Here are some of my latest creations for charities:]
These little guys are fun to make. Thanks to LoomaHat.com for teaching us how to make them. The big one I made on the KK 24 peg. The little one I did on my Martha Stewart 24 peg loom which is much smaller. It’s fun to see how different they turn out. I usually use up my scrap yarn on these.
Hey, everyone! Here is my very first needle knitted hat! I started with a provisional cast on and then alternated inches of purls with inches of knits and even cast off first with the circular needles, then finally on four Double Point Needles. Please allow me a moment of awesome pride. Okay. I’m over it.
So, my brother and my son said this looked more like a young lion. But it is a cow. This is one of Scarlett Royal’s inventions. Okay, so I should have used more tan color but this is what I had. I think a kid will like it. The curlycue of yarn on top is the bow holding the label telling about the Hat Hugger group I get the donated yarn from and who gives our creations to the charities.
This lion was fun to make but the mane is hard for me. I count to nine without knitting fairly well. Keeping track of nine rows of two seems impossible. So some lanks of mane came out too long. I just took some ribbons and tied them fancy like the Cowardly Lion in Emerald City. Notice the pink arm. I ran out of the yarn I used on the rest of the lion as I reached the last arm. Since these go to kids in the clinic I figured I’d give him a cast. Hopefully, this guy will find a kid with a cast to commiserate with.
This is many shots of the same dragon and his little hat for a baby sibling. He likes the mouse. He thinks he is supposed to ride on it. He’s just a baby dragon and doesn’t know better. By the way, the lion and the dragon are Scarlett Royal patterns, too. I love her minis best and the sheriff here in town as requested I make a lot of these as he loves handing them out to the homeless kids or kids at the clinic. Because they are tiny and are easy for the kids to hold and enjoy. If the sheriff wants minis I make minis, what can I say?
I really enjoyed making this hat and love how it turned out. It was made on KB white loom with the small gauge. I just did three knits and three purls (rib stitch) all the way to the top. Because of the small gauge, it took quite a while to finish. The yarn is bumpily but very soft. It has that gradual color change that works up so cool. I have a ton of this that I took from Hat Huggers because it is so soft. So I am making another one with smaller rib stitch pattern. I think this will make a good hat for someone who might have bad/no hair days. It’s so soft and fits low on the head. I have to admit I am tempted to keep it. I won’t. But I can wish.























You’ve been busy! I adore the loom critters and kudos to you for making a hat on needles, too.
Thank you! They sure are fun to make. My needle knitting takes so long so it will take a while to be fluent, if that’s the word I need here.
These are wonderful! My favorite is the gray and blue hat. I want one!
Thank you! And if would volunteer to make another if I felt I could do it again. It surprised me that it turned out as it did! LOL!
I aspire to have a hat like that, but the truth is, I can only wear supersoft polyesters or cottons. Wool makes me itch. 🙂
This one is not wool. For the charities we try to make sure the yarn is soft as often they go to cancer patients who have very sensitive heads. After so much playing with wool I feel less itchy than I used to. I don’t know if I have gotten used to it or what. Many of the donated yarns don’t have labels but I have learned to ‘feel’ which is which. Then if I need to make sure striking a match to the ends will be a give away as the polys melt where wools burn like hair. So I guess you have me wanting to get better so I can make you a hat like that. 🙂
What a sweet person you are. 🙂 And you’re quite talented, too.
**Blush** Thank you.