovely sock, ready to wear.

At the end of the day, it’s horses for courses. Some people will swear by one direction rather than another but it’s what you are happy with that counts. It’s always best to be able to work both ways - just in case as these skills are never lost. And in most cases, even if you are a devoted cuff down knitter and you inadvertently buy a toe-up pattern, it’s possible to convert a sock design to your preferred method. There are only a few directional patterns that in all honesty will only work one way.

So which are you - cuff down or toe-up? Or are you happy to knit in each direction - a sock ambivert perhaps?

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Can a beginner knit socks?

A pair of scrappy socks knitted toe-up

Short answer: Yes, absolutely.

Longer answer: Yes, of course they can. An adventurous beginner can tackle pretty much anything. They will only think it’s hard if you tell them that it’s hard.

I wrote a blog post a while ago called ‘Death by Scarf’ and it never fails to generate comments. So often the received wisdom for a new knitter is that they should start with a ‘nice long garter stitch scarf’, which has always been baffling to me. Why, for heavens sake would you want to beat the enthusiasm out of a new knitter so comprehensively?

Why not start them with a fun hat, knit in the round with some pretty yarn. They might need a bit of help with the cast on, but let’s face it, you’ll often need to help them with that anyway, but once that’s done they can zoom around with gleeful abandon until a short while later they learn a decrease and have their first triumphant finished object.

And socks are just the same. At their simplest you can just have them knit a tube sock with no shaping and a rounded toe (with no grafting). My BOB socks have a rounded toe like this (and a short row heel) and are really popular with beginner knitters who want to start knitting socks.

But honestly, there is no reason why a new knitter can’t learn to knit socks. The advice for them remains the same as it does for someone who has been knitting blankets and garments for years but has never knit socks. Let’s bear in mind that some people stick with flat knitting for all of their adult lives and never venture into knitting in the round at all. Years of experience does not necessarily equate to the ability to knit a sock.

Be patient, take it one step at a time and (unlike with other patterns) don’t read ahead. Socks are different - you are manipulating a fabric through 90 degrees and reading ahead about the heel turn won’t make sense until you get there. So just stick to the line ahead of you and take it slowly.

In no time, you’ll have a finished sock on your hands and a real sense of accomplishment. And if not? Well, you are back where you started with yarn and needles except that this time you have more experience and learned something which you can apply to your next attempt. Your first sock is unlikely to be perfect, but that’s fine. It’s a learning process and soon you’ll be cranking out handknit socks with the best of them.

Resources for new sock knitters

My free sock patterns: The basic one is cuff down and the Have Fun socks are toe-up

Silvers Sock Class

Winwick Mum Sockalong Facebook Group & Book

Socks knit flat on two needles - if the idea of knitting in the round does not appeal. Hanna of Germander Cottage Crafts does a fabulous tutorial for socks on two needles.

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Why are we here?

A slightly more existential question than you usually find on a knitting blog, so please bear with.

The thoughts behind this blog post arose from a chance conversation on Instagram with @ofsimplicity, who was asking a simple question of her Instagram followers - “Why are you here?” And some of the responses were just so moving it prompted me to think a little bit more deeply about Instagram and how perhaps our use of the platform has changed over the years.

I joined Instagram years ago, back in the day when it was all about the filters, vignettes and fancy borders. Your feed was chronological and you could happily scroll through in a morning looking at what everyone else in your time zone was up to.

A far cry from the heavily curated feed we see today. Filters are still very much there (although much more subtle) but still images have been crowded out by video/Reels and a lot more content competing for attention. It feels like a much noisier place than it did, ‘back in the day’.

However, I’m still there.

For me (and I suspect, many others) Instagram isn't just a platform and I have way more invested in it, emotionally than I do with maybe Twitter or Facebook. Twitter is a fun place to hang out for a bit but, to be honest I often go there to have a moan about something - and being around lots of other people also venting in a similar manner can deplete my energy reserves pretty quickly.

In contrast, Instagram is home to some wonderful supportive friendships. People that I have connected with there and remain good ‘insta pals’ to this day. Human connection is ultimately why we use the app, and why, Reels notwithstanding, I don’t think that Instagram is going anywhere although the way we use it might change a little.

Without Instagram for example, I probably wouldn’t be taking part in Blogtober - and writing this post in the first place. I wouldn’t have set myself a challenge to read 50 books this year without being inspired by the various Bookstagram accounts that I follow. And I don’t think I would be as inspired to create some fabulous new autumn designs if it weren’t for the daily dose of gorgeous hand dyed yarn content that I see served to me alongside my morning coffee.

For all of my dislike of the present format, starting my day without at least a little scroll through Instagram is unthinkable. It's part of my routine along with coffee and cat cuddles.

How about you - are you still there and how do you see your use of the platform changing? Drop me a line in the comments or come and say hi over on Instagram - @LouiseTilbrookDesigns


Excited for October

Wearing the BOB Socks

Happy 1st October. And I'll say 'white rabbits' for luck too.

Blimey - the weather has certainly taken a turn hasn't it? The rain was absolutely lashing it down outside yesterday as I curled up to do all of my writing jobs. Hot coffee and cosy socks were definitely the order of the day.

I find I work best when I batch jobs these days and for some reason Friday has become my writing day - when I sit down to do my newsletter, my draft blog posts for the coming week and any other bits and pieces, along with usual daily journaling.

I'm taking part in #Blogtober this year - and while I might not manage a daily blog post my aim is to spruce up my blog a little and more importantly to connect with others in the blogging community.

If you are taking part please do let me know - or tag someone you know that is so that I can follow them and cheer them on too.

It's also #Socktober of course so expect lots of sock related content this coming month.

If you have any burning sock related questions that I might be able to help with please do let know.

Oh, and of course there's my self-imposed reading challenge for 2022.

I'm currently stalled on book 43 of my 50 goal so I do need to make a little progress. I'm enjoying my current read - a historical fiction novel "The Girl in the Glass Tower" by Elizabeth Freemantle but it's a bit heavy going, especially when I'm tired.

So I'll be looking for a lighter, quicker read to power through this weekend and give me a bit of a boost.


And there we are: blogging, sock knitting, reading goals (oh, and a couple of new designs)... I think we can safely say that October is going to be a busy one ☕☕☕

An autumnal Fuss Free Festival Shawl

Recently I have been using a lot of my sock yarn leftovers in scrappy socks and blanket projects, which has been great but has meant that my supply of smaller scraps has dwindled somewhat.

So when I ran out of sock yarn scraps I shifted my attention to my bag of larger amounts of leftovers. I think we all have a bag of these somewhere - those balls where you have started something and frogged it, or used an annoying 30-40% of it - rendering it not much use for a full pair of socks or a shawl.

I dug out these contrasting greys and a burnt orange from my stash - I had around 60-70g of each of them and decided to knit a larger version of my Fuss Free Festival shawl in suitably seasonal colours..

I knew that I wanted stripes but I couldn’t decide on how to arrange them and I spent more time than I care to admit using a random stripe generator, playing with colour orders until I went a little dizzy.

Then I hit on the idea of ‘borrowing’ one of my sons D20 dice from his Dungeons and Dragons set and rolling each time I wanted to change colour - with the number on the dice corresponding to the number of garter ridges I would knit.

I didn’t want a hard line at each colour change so I phased in the new colour by knitting 2 rows of the new colour and then 2 rows of the old colour before rolling the dice to determine how wide the next stripe should be.

I was really pleased with how it turned out and I got so carried away that I ended up digging out some more grey from my leftovers bag (happily it turns out I have no shortage of grey). And in the end the shawl weighed in at a very pleasing 210g.

It’s is wonderfully warm and wrappable and might just have converted me to the way of the larger shawl. It’s big enough to be cosy, without being too big (thinking of some of those 3-4 skeins monsters that almost wear me, rather than the other way round).

Either way, it’s become a staple of my autumn wardrobe and I can definitely see another one or two in my future. I think I might need to buy my own D20 dice though - as my son has been making noises about needing his back.

A new shawl for crisp autumn days

I'm sure you are well aware of my love of all things autumnal, and when I came across a new word - Autumnity - for some reason it stuck in my head and wouldn't leave.

It kept making me think of crisp autumn days, the rustle of leaves and the slight chill in the air. It struck me that as we have petrichor (the term used to describe the smell of wet earth after summer rain) we should really have a word to describe the smell of those autumn days.

I can't recreate that in knitwear, obviously, but this wonderfully crisp Yak-based sock yarn from Banshee Yarns ticked all the right boxes for me - fabulous stitch definition, crisp but soft - and of course a gorgeous autumnal colour.

The shawl is an extended triangle, knit sideways with the straightforward lace border knit on as you go.

You do need access to weighing scales for this, but other than that it is a wonderfully relaxing and straightforward shawl to knit. Just make sure that if you are knitting on the move, you have some portable scales with you (don't be like me and end up carting our kitchen scales with you in your hand bag. It wasn't quite an 'everything but the kitchen sink' moment - but my husband did raise an eyebrow when he spotted it in my handbag).

The pattern is available on my Payhip store as usual, but this time - for the first time - I have a pattern launch available directly on my website (cue trumpet fanfare). Just click the button to buy and if you’d like a copy for your Ravelry library please email me after purchase and I’ll make that happen.

Happy autumn knitting.