
Autumn is undoubtedly my favorite season of the year. I grew up in the Northeast where we were lucky enough to enjoy the changing colors and splendid cooler weather in all its glory. Last year I spent autumn (and winter) … Continue reading
Autumn is undoubtedly my favorite season of the year. I grew up in the Northeast where we were lucky enough to enjoy the changing colors and splendid cooler weather in all its glory. Last year I spent autumn (and winter) … Continue reading
Folks. Halloween is four weeks away (yay!), fall is firmly in the air, or at least technically arrived via western calendar, and it’s time to rev up your hat making! Here’s the pattern for our perennially popular dinosaur/dragon hat pattern. … Continue reading
Happy fall, all! To commemorate all those squirrels hiding away their winter victuals (is it victuals or vittles? Apparently urbandictionary says they mean the same thing), here’s an awesome acorn hat pattern for that little nut in your life!
This hat uses puff stitches (detailed photo instructions included in pattern) and a cute wittle leaf embellishment (with more detailed photo instructions). As always, if you have any questions or run into any problems, I am always available at classycrochet@gmail.com
Get yours on Ravelry, Etsy, or Craftsy today and hurry up and go enjoy that fabulous fall weather!
9/11/2013 UPDATE:
Y’all. Thanks so much for your comments and feedback – I had no idea you would all find this little rectangle hat as cute as I did. 🙂 Due to overwhelming popularity and feedback, I am now offering a PDF download of the pattern in THREE additional sizes (3-6 mo, 6-12 mo, 1-3 yrs). If you simply don’t feel like doing your own adjustments, I’ve done them for you! I’ve also included a few additional photo instructions for clarity. ALL this for a fabulous discounted price, since I’m leaving the free pattern up below. You can find it on Ravelry, Etsy, or Craftsy today. Hooray!
Thanks again and happy fall crocheting everyone!
Love, Jen
*Back to original post*
Happy September! I’m writing this from my hometown in upstate New York, where September automatically meant the beginning of a new school year. I mean… it always kind of mentally means the beginning of a school year for me still, even after 5 years+ after I attended my last class ever, but it’s much more prevalent when I drive by my high school every day and see all the same ads for the same back to school sales at the same malls where I shopped when I was twelve.
September in upstate New York also always immediately means cooler weather. For example, today, on the first day of school, it is currently 57 F outside. That means one thing – time to start making more fall hats!!
Anyway, here’s another free hat pattern. When I was trying to name it, I realized I gave a previous hat the exact same name. Who knew two co-hats could be so wildly different? Oh well, since they are apparently named the exact same thing, I’m not going to reinvent the wheel. Here’s another pixie elf hat for you, version 2, AKA “Pixie Hat: The Autumn Woodland Version.”
If you do a quick Internet search for “crochet elf pixie hat”, you do usually get the stripey long tail version more, but this one has it’s own charm. The first time I saw this design was back whenever the first time I saw the movie Willow. You know… little man saves little baby princess from evil Maleficent-esque woman trying to take over the universe? Willow’s kids wore hats with little peaks. I can’t for the life of me remember now the name they gave the little children, but it was a cute one. (Excuse me while I take a moment to mentally run through memorable Willow quotes in my head… “I dwell in darkness without you and it WENT AWAY?”)
This hat is really easy. I know I say that about all my hats, but seriously. If you’ve never made a hat and the extent of your crocheting skills is a dishcloth, then this is the hat for you! It’s a dishcloth folded in half and sewed down the back. The end. The natural curve of the baby head creates the adorable little peak at the back. See? It’s just a rectangle folded into a square. Easy peasy.
I use a fpdc/bpdc ribbed edge, the same one in my *other* elf pixie hat, but if you’re a beginner and don’t want to deal with fussy new stitches, just skip the fpdc/bpdc row and leave the dc row as is. You’ll have a cute border with the fluffy yarn anyway.
I wrote this pattern up in a 0-3 month size, but you can easily adapt it by increasing the width of your hat. I’m in the process of writing up more detailed sizing to publish at a discounted price in the very near future – stay tuned!
STITCHES USED
(note: all the linked stitches are optional if you’re a novice. They’re more like bonus point stitches for more advanced crocheters. Your hat will still be awesome no matter what.)
MATERIALS
I used Lion Brand Wool-Ease (Seaspray) for this pattern. I like Wool-Ease as a worsted weight yarn, especially for knitting, because, like the Thick n Quick, it’s a great blend of washable acrylic and wool to give it that nice vintage feel, plus it has the greatest ‘natural’ palette. I think woodland elf hats should be made of earthy colors.
The furry trim gives this hat the knuckle-biting cuteness factor. Obviously it’s optional (the hat looks just as woodlandly authentic without it) but c’mon. Fur. I’ve used Bernat Baby’s Pipsqueak, although I might even recommend Red Heart Buttercup, since it’s a bit fluffier. I’ve usually only found blinding white, but recently discovered Pipsqueak in “vanilla”, which I think matches better with browns. Anyway, use whatever you can find.
I used an H hook for the hat, J for the fur trim.
PATTERN
Row 1: ch 43, skip first 2 st, 1 dc into each ch. (41 st) You could also do chainless foundation if you wanted, but I actually find that the tighter tension of the ch foundation gives the edge a better curve around the baby face.
Row 2: (you can skip this row if you don’t want to deal with fpdc/bpdc) ch2, alternate fpdc and bpdc into each dc, creating the ribbed edge.
Row 3-13: ch1, hdc into each st. When you reach the end of each row, ch1, turn, hdc into the same st, hdc into each st, etc. Your gauge might be different than mine and you might need more or less rows. Basically you want a rectangle that folds in half into an exact square. I test by folding in half, then folding the square(s) into a triangle to see if the edges line up. It’s left over from my origami days.
FINISHING
When you reach your desired length, fold the hat in half. Insert your hook into the last st on the folded side, wrap yarn over, and draw yarn through all loops (sl st).
Matching up remaining stitches, insert hook into front st, then back st. Wrap yarn around, and pull through all loops (sl st). Repeat for remaining stitches.
You’ll have a row of sl st along the inside edge. You might have a stitch left over at the end where the fold is – thankfully crochet is forgiving and you can just sew around it. Fasten off yarn and weave in ends. Turn hat right side out.
Fur: using J (or larger) hook and fluffy yarn, sc into the ribbed edge. When I first did it, I sc into each st and the brim of the hat flared out a little. Since I am picky, I went with a larger hook and skipped every other sc for the hat in these photos. You can do whatever you want to get the nice fluffy look of your dreams.
More options: To create a nice finished look, I like to sc around the bottom border of the hat. It’s completely unnecessary but it’s pretty. If you do, make sure to only sc one st into every row, otherwise the bottom kind of flares out and doesn’t wrap around the head as snugly.
Chin strap: You can do a chainless foundation of dc (about 15-18 st long), or I liked mine a bit more tightly woven, so I just ch18, 1 hdc in each st down one side, 5 hdc into the end, hdc down the other side, 4 hdc into the end and fastened off. Leave a tail at the beginning and the end so you can sew one end to the hat, and use the other tail to sew the button onto the strap. Another marvelous aspect of crochet is that the stitches are large and loose, meaning you don’t have to stitch in a buttonhole, you can just button it up wherever the button fits through on the brim. Automatically adjustable chin strap = win.
Sew button to strap, sew strap to hat, weave in all ends, place on baby head and admire adorable woodland elf cuteness. Yay cuteness!
Follow along with the project gallery on Ravelry!
This is one of my favorite go-to patterns when making a baby hat. It’s adorable, it’s quick, it’s unisex, it’s easy, what else can I say? The design was inspired by a friend – originally I’d thought to just do regular dc with a few fpdc posts interspersed, but she, creative one that she is, remarked “the ribs go the opposite way, don’t they?” and so opposite way, more anatomically correct, ribs we have.
This hat was a best-seller at the AOTA fair a few years ago – so much so that people started wandering into our booth and asking “are YOU the guys with the pumpkin hats???” I should have listened to my sister and made like twenty of them, instead of oh, six. My most favorite transaction of the day was the mother who walked in with her baby strapped to her chest, put a pumpkin hat on the baby’s head, flipped the tag over to check the price, pulled a bill out of her pocket, handed it to me, and left without a word. The entire thing took about four seconds. Those are great sales. 😉
You’ll have to know how to fpdc and bpdc for this pattern, but once you pick it up it’s really simple and the end results are way more impressive than the time and effort you put into it. It kind of reminds me of that old school commercial where the mom makes Rice Krispie treats, then powders her nose with flour to make it look like it was really hard (but c’mon, hopefully by now we all know that they aren’t that hard. Actually wait, I made them a few years ago and my fully grown adult brother marveled and asked me how long they had taken to bake. So never mind.)
Buy yours on Ravelry, Etsy, or Craftsy today, and when you’re done, follow along with the project gallery on Ravelry!