patterns > Christine Guest Designs
> Herringbone Mittens
Herringbone Mittens
One of the test knitters for the Herringbone Toque asked for a mitten. I thought the thumb was impossible. I drew sketches in my notebook to prove that it was impossible. One night when I should have been cooking
dinner I realized a way that might just work, drew the idea down on an envelope next to my computer,
then made dinner all the while wondering if it would work. After the dishes were done, I printed the chart,
turned on an old episode of Nova, and knit very fast. Lo and Behold, it did work. And black holes are
cool.
The Herringbone Mitten is knit on the bias in three repeats, increasing near the wrist, decreasing and using
short rows near the fingertips to shape the top of the mitten. When the knitting is done, the provisionally
cast on edge is grafted in pattern to the last row, leaving a long slash for the thumb stitches.
The Thumb is made of two parallelograms, increasing at the top of the thumb webbing, decreasing near
the wrist. To finish the thumb, the top point folds down into the valley point, then the stitches are grafted.
The second hand is knit just like the first, but the mitten is turned inside out to fit the other hand. I wrote more about how the thumb works on my blog.
To size the mitten, you choose which size yarn to use, sport(dk, worsted, Aran) for a (6.25, 6.5, 7.5, 9)’’/ 16.5(16.5, 19, 23)cm hand circumference. In 4’’ of Stocking Stitch, the gauge is 23(22, 20, 15.5) stitches. A pair of mittens requires 133(134, 168, 192)yards/ 122(122, 154, 175)m.
I have a tutorial for adding an i-cord edging to a diagonal edge at http://www.christineguestdesigns.com/blog/adding-a-i-cord-edging-to-a-diagonal-edge/
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- First published: November 2015
- Page created: November 19, 2015
- Last updated: July 21, 2022 …
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