yes i know its typically used for knitting, but im feeling adventurous! and i cant find one anywhere.
Not sure, but please listen to meYou need to stop doing all of that stuff, because you can be hurting other parts of your bodyIf you keep doing that you might become blind, then the next thing you know, you will end up having more problemsPlease get help or simply talk with friends or anything, I don't want you to get worse, if your already having eye problemsGood Luck with everything, be smart and safe!!
You dared to look upon Chuck Norris.
yeah your going to go blind, sorrycutting without glasses and smoking out of tinfoil, too add on to inhaling nitrous is RETARDED!
You can use it in any pattern, the same as any other yarnTo get it to stripe nicely, remember its original purposeIf it's sock yarn, make things that are small/narrow, such as baby items, hats, scarves, mittens, gloves, socksUse thicker self-striping yarns for things like sweaters, tote bags, and shawls because the length of the color change will be suited for wider fabricsIf you want the stripes to line up a certain way, run the yarn through a ball winder first and make note of the patternThe typical self-striping sock yarn has 8 pattern repeats per skeinYou can start and stop your project at any point in the color pattern simply by cutting the skein thereSo you can make two identical socks, mittens, or gloves that have matching stripes simply by starting each one at the same point in the striping pattern.