What do you get when you cross an ungulate with a zoantharia? An Anemone ear flap hat! Sorry that is just a little zoology joke.
After being put to the back burner to make my son's hat and scarf, I finally got back to my sea anemone ear flap hat. As I posted a couple of weeks ago, I saw a really neat technique that Carla Price of the blog Knitting is a Romantic Drama used for a hat. I used that technique with a bulky yarn to make an ear flap hat with the left over Noro Hitsuji from the chullo hat I made my husband. I really like the way that it turned out -- it should be incredibly warm.
I basically adapted the ear flap hat patterns that I have done to use the tendril technique with help from notes on Carla's blog post dated 12/14/2012.
Easy Peasy!
Happy Knitting!
Incessant chatter with insufficient knowledge on quilting, knitting, sewing, cooking and the like.
Showing posts with label tendrils. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tendrils. Show all posts
Friday, January 4, 2013
Saturday, December 22, 2012
Sea Anemone Ear Flap Hat
Just the ear flaps done |
I was reading some of the knitting blogs I follow and found this post by Carla Price on her blog Knitting is a Romantic Drama. BINGO! This was something different. I contacted Carla and she generously added her notes on how she created her self-designed hat. She pointed me to where she learned the stitch: a video by one of my favorite sock designers, Cat Bordhi (how did I miss that?!) And away I go. . .
I am still addicted to ear flaps, so I started directly with the them -- no i-cord on this hat. Since the tendril is created on the knit row; I am doing my increases on the purl row. Although, both Carla and Cat made their tendrils with a set count of twists, I am being a little less rigid and twisting until it looks right as I am making them somewhat different lengths. (Anemones don't measure their little tentacles to make sure they are all exactly the same.)
I am thinking of adding a strap between the ear flaps to keep the hat tight in the Chicago winter wind. I don't want to loose this puppy! That is one nice thing that I found about the i-cord on the other hats (here and here) I made myself. If I tuck them into my coat, it helps the hat stay on in 50+ mph wind gusts. I walk across the Chicago River and the wind is always strongest there. I don't want any of my work to take a dive -- I won't go in after it.
This is a really fun project. I am taking detailed notes, so that if the hat works out, I will have a pattern to share. Who knows, maybe I will even go back and make a child size hat, too!
Happy Knitting!
How to make an tendril:
Fig. 1 |
Fig. 2 |
Fig. 3 |
Fig. 4 |
Fig. 5 |
Fig. 6 |
Fig. 7 |
Making the tendril the "wrong way" as in Fig. 6 is a little easier as the stitch is not stretched as tightly and I made several wrong and had to correct them.
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