Wednesday, November 30, 2011

I get binary about heels

I thought of a way to illustrate what’s going on with some heels. Imagine each one below represents one stitch in a short row while zero is the needles not engaged

regular heel - peak row ½ of the stitches
111111111000000000
111111110000000000
111111100000000000
111111000000000000
111110000000000000
111100000000000000
111000000000000000
110000000000000000
111000000000000000
111100000000000000
111110000000000000
111111000000000000
111111100000000000
111111110000000000

sweet tomato heel - peak row ⅔ of the stitches
111111111111000000
111111111100000000
111111110000000000
111111000000000000
111100000000000000
110000000000000000
2 rows knit plain
111111111111000000
111111111100000000
111111110000000000
111111000000000000
111100000000000000
110000000000000000
2 rows knit plain
111111111111000000
111111111100000000
111111110000000000
111111000000000000
111100000000000000
110000000000000000

y heel - peak row ½ of the stitches, for 1 wedge, the second either has more or less stitches than the first
111111111000000000
111111110000000000
111111100000000000
111111000000000000
111110000000000000
111100000000000000
111000000000000000
110000000000000000
111000000000000000
111100000000000000
111110000000000000
111111000000000000
111111100000000000
111111110000000000
111111111000000000
111111111100000000
111111111110000000

y heel has one wedge that is larger than the other so that when you look at the heel of the sock you see a ‘y’ on either side of it. The ‘y’ I illustrated is for a larger heel. It may also be shorter. Really it depends on the shape of the foot.

Personally I like a deep heel but I think mr gobbism’s feet need it less. I suppose if I make socks for more people I will find different heels work better for each. A big future challenge for me is my mother’s feet. She had polio as a child and her feet are shaped quite differently as a result.

Anyway, if you add up the number of short rows, you’ll see that the sweet tomato heel typically is deeper than the standard heel but one may eliminate a row or 2 from 1, 2, or 3 wedges if you like.

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