How to Unpurl Stitches and Fix Purl Mistakes Step by Step

If youโ€™ve ever looked at your knitting and realized a purl stitch went wrong a few rows back, the instinct is often to panic or start pulling needles out. The good news is that you usually donโ€™t need to.

Unpurling stitches lets you calmly undo purl stitches one at a time so you can fix mistakes without ripping out your work. Itโ€™s a quiet, controlled skill that gives you confidence instead of frustration.

This guide shows you how to unpurl stitches step by step, even if the mistake is a few rows down.


Watch the Tutorial First

How to Unpurl Stitches (Fix Purl Mistakes Step by Step)

You can watch once for the overview, then follow along as you try it yourself.


When Youโ€™d Need to Unpurl a Stitch

Unpurling is useful when:

  • A purl stitch is twisted
  • A stitch was purled instead of knit (or vice versa)
  • The tension looks uneven in a small area
  • You want to fix a mistake without undoing whole rows

This is especially helpful in ribbing, garter stitch sections, or textured patterns where mistakes stand out.


Before You Start: A Calm Expectation

Unpurling is slower than knitting forward. Thatโ€™s normal.

Youโ€™ll be:

  • Working one stitch at a time
  • Gently controlling the yarn
  • Paying attention to stitch orientation

This isnโ€™t about speed. Itโ€™s about accuracy and calm.


Step 1: Identify the Exact Purl Stitch to Undo

pointing at purl stitches on needle

Look closely at your fabric and find:

  • The specific purl stitch thatโ€™s incorrect
  • The row itโ€™s sitting in

Make sure youโ€™re fixing the right stitch before you begin. That alone saves frustration.


Step 2: Bring the Yarn to the Front

Because purl stitches are formed with the yarn in front:

  • Move the working yarn forward between the needles
  • Keep light tension so it doesnโ€™t slip away

This sets you up to reverse the stitch cleanly.


Step 3: Slip the Stitch Off the Needle Carefully

needle inserted into purl stitch below

Gently:

  • Slide the purl stitch off the needle
  • Hold the yarn so the loop doesnโ€™t drop uncontrollably

Youโ€™ll see the stitch begin to open as the yarn releases.


Step 4: Pull the Yarn Back Through to Undo the Stitch

allowing stitch to drop off right needle

Slowly pull the working yarn backward:

  • The purl stitch will unravel
  • The previous stitch loop will reappear

That loop is your live stitch.


Step 5: Place the Live Stitch Back on the Needle

stitch releasing

As soon as the stitch is free:

  • Place it back on the needle
  • Make sure itโ€™s seated correctly and not twisted

At this point, the mistake is undone and you can rework the stitch correctly.


What If the Stitch Feels Tight?

Thatโ€™s common, especially if:

  • Your tension was firm
  • The stitch has been sitting for a few rows

If it resists:

  • Wiggle the needle tip gently
  • Ease the yarn a little at a time
  • Avoid pulling hard

The stitch will open with patience.


A Quiet Reminder

Fixing a stitch isnโ€™t failure. Itโ€™s part of knowing how knitting works.

Experienced knitters unpurl stitches all the time. This is a skill that keeps projects moving forward.


After You Fix the Stitch

Once the stitch is corrected, you can:

  • Continue knitting normally
  • Check nearby stitches for consistency
  • Relax and keep going

No one will ever know there was a mistake there unless you tell them.


Conclusion

Unpurling stitches gives you control instead of stress. It lets you fix small mistakes exactly where they happen, without unraveling progress youโ€™ve already made.

Knitting isnโ€™t about perfection. Itโ€™s about knowing you can fix things when they donโ€™t look right.

Where to Go Next

If youโ€™re learning how to fix knitting mistakes calmly, the Fix a Knitting Problem hub collects other quiet, practical solutions you can return to anytime.