Draft:Intarsia sweaters

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In terms of layers, jacquard is double-layered, with a bottom layer and a surface layer. The surface layer is raised and raised, so it is called jacquard. The intarsia is a single layer, and the horizontal arrangement is a single layer structure. In terms of color, for example, if you want to weave a jacquard of red, yellow, and black colors, in the same knitting row, the three threads must participate in the weaving at the same time, but according to the needs, any color is brought to the surface during weaving to form Flower pattern. As for intarsia, the same three colors are red, yellow and black. When the pattern requires one color, the other two colors are not involved in the weaving. In the same row, only a handful of sand spits drive a color weave. When changing colors, another sand spit brings another color over for weaving. Therefore, in the jacquard structure, if several colors appear in the same row at the same time, several incoming threads will be woven at the same time.

Intarsia does not. In terms of thickness, intarsia is thin and jacquard is thick.

From an aesthetic point of view, intarsia is more beautiful, while jacquard is relatively less beautiful.

In terms of knitting time, changing the color of the intarsia in the same row requires changing the yarn feeder, so the time will be longer.

The picture above is the jacquard effect. Press the white thread underneath and the black thread floats on top to create a jacquard effect. Intarsia has no crimping below

How to customize intarsia sweaters in large quantities?

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