All posts in knitting pattern

Free Knitting Pattern- Little Zebra Mittens!

New blog! Ryan has been working on this for me, and it’s so exciting to see it up and running. To add to the excitement, I bring you a free pattern for Little Zebra Mittens! I dare you to find something more fun and crazy than zebra print. Or young children. These mittens bring the two together!

The mittens are knit in two different sizes using the same chart, varying needle size to get a larger or smaller mitten. There is a lot you can do with such a simple pattern; a glittery yarn would make some crazy sparkly mittens, or you could bring in an optional third color to knit the cuff, tip and thumb with. Like pink and purple glitter mittens! Or a cyan cuff, tip and thumb with a traditional black and white zebra print for a little retro feel. You could go crazy colors like cyan and red or green and orange, or more analogous like auburn and camel or cerulean and sapphire.

Little Zebra Mittens

Sizes
2-4 years
5in long by 3in wide
15 rows and 17 columns in a 2in square

4-6 years
6 ½in by 3¼in wide
14 rows and 13 columns in a 2in square

Supplies

  • a set of double pointed needles, size 3 for 2-4 year mittens or size 4 for 4-6 year mittens
  • 70y of worsted weight yarn in main color (Red in the mittens pictured in the post)
  • 50y of worsted weight yarn in contrasting color (White in the mittens pictured in the post)
  • optional – 25y of worsted weight yarn in a third colour for cuff, tip, and thumb of mitten
  • tapestry needle
  • scrap yarn for marking thumb

Abbreviations
k- Knit
ssk- slip, slip, knit
k2tog – Knit two stitches together

Pattern
Cast on 40 stitches with your main color. If you are doing the cuff, tip and thumb in a different color use that color.
Divide the stitches among three double pointed needles and join in round.
Work 8 rows in k1, p1 ribbing in the round. If you want a longer cuff, knit 8 additional rows.

Begin chart. Knit with your main color for the black squares and your contrasting color for the white squares.
Note increases in the first row, with 6 increases over the row,bringing the stitch count up to 46.
In row 16, there are two rectangles each outlining 7 stitches. These represent the right and left thumbs, one for each mitten. Knit the 7 marked stitches for the thumb onto a piece of scrap yarn. Then move these stitches back onto your working needle and knit them according to the chart.
Begin the decreases in row 36. Remember to switch back to your third color if you are doing the cuff, tip, and thumb a different color.

If you want a longer more rounded mitten tip, knit one round between each decrease round.

At the end of the chart you should have 26 stitches left. Divide them among 2 needles and use Kitchener Stitch to close the top of the mitten.
For the thumb, pick up the stitches on either side of the scrap yarn in row 14.
Pick up two additional stitches, one on each side of the waste yarn for a total of 16 stitches.
Remove scrap yarn and divide them among 3 needles.
Knit 12 rows in your main color, or the third color you used for the cuff and tip if you did them a different color.
Knit the next row as follows: ssk, k4, k2tog, ssk, k4, k2tog.
Knit the final thumb row as follows: ssk, k2, k2tog, ssk, k2, k2tog.
Divide the 8 remaining stitches among 2 needles and use Kitchener Stitch to close the thumb. Weave in all ends.

Follow these instructions for the second mitten, making sure to knit the scrap yarn for the thumb on the opposite side. Otherwise you are going to have to knit two more mittens so that you have wearable pairs!

Edited on November 2nd, 2010 to change thumb placement from row 14 to row 16 and clarify decreases.

New Etsy Shop!

Along with featuring my patterns on Ravelry, I’ve decided to set up an Etsy shop for my patterns!

There are only two patterns up right now, but expect more in the future! I’ve committed myself to a goal of at least one new pattern a month, and when they go live, I’ll post here. Later on in the month, be on the look out for both a new pattern for sale on Ravelry and Etsy, and a new free pattern here in this blog! 

Memento Mori Mittens

My new pattern, Memento Mori Mittens, is up! It’s a fun mitten to knit with a lot of detailing that starts right at the cuff all the way to the tip. And flowers everywhere! I spend a fair bit of time reading about various imagery and customs related to death when working on a series of photographs, and found it as a whole quite interesting.  I recently came across some working sketches I did and liked what was going on. I wanted to do something more with them, so of course I thought mittens! I decided to use a really colourful sock yarn (Marks & Kattens Fame Trend in Party  - #653) as the background colour to stress that these are not a sinister mitten. Skulls aren’t all doom and gloom! Even if the title does implore you to consider your own mortality. I really like the patterning on the palm. I wanted to echo the flower detail on the back of the hand, so I decided on simple flowers and started framing around them, which eventually turned into the pattern you see.


This pattern is a great way to use a beautiful soft sock yarn. Pair a bright or vagrieated yarn with a dark solid, or two contrasting colours together (even better if they are tonal-dyed!) for a mitten that really pops. Think golden yellow with grassy-green, icy blue and red-orange or inky black with bright purple. If you are wearing something everyday for half a year (at least up here), you want it to feel and look good.

You need about 200 meters of fingering weight yarn for the background colour, and about 100 meters of fingering weight for the design, size 2 (2.75mm) needles, a bit of waste yarn and a needle to weave in the ends. If you have not tried using the Magic Loop for mitten knitting before, I really suggest trying it, as I find my colourwork to be so much more even compared to when I use double-pointed needles. Techniques used in the pattern include stranded colourwork, knitting in the round, increasing and decreasing and my favorite mitten cuff decoration, the Latvian Braid (you can find a tutorial here if you need one).

Making mittens and a new camera!

I wrote up the pattern for the Leaves and Petals mittens I made the other day and put it up on sale on Ravelry today. My first real pattern (that I wrote down at least) Being on size 8 needles, its a quick knit (I know I say that a lot, but I love instant knitting gratification. So much, that if I am working on a bigger project and am getting bored, I will knit a dishcloth or something to get the excitement of finishing something). And it really showcases an amazingly bright ball of Noro Kureyon, which is one of my favorite yarns. I just love the really long colour changes, and how it can go from neon yellow to neon purple to dark green and it works. There is more about making the mittens in this post. The button below is a link to buy the pattern.


In other news, I got a new camera!!! My very nice mom picked it up for me yesterday at Don’s Photo. I am still figuring it out, so I have not taken many real photos with it, but I love it. I got a Pentax K-X. I spent a lot of time reading reviews trying to decide on a camera, but in the end went with the Pentax. I used a K1000 all through university and loved it. It was a great camera, and it still takes great photos. A DSLR is a really different way of working that I am going to have to get used to. It does not feel as second-skin as my old SLR, but maybe that will come with time. The best part is that my old lenses (and I have 4) are compatible with my new camera. I have a nice wide angle, and a telephoto that I did not use much, but just realized it was a telemacro (even though I am sure I used it as such, haha). I have a lot of work ahead of me now in building a photography business. Don’t forget, I want to take your picture!

O has figured out how to army crawl, and is now dragging himself around on the floor like a little worm. I need to figure out how to keep the Hot Wheels from the tiny baby! We’ve been getting outside more with all the nice weather. Chalk is amazing! In the sense that it gets B to stay in one place while I lounge around with little O and try to keep him from eating fistfuls of grass that he rips out of the earth with his tiny pudgy little hands. Today we went to a super fun birthday party for an adorable little girl. Which gave me the opportunity to knit these adorable monsters that I have been wanting to knit forever. I think it’s my new favorite knitting pattern. It’s well written and easy to follow and so cute. B has insisted I knit him blue ones. And I am more than happy to oblige!


Recycled Sari Silk Mittens (or as I like to call them Happy Hippy Mittens)

In my last post, I talked about the recycled sari silk mittens I was working on. I finished them tonight, and figured I’d write up the pattern here. Even though it’s a really basic mitten pattern, its nice to have someone else figure out all the math stuff for you. I looked for patterns to use this ball of yarn so I could admire all of its colours and textures, but came up short. Unless I liked drop-stitch scarves (which I don’t, all that loose yarn makes me anxious), or had just a bit more yarn to knit a bag (that I probably would not use, so that would be a waste), there just was’t much out there. So I decided to use it to knit my favorite thing, mittens! Mittens are a little bit of an unconventional use for this sort of yarn. It’s not really stretchy or particularly soft and fuzzy (although a bit of washing with a gentle conditioner goes a long way!), and some people find it really difficult to work with. Maybe it is the particular brand, (Darn Good Yarn Wild Peacock Recycled Silk), but this stuff knit up really well. And quick! Because it’s so chunky they knit up crazy fast, and only took a few hours per mitten. Sure they are not warm fuzzy wool mittens, but think of how much more positive your outlook will be on a cold February morning when you are wearing such colourful and exotic mittens! Like their yarn’s namesake, they look like vibrant peacocks strutting their stuff. No one is going to be mistaking these mitts for their Thinsulate flip top mittens. Anyways, on to the pattern.

Happy Hippy Recycled Sari Silk Mittens

Yarn:
Darn Good Yarn Wild Peacock Recycled Silk
(or any chunky recycled silk yarn) The ball is 155 meters (or 170 yards), and I would say each mitten used about a third of it.
Needles:

Size 8 (5.0mm) double-pointed needles

Gauge:

17 rows and 14 stitches in a 4 by 4 inch square

Size:

Finished mitten is 9 inches long and 3 3/4 inches wide, it’s on the larger side of medium
Note:
In the shaping of the thumb gusset, when I say M1, I mean make or increase however you feel comfortable, as long as it does not make a hole. I KFB’d (knit into the front and back of one stitch). For more information on increases look here. And here are decreases for good measure.

Pattern:

Cuff:
Cast on 21 stitches and divide equally between 3 needles

Knit 10 rows

This will give you a cuff of about 1 1/2 inches, if you want a larger cuff, just knit a few extra rows.

Shape Thumb Gusset:
K10, M1, K1, M1, K10 (23 stitches on needles)

Knit one row

K10, M1, K3, M1, K10 (25 stitches
on needles)
Knit one row

K10, M1, K5, M1, K10 (27 stitches
on needles)
Knit one row

K10, M1, K7, M1, K10 (29 stitches
on needles)
Knit two rows

K10, put 9 stitches on holder or waste yarn, k10 (20 stitches
on needles)

Body:
Right mitten: M1, K10, M1, K10 (22 stitches on needles) Left mitten: K10, M1, K10, M1 (22 stitches on needles)
Both mittens: Knit 17 rows
Top:
K2tog, K7, SKP, K2tog, K7, SKP (18 stitches on needles)
Knit 1 row
K2tog, K5, SKP, K2tog, K5, SKP (14 stitches on needles)
Place 7 stitches on each on two needles and bind off using kitchener stitch
Thumb:
Pick up 9 stitches from waste yarn, as well as one from each side of the inside thumb (11 stitches)
Knit 10 rows. In the first row knit the two picked up stitches together (10 stitches)

K2tog, K1, SKP, K2tog, K1, SKP (6 stitches)

Knit 1 row
Place 3 stitches each on 2 needles. Bind off using kitchener stitch
Weave in all ends and gently hand wash with a gentle conditioner to soften. Air dry. Dazzle!