Every now and then I get volunteered for something. Similar to the way a kid says, "Oh my mom will drive us. No problem!" and then goes home to ask if mom will indeed drive. Recently my sister did this to me. She had not only volunteered me but had struck up a correspondence with the person and THEN called me. As she was reading the person's reply. Yes. My sister is thoughtful. ;) What happened? My sister is a reader of VeryMom. Well she goes by Balancing Everything now but I know her as VeryMom. If you notice off to the side she has a box for inspiring ideas. About a week and a half ago my sister hopped on over and happened to glance over and see mention of vikings. Turns out VeryMom's kids wanted to go as vikings for Halloween this year but they had no hats. VeryMom was hoping to find some cute ones. My sister instantly clicked her ask a question form and pimped out my knitting skills. After a series of emails and info exchange me and VeryMom were talking. I ended up making her 3 viking hats. In about 5 days. The original plan was for 2 and on Monday night she requested a 3rd. People this was a time crunch if there ever was one. I dropped them off to her today at 2 and due to a series of uncooperative children last night was up until 4:30 this morning finishing up. I was weaving in ends at the last minute. I finished with exactly 15 minute with which to get my kids ready to go and trade cars with my mother in law. I'm very much done knitting hats for now (well that's not true...one more for the baby). I know you are waiting and getting impatient so here are the pics.Stats:
Every hat was done in acrylic. The hats were on 8's and the horns were in 5's. The smaller needles helped with not showing stuffing and kept the horns in size accordance to small heads. The 2 fellas on the ends have a band of rivets up the center. This is a mod. created by a Ravelry person. It rocks but can be tricky when it comes to decreases. I did do the decreases as written but it does throw off the purl texture that helps them pop. The middle guy has no rivets for a couple reasons. It is for a little girl so I wanted less bulk over all and, as odd as this sounds considering it's a VIKING hat, to make it a little less manly. A feminine Viking hat. Who knew? One set of horns needed to be done in a different white (ran out of the original) and as result of it being thinner I held it double. That made the overall horn larger so I stuck it on one of the boy hats. All hats have a large ear flap with ties. I live in Idaho and these are for Halloween. Cold does not even begin to describe it. This way they get the ear flaps from the original pattern but they double as warmth. I love how these turned out. As did my kids. I had to hide them more than once. The nice thing about this pattern is the stretch. It fit everyone in my house from my one year old to me.
I will leave you with one final image:
Hope everyone who celebrates Halloween has a good weekend. I'll have family up so I'll be quite until Monday. :)
5 comments:
Your last picture is my favorite, oh my gosh I'm dying laughing.
THANK YOU so much! I'm sorry I had to jet off so quick - you're amazing!! I'm sewing their Viking tunics and will post soon! My kids have not taken the hats off since I've been home. :o)
I'm glad they like them!! No worries on leaving. I figured you had a busy day ahead of you. :) I can't wait to see them in costume!
That is so great! I love this. Those hats are so cute. Thanks so much for linking up!
I really adore your viking hats, they're adorable! If you would be interesting in knitting another one, could you email me please (goodsellmx@internode.on.net) with your pricing etc.. I have a 14 year old who would love one!
Cheers,
Mel
P.S. I understand if you're all viking-ed out!
Glad I passed on your name to the right people ;)
The hats turned out awesome but I have to say that your pic is the best part of this post!
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