Category Archives: knitting

Edie Beanie

Because we were camping without cell reception/internet, I didn’t post weekly patterns like I said I would. Instead we went to Utah to the Uinta Mountains. There I found bright fall colors! I also realized how each region has different fall colors. (Of course there are no fall colors at my home in the Mohave Desert.) When I designed Edie Beanie it was still summer and I was going by memory of what fall feels like. I still love the colors in this hat pattern, but they are more subdue than the real life bight fall colors that are happening in some places. It doesn’t matter really because are we just trying to match the colors in our coats, right? 🙂

Edie Beanie calls for small amounts of 7 colors. I think it’s a good use of fingering weight scraps. The pattern of alternating botanical motifs travel up to the crown and meet in a way that creates a star at the top.

This is a free pattern for now. Please do not use any of these images without consent or post the pattern pdf on another site. It is okay to link to this website so others can find it.

Happy Knitting!

Bonney Lake Cowl

Earlier this summer I started making cowls while traveling around in our camper. I brought lots of balls of Knit Picks Palette yarn and worked on small projects while camping in Oregon and Washington. I tried several sizes of cowls to get a fit I like. The first cowl pattern I put out was Ozette Cowl which is 7 inches tall. Bonney Lake Cowl is 10 inches tall so it is a bit more ample.

Sometimes choosing colors for a project is time consuming and other times it just clicks and I know what I want. I usually make my patterns on the computer using a gray scale or just black and white then add in the colors. With Bonney Lake Cowl I knew right away which colors I wanted and I was happy that I had enough on hand.

Here’s the free knitting pattern for anyone who wants to make it. I do not care if anyone links to my free pattern BUT it’s not ok to take the pdf and use it for commercial purposes. This happened to me this week and I’m not happy about it. I’m trying to figure out what to do in the future so my work isn’t used for someone else’s gain. Even though my patterns are free I consider them my intellectual property. I ask for no money but I do want proper credit for my designs. Enough said. Here’s the download for Bonney Lake Cowl. Enjoy!

Blyn

So many of my designs lately have a flower motif. This kick started a while back when I notice I had so many greens in my yarn collection I decides to use them for leaves. That’s how I came up with the design I called In the Weeds.

In the Weeds has 9 color changes for a busy colorwork project. I recently had a comment on Ravelry about this hat and they called it “controlled chaos” which I took as a great complement because that was the effect I was going for!

Excuse my rambling about an old project. This post is really about a new project called Blyn. (Named after the town Blyn, Washington. I was camping there when I was knitting this hat.) Blyn came about because I decide to use something other than green for the leaves. Why be so literal, right? I started using a color called Bittersweet Heather from Knit Picks and it gave me the effect I wanted–dark leaves.

Here is the Free Pattern for Blyn. Enjoy!

Floretta Mittens

I’m excited that fall is around the corner. It’s time to start publishing my patterns! My plan is to put out a pattern a week until I work my way through all my summer projects. I’m currently knitting baby sweaters and they should be done later in the fall too. I’m happy to have all this pattern writing part of my hobby to work on. I have a shoulder injury and have to take it easy on all repetitive movements–so no epic knitting sessions for now.

Floretta Mittens have quite a few color changes and a fancy thumb. This is the most complex project I worked on during the summer so I’ll start here. I personally enjoy lots of color changes—that’s why I do color work! But these mittens might take more time to make compared to a 2-color project. I figured if someone wanted to make them for this winter/fall you could start now and get it done.

I love fancy thumbs and have recently designed several mittens where the pattern continues up the thumb. Yes, it’s a little fussy to change colors in such a small space, but it’s worth it in the long run. You will end up with a really cute thumb—and who doesn’t want that? I use shorter needles for thumbs and it goes pretty fast. Regular length DPNs will work just fine too.

Here is the Free Pattern for Floretta Mittens. Enjoy!

Ozette Cowl

We are back from our epic 2 month camping trip. It was going to be longer but we got smoked out so-to-speak. The West is on fire! We had lots of fun and visited lots of people and places. I designed and knitted almost everyday but as usual I didn’t have good cell/internet so I didn’t post anything. I didn’t even check my blog or Ravelry for 2 months!

Over the next few months I’ll be putting out some of my new mitten patterns. In the mean time I thought I’d share a new pattern for a cowl. I named it after a place we visited: Lake Ozette on the Olympic Peninsula in Washington State. We also went to Neah Bay which is just north of Ozette – ah fresh air and no forest fires! (That’s what originally brought us to the coast.)

Cape Flattery, Washington

The Ozette Cowl was designed to keep your neck toasty but not strangle you. I tried on several cowls before deciding on the dimensions. As for the color palette, I pulled out my yarn and played around with it until I put these 6 colors together. I think this would be a good project for someone new to colorwork because there is no shaping. You start with 168 stitches and you end with 168 stitches. The begging and end of the tube is constructed with a 2-color ribbing. This gives it a somewhat stiff edge that does not curl.

Corrugated ribbing

Here’s a few tips if you are new to stranded colorwork. It will save you so much time (and yarn) if you learn to weave in the color changes as you go. There’s many techniques for doing this; just pick one and try it out. However, you may want to leave long tails at the beginning and end of the project and weave them in with a yarn needle. This way you can direct the tails away from the opening so they don’t show.

Another tip to get a nice edge is to cast-off with a needle that one or two sizes bigger than the one you are using. That’s the way I get a loose cast-off.

Below is the pattern for Ozette Cowl that you can download for free. Let me know if you make it or if you do, please post it on Ravelry.

Ozette Cowl

Aluma Hat and Learning New Things

Greetings! This has nothing to do with knitting, but I’m learning to ride a motorcycle out on some crazy dirt/gravel/sand roads. This photo is of me, taken this morning up on Flat Top Mesa near Mesquite, Nevada.

Did you think I just sit on my couch and knit all the time? (Well, I do sit and knit a lot!)

I just wanted to put it out there that even with knitting you have to be brave to try new things. So if you are thinking about knitting something that’s more complicated than you have previously tried—go for it. If you want to knit something way out of your comfort zone–give it a go. What’s the worst that can happen? Even if it’s a total mess you will surely learn new things.

Earlier this week I had a good time designing and knitting this hat.

This hat has all the classic elements: corrugated ribbing, stars, diamonds, and a fancy crown. I tried to put these all together in a new-to-me way and came up with the Aluma Hat.

The crown is my favorite part. Here’s the FREE PATTERN for you to download if you want to knit this hat.

Sprung Hat Pattern

Do you have a lot of left over yarn? I do and I’m constantly weighing these little balls to see if I have enough of a certain color to make something. I mostly have left overs of the Knit Picks Palette line which is fingering weight 100% wool yarn. Sometimes I want to design a pattern that has lots of colors in it so I’ll pull from my collection of scraps. I have noticed in general that people are more likely to make my patterns if there’s just a few colors involved. However, I design for my own knitting pleasure and I can’t resist complex colorwork.

This photo shows how the Sprung Hat came about. The bottom swatch was make to figure out how the flowers would look. Then I got to work on the crown. (I normally don’t show my swatches. I do them quick and dirty with no concern about presentation!) I never intended to use pink in this hat but I was running out of orange and wanted to save it for the actual construction of the hat. Pink yarns would be a great substitute for the flower colors, if that is what you have. There are 9 colors here: 3 light back-ground colors, 3 greens for the leaves, and 3 flower colors. Of course the leaves don’t have to be green!

Here’s the FREE PATTERN for you to enjoy!

Alpinia Hat

My abundance of green colored yarns inspired my newest design: Alpinia Hat. This pattern calls for 8 colors: a main color for the ribbing and back ground, 4 greens for the stem/leaves, and 3 flower colors. I made the “blooms” with red and oranges but you could use any scrap colors you have around. For the bloom colors you only need 11 yards of 3 colors each. With the 4 green colors, you only need 20 yards of each. The flowers could be in pinks or yellows or lavenders–any colors really. When substituting colors, consider keeping the values/shades close to the original pattern.

This is a basic charted pattern using fingering weight yarn. Only 2 color strands are used at a time. There are lots of color changes though and if you make this hat you will enjoy it more if you know (or learn!) how to weave in ends as you go.

Here’s the free pattern for you to enjoy. If you make this hat, please share a photo of it with me or post it on Ravelry.

Foreign Accents Hat

There are many colors in my yarn collection that I consider “accent” colors. Yellow, orange, red, and bright peach are a few colors I rarely use. This time, however, I used them all at once. Except for the dark gray color, the rest of the palette for this hat is BRIGHT. This is how I came up with the hat I call Foreign Accents.

For me personally, this is the best fitting hat that I’ve made. I used smaller needles (size 2) for the corrugated ribbing which makes the hat fit nicely. I used my balloon trick for blocking: soak the hat, squish out the water, fit the hat over a balloon that measures 1 inch less in diameter than your head. Let it dry like that.

I’ve written up the pattern and I’m sharing it here for anyone who would like to make it. My advice for knitters using this pattern is to learn to weave in your color changes as you go. There’s lots of ways to do this and the internet is full of tutorials. I know we all have different techniques that accomplish the same task, that’s why it’s only a suggestion. Maybe there’s a person who LIKES to weave in all the ends at the end of a project, but that’s not me.

Here’s the FREE pattern for Foreign Accents Hat:

Rock Climbing Hat

You may know that I love wool and knitting but rock climbing is also at the top of my list. My local craig is Lime Kiln Canyon in Northern Arizona. I live in Nevada but I’m right on the boarder of Arizona and I’m a stone’s throw from Utah. We chose this place to live because it’s close to all our favorite rock climbing areas. We get really great weather here this time of year but if it’s a little cold a nice wool cap will make the hike up to the craig comfortable. But enough about climbing! Let’s talk knitting!

I designed these hats as a way to use up small amounts of yarn. Quick draws and ropes come in all kinds of bright colors so I thought it would be fun to put together a pattern that used up these tiny bright scraps. I used fingering weight 100% wool yarns by Knit Picks.

The first hat I made for myself and I used my favorite dark blue color as the base. After I made my husband a dark green hat I decided it was a slightly better color combination so I used his for the creation of the actual pattern that I wrote. Of course if you make this hat you can use any colors you like.

Here’s the Free Pattern for Rock Climbing Hat. Enjoy!