Tag Archives: mittens

New Pattern – Sebright Hat and Mittens

The new edition of Knit Now magazine (issue 54) is published today and includes my latest patterns – Sebright hat and mittens:

Sebright Set image from KN54 - credit Dan WPhoto: Dan Walmsley, Practical Publishing

It was a relief to see the finished hat being worn by someone – everyone in our house has a particularly large head, so there was no-one who could try on the required sample size!  It was artfully modelled over a few bowls and inflated balloons, but that’s not quite the same as a real live person…

This set uses the broken seed stitch, which creates a really interesting textured pattern, but is very simple to create – a row of knit stitches in one colour and then a row of alternating knit and purl stitches.

Persuading the stitch pattern to decrease for the crown/top of the mittens in a consistent way was a challenge, but I was pleased with the finished effect:

BSS hat and mittens - decreases

Pattern naming also proved to be a challenge.

Originally these patterns had a name that was inspired by the similarity of the stitch pattern to the “laced” feathers on a Wyandotte chicken.  If you need to know more about these chickens, there’s a detailed history here.

silver-laced-wyandotte-hen

Now, how many other people would name patterns after chickens?  Surely not many?  But by some strange coincidence another designer for Knit Now had already used the name Wyandotte – and for a hat and mitten set too.  So, back to the drawing board…

Consulting my book of fancy chicken markings (I’m sure you have a copy on your bookshelf…) I found that the Wyandotte was developed by breeding Sebright bantams with larger birds to obtain the markings in a full sized bird.  So Sebright it is!

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Knitting with glitter

Yay!  Second pair of mittens is now finished – just one more to do and Christmas knitting is sorted:

Mittens galore

Knitting gifts for Christmas always seems such a good idea – but why does it always end up taking more time than you have?  The snow and ice has returned and it meant a day of going nowhere and an excuse to do nothing but knit.

I’m doing three pairs of mittens and have finally finished one pair, the other needs another three rows per hand and I have finished one of the other pair (which was the pair I started first…).

This pair are for my mother-in-law, a lover of animals.  The yarn is spun from a batt made of merino, alpaca and angora so represents a good selection from the animal kingdom.  I’m not sure I carded it very well, the angora went into little clumps, but it made an interesting tweedy effect so I’m going to claim it’s a design feature.