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The Swatch: Why It’s the Only Way to Truly Understand a Yarn

Anyone who knits or works with yarn has heard this advice sooner or later:
“You have to make a swatch.”
Many people skip it.
Others do it quickly and without much attention.
Some even think it’s a waste of time.
In reality, the swatch is the only real tool that allows you to understand how a yarn will behave once it’s worked, washed, and worn. Everything else is theory.
What a Swatch Really Is
A swatch is not just:
a small knitted square
a way to count stitches
👉 A swatch is a small-scale simulation of the finished garment.
It helps you understand:
visual appearance
hand feel
elasticity
stability
reaction to washing
real yarn consumption
Why Nm Is Not Enough (and Never Will Be)
Two yarns with the same Nm can:
spread differently
stretch or hold their shape
become softer or drier after washing
change their appearance completely
👉 None of this is written on a technical datasheet.
👉 It only becomes clear once the yarn is worked.
A Swatch Before Washing Can Be Misleading
A very common mistake is judging a yarn right after it comes off the needles.
Many yarns:
open up after washing
compact or relax
change their hand feel
stabilize only after drying
🔑 The real swatch is the washed and dried one, not the freshly knitted one.
What a Proper Swatch Really Tells You
A well-made swatch shows you:
1️⃣ Whether the Yarn Is Suitable for the Project
Is it too soft?
Too stiff?
Too loose?
Too heavy?
2️⃣ Whether the Tension Is Right
Is the stitch balanced?
Does the fabric breathe?
Does it hold its shape?
3️⃣ How It Reacts to Washing
Does it felt?
Does it grow?
Does it lose elasticity?
Does it improve?
4️⃣ How Much Yarn You Will Actually Need
more realistic estimates
less waste
fewer unpleasant surprises
Hand-Knitted Swatch ≠ Machine-Knitted Swatch
Another common mistake is thinking that one swatch is enough.
Hand knitting:
more elasticity
human irregularity
a more “alive” fabric
Machine knitting:
constant tension
higher regularity
different yarn behavior
👉 The same yarn can be perfect for hand knitting and problematic on a machine—or the opposite.
How Big a Serious Swatch Should Be
A proper swatch is not a stretched 10×10 cm square.
Practical advice:
at least 15×15 cm
worked exactly like the final garment
washed the same way the garment will be washed
left to rest
Only then do the stitches truly settle.
The Swatch Saves Time (Not the Other Way Around)
Skipping the swatch often means:
undoing work
starting over
wasting yarn
losing hours
Making a proper swatch means:
deciding in advance
making mistakes on a small scale
working with confidence
👉 The swatch doesn’t slow the project down.
👉 It prevents the project from failing.
A Fundamental Principle
The yarn on the cone makes promises.
The swatch keeps them—or breaks them.
Until you work and wash it, you don’t really know a yarn.
The swatch is:
a technical tool
a reality check
a silent ally
Those who learn to trust the swatch:
choose yarns more wisely
make fewer mistakes
achieve better results
truly understand what they are working with

