Saturday, December 8, 2012

Striped hats

These are two hats I recently knitted. In fact, the brown one I finished just today. They both follow the same theme for the pattern, which is stripes in a main and contrasting color, with a pompon of the contrasting color. Both hats have a self folding rim, which is  basically the same stockinette stitch that flows through the rest of the hat. The yellow hat is for the soon to be born child to my brother and bhabhi. I chose the color yellow because it goes well with the mood in India - bright and sunny. The brown hat's for my son. He's wearing it to his daycare on Monday :)
Here  are some pics of the hats while they were in progress and the finished ones...
Notice how I have used double pointed needles when the number of stitches were too less to fit comfortably on circulars.
Those are red marker stains on Aarav's cheeks btw...he did that while I was busy making his hats pompon.

Finished Hat
In Progress - working on DPNs
The Hat Bearer
Work In Progress - Still on Circulars
Even his hands are full of red ink! aarrrgghh...

About Me

I'm a passionate self taught knitter. I started dabbling with knitting when I was pregnant with my son (now 2 years old). I made him a hat and  a pair of booties. None of them were functional (the hat was too big and the booties too small). I obviously hadn't started the right way. I had absolutely no idea about the basics...heck, I didn't even know there were different types of yarn! I had never heard about the terms yarn weightage or guage...I didn't know anything about yarn composition or the fundamentals of needle sizes. And I didn't know that I didn't know!
Just the fact that the hat turned out atleast to be a hat and not some mini version of a skewed sweater, gave me the confidence to dive right in. My next project was a cabled baby blanket. Needless to say I never finished it. Not because I couldn't master the cabling (which is considered an advanced skill for knitters), but because I was using baby sport weight yarn on size 3 needles! I might as well have been knitting that blanket for my grandchild! Thankfully I had the sense to realize I was wasting my time on something futile (although I did learn cabling in the process), and shelved it.
I have come a long way since that unfortunate baby blanket. And still I can only rate myself as somewhere between a beginner and intermediate knitter. I am so inspired by seasoned knitters who are able to create complex designs and well-fitted garments out of simple techniques and a creative imagination. I hope I can be as good some day.
Taking time out to knit is probably the most difficult part. But I try and squeeze in atleast 10 minutes each day to devote to it. Even one row completed is progress made. These days I even carry my knitting to work and use my lunch time to finish a few quick rows. Whatever it takes! On days I can't knit are days less fulfilled.
Knitting gives to my soul what meditation gives to one's mind.