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Percentage Systems

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By August 16, 2012


Jen

Rip…rip…riiip…

I would love to discuss the established Percentage Systems of Seamless Yoke


Construction. Anybody game?

Here’s the deal, the sweater heaped on the chair, getting ripped back was because I
mistakenly went along my merry way starting the decrease rows from the method I’m
use to , a ‘percentage system’ of a kind that I came up from the charts I’ve used,
completely forgetting how this time I wanted to try out strictly Elizabeth Zimmerman’s
Percentage system. (no hybrid!) Feeling a little bit unsure with the over-all fit of
another way, I am trying to anticipate the difference. I’m laying the math out and
taking a close look.

Elizabeth’s Percentage System, or cute little title of “EPS” as it is known among the
Zimmermaniacs of the Modern Knitting World, I will extract from her book which I
bought recently (used) called “Knitting Around”. In EPS, the depth of the yoke is to be
approximately half of the width of the main body before the sleeves are joined on (not
circumferance, but laid flat, measured-across-width-wise measurement~ and then half
of that is the “yoke depth”). After joining the sleeves to the body, all on one circular
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needle, EPS has you knit up half of the entire yoke depth before beginning the first
decrease row, and continueing with only 3 decrease rows total, dividing the upper half
into halves, (quarters of the total depth, actually) with the third and last decrease at the
neckline.

EPS is roughly as follows: On the first decrease row , the total stitches are decreased by
25% , with *K2,K2tog* repeat. One knits up to I suppose about another quarter section
of the whole yoke depth (perhaps after a decorative pattern allows), then begins the
second decrease row, where the new total stitches is decreased 33.3% , with a
*K1,K2tog* repeat. The last and third decrease, right before the short-row shaping at
the back of the neck, is a decrease row which is a *K1,K2,K2tog* repeat which decreases
the new total of stitches 40% and which then leaves the remaining total of stitches to be
finished off method of choice. The last remaining stitches also is around 40% of the
original casted-on total of stitches. That is roughly, a condensed summery I think, of
Elizabeth Zimmerman’s Yoke decreasing which I am about to try for the first time.

Now, the other yoke-decrease method , percentage system if you like, that I’ve been
using up until now, is what I’ve come up with by following the instructions of the charts
of the book of Ann Budd’s called “Handy Book of Sweater Patterns”, a great book
loaded with charts so one can design just about any kind of sweater from any yarn and
needle combination (within reason of course). This book has been my ‘bible’ up to now,
along my adventure thus far of seamless yoke sweaters.

It goes something like this : The total yoke depth is likely the same as EPS, but one
begins the first decrease row after only about 1/4 , or less, of the total yoke depth
(instead of half). If you factor in the fourth decrease row at the neck, you’ve got the
whole yoke depth divided into thirds, with the last and fourth decrease being at the
neck. So far , are you with me ? That’s one extra decrease row than EPS, but different
ratios of decrease.

The way I’ve managed to figure the math from the charts , and from my own ‘imaginary
sweater’ which employs the EPS as a template ~ has had the first row decrease of 20%
total stitches, with a *K3,K2tog* . The second decrease row , about half way up the
yoke, decreases the new total of stitches 25% with a *K2,K2tog* repeat. The third
decrease row about 3/4 or thereabouts up the yoke depth, (depending entirely which
pattern one might design into the yoke) decreases the new total of stitches 33.3% with
a *K1,K2tog* repeat. The last decrease row, just before the short-row shaping at the
back of the neck opening, repeats the *K1,K2tog* pattern to arrive at the final neck
finish total of stitches.

Are you still with me? Have I made any outrageous math mistakes yet? (If so, please
point them out). So what I’d like to know, is if there are any of you reading, who has
tried different yoke shapings, and can enlighten me to how the end result actually fits
being worn. Until then, I will finish off my nieces Autumn Sweaters using completely
Elizabeth Percentage System, and see for myself. I will no doubt, be anxious to spill the

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beans when the finished sweaters are all blocked out. I have a sweater which I haven’t
finished (haven’t steeked yet) which is shaped through the decreases from the Ann Budd
charts to compare the EPS yoke shape to.

Sit tight, and see me get giddy with my newly discovered math abilities (Yes, I’m
suggesting that I always was a very bad math student). I’ve quite astonished myself
actually ! See you back on the subject in a few posts.

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