How to Make a Simple Yarn Tassel (A Pretty Good One: My Two Cents)


Picture Tutorial for 6(9) in/15(23) cm Tassels

Materials include:
  •   26g/39g worsted weight yarn such as Rowan Pure Wool Worsted 
  •   A 3x6(8x15)in/8x15(20x38)cm sturdy piece of cardboard
  • Two lengths of yarn for tying and wrapping the top areas of the tassel
  • Scissors
        


1. Starting at the bottom of the cardboard, wrap the yarn around the cardboard the long way about 50 times. This will give you 100 tassel “strands.” If you’d like a fluffier tassel, feel free to wrap even more times.

Don’t wrap too tightly or you might bend your cardboard as I’ve done in the picture below! Tight wrapping might also shorten the length of your tassel or make it harder to remove from the cardboard.




2. Thread a length of yarn about 6in/5cm or a bit longer through a darning needle (or use your fingers) and run the piece of yarn under all the wraps at the top. Tie them together tightly at the top with a double knot. Carefully slide the yarn off the cardboard and lay it carefully onto a table. Smooth a bit if needed.






3. Cut another length of yarn about 10in/25cm long. About 1inc/2.5cm down from the top knot, wrap the yarn several times around all the strands, creating a “neck” at the top of the tassel. Tie off or tuck end into the wraps on the neck.






Carefully sliding a scissors through all the bottom loops, cut through all the loops to create tassel strands.





To smooth out the yarn strands, wet thoroughly as if to block and hang to dry. Once your tassel is dry, trim the ends to make them even. If you want to be fiddly, you can comb the strands out after they dry and before the final trim to really make them even. Tie them onto the corners of you hat!







Three Needle Bind-Off Tutorial to Seam the Top of a Hat

This is where we begin. Your hat is the desired length.
***NOTE: While the method presented in this tutorial can be used for other knitted hats, my newest pattern, A Seafaring Man, pictured in this post, is currently in testing. If you would like notification once the pattern is released, please PM me on Ravelry for an earburn! Thank you for reading my blog post, and tag me on Instagram @freckledgirl knits if you give 3-needle bind-off a try!***

If you are knitting my newest pattern, A Seafaring Man, and you have never executed a 3-needle bind-off before, I am here to help!

Yes, the crown of the hat can be finished traditionally, with a round top, created using decreases at regular intervals, and that is included in the pattern as well. However, if you are interested in creating a knife-edge, square top, with a seam straight across the top of the hat, then this is the tutorial for you. In addition to the work currently on your circular needles, you will need an extra needle in the same size as your circulars, such as a dpn or straight needle.

(Note: This method will work to finish the top of any hat that has been knitted in the round! Just be sure that your hat is the final height you want it to be before starting the bind-off.)

Once you achieve the desired length of the hat, you are going to very carefully flip the hat inside out and bind off all the stitches together to create an interior seam. Let's go!

Add caption
1. Once you achieve the total desired length of your hat, remove the stitch marker and set aside. 

NOTE: If you are working A Seafaring Man, please note that all the sizes have an even number of stitches, so as you work this bind-off, each of your stitches will have a "partner" and will match up evenly. 

2. This is a tricky part: without letting your stitches slide off your circular needles, very carefully turn you hat inside out. After that, you might want to slide your ball of yarn through the top so it is on the new "outside." This just makes it a little less fiddly (I have done that here in the photo). Line up your circular needles side by side. You will have a bit of bunchy stitches on the cord of the circular needles. This is okay, but if it really bothers you and feels too fiddly or messy, you could choose to slide all the stitches onto a much longer circular, if you want. That would make it easier to have the stitches side by side. Just be sure to keep the start of the round in the same spot, especially if you are using this to close the top of a hat with a defined front and back. Knitter's choice!

If you have done a 3-needle bind-off in the past to seam sweater shoulders, for example, you will notice a difference here. The working yarn is attached to the front needle instead of the back. That's ok. This will still work. 


3. Hold the two ends of your circular needle close together with your left hand. Using your extra needle (I used a dpn in US7, just like my circulars), enter the first stitch on the front circular needle (the needle closest to you) from front to back, just as you would to knit a normal knit stitch. Now continue on to do the same for the matching stitch on the circular needle in the back (the circular needle farthest from you). Your extra needle is now going through two stitches, the front one and the back one. 



4. Knit those two stitches together as one. You now have one stitch on the right (extra) needle and all the rest still on the circulars.




5. Repeat steps 3 and 4. You now have two stitches on the extra needle. 

Pictured above, I have done a few bind-off stitches to show the seam starting. 


6.
 Working on the extra needle: slide the first stitch you knitted over the second one and off the needle. You now have one stitch left on the right needle, just as you would in a regular bind-off. 


7. Continue to repeat steps 3-6, working through the stitches on the circular needles. 


8. When you are about halfway through binding off the stitches, you might notice some tension starting on the stitches still waiting to be worked. Fold the cord in half, separating the stitches in half and slide them up to the needles to continue, letting the cord stick out the back, as pictured. Try to be sure that the stitches are divided exactly in half, but if you get to the end and they are not, you can always re-adjust them without too much trouble. (I had to do that on the hat pictured!)



9. Once you have completed binding off all the stitches, cut the yarn, thread it through the remaining stitch/loop and weave in the end! 

Now you can easily flip your hat right side out. Note the nice, clean seam on the top! Once you block it, it will be even smoother. 



A freshly seamed hat, pictured above!



Flipping the finished hat right-side out is much easier than the other way around!

Note: To block these hats (for I have made a few!), I have been soaking them in lukewarm water with some Eucalan, pressing the excess water out in a clean dry towel, and laying them out on another dry, clean towel till dry. Alternately, you could put them on a hat form, too, instead of a towel once the excess water is squeezed out!

Please tag me on Instagram with your projects using the 3-needle bind-off! 













How-to Make a Pom Pom Picture Tutorial (Don't get too excited. No Alchemy Here)


How to Make a Pom Pom without losing too much of your mind, the old fashioned way (with some better tutorials than mine at the end -- and it's okay if you decide now to scroll down there!)

Ah, the traditional pom pom. Not my fav project. It feels like too much trouble for the outcome. And how many of us have gone seeking real help on YouTube and instead we find an all-too-cheery mom with a kid on each hip telling us in her chipper, shrill tone, "I'm addicted to pom pom making! I love them and I just can't stop!" (((laughs maniacally)) Sure, sweetheart. Sure. As a mother of 6 myself, I am here to tell you that you may just need a little more grown-up conversation. Or something...

This video then rushes into hyperspeed, and becomes a blur of wrapping, cutting, yarn, all sped up like time lapse nature photography so we don't switch channels before the pom pom is done. And -- oh, wait, what did I miss? -- a perfect pom pom just appears on the screen and the super chipper mom is back telling us to subscribe. I still don't have a pom pom.

Ok. I'm joking around. Mostly. And there are really are some good video resources out there to help, and other pictorials like this one I am making here. I guess that, for me, there are a couple of truths in pom pom making that are just unavoidable: pom poms are fiddly, more time-consuming than I want them to be and -- brace yourself -- they don't always turn out, and in the worst cases, sometimes you have to start over. That just has to be ok.

With that, let's try to make a not-too-irritating pom pom. First, as I say: we must use patience. Make sure you don't have a lot of distractions, and that no one is going to imminently need your hands for about 15 minutes -- or 20.

We are going to make a pom pom (or two) that is about 3" in diameter. 



You will need:

  • Firm cardboard, such as from an Amazon box. You know you have one. Or three. I do.
  • Sharp scissors. I've seen some people use tiny surgical scissors or even razor blades (I've actually seen that done!). Sharp is the best -- and the safest -- option. You don't want to slip with a dull blade.
  • About 13-20g of yarn. I used 15g  of Lion Brand Wool Ease for the gold pom pom It's the firmest and fluffiest. The green one was made using 12g Red Heart worsted acrylic yarn and the blue guys were made using a total of 13g of Patons Classic Wool.
  • A jar or glass that measures about 3 inches in diameter, more is ok. 4" might even be better. 
  • Another round object about 1.5 inches in diameter, like the top of a small lotion bottle or even a quarter would work. 
  • A reliable pen. (Why create more annoyance with a pen that won't write?)

First, draw two matching circles on your cardboard with the little circles inside them. Just do your best to get them in the center. I know. They look like boobs.


Cut them out, creating a Pacman-like "C" shape.





Holding your C-shaped forms together, begin to wrap your yarn, patiently and slowly back and forth around the "C's." The trick is to wrap evenly, and use a LOT of yarn. And wrap sort of loosely. If you wrap too tightly, you won't be able to slide the blade of your scissors between the cardboard pieces. This will become important in a moment.


My gold pom pom got pretty fat, as you see below, and it turned out to be the best one of the bunch. Thickness is key in order for the pom pom to "stand" up on it's little c-shaped frame. This will help you tie it. Note: be sure not to creep too close to the ends of the "C" when wrapping. That made it harder for me, I think, to hold the looser yarn bits in place after I cut the outside edge. 


Here begins the fiddly part. You will next take your sharp scissors, slide/wiggle the open blade in between the two C-shaped pieces of cardboard and begin cutting the yarn. In the first pic below, I am not showing my left hand holding the yarn while I cut (in order to get the photo), but you'll want to hold the yarn onto your C-shaped forms with your fingers, as you can see me doing two photos down.


Go slowly and use VERY sharp scissors for best results. It is almost impossible to cut the yarn when it's this thick and your scissors are dull. 

Hold the inside yarn when cutting!

When my outside edge was all cut, I tried to patiently smooth the yarn into place, evening up -- just a little -- any strands that looked a bit uneven. It worked well, as long as I went slowly and gently. Trust that it will stay mostly in the little form.

Smoothing the yarn out.

Here is another pic of the "loose" yarn. It doesn't jump out, or
anything, so you can work with it a little. 

I think this may be the hardest part: slide a length of yarn between the pieces of cardboard. I used a piece about 10 inches long.


Below, you can see how it looks once the yarn is nestled all the way between the C-shapes. Preparing to tie!



Carefully tie a very firm knot in the center of the pom pom, holding all the pieces together. (Really -- it can work!)



Now you can slide the cardboard out. The C-shaped pieces are reusable, if you liked the ones you made. 


You'll have to trim your pom pom to be more even. Don't do what I've done in the past: trim wayyyyy too short and have your yarn start to all fall out of your tie!! 


Now you can use your pom poms for something! 


Final tip: watch out when you wash items with pom poms on them. I'd recommend hand-washing hats, etc, that have handmade poms, just to be sure they don't start to lose strands. 


Here are some truly helpful links for more pom pom making:

1. A Rectangle option! 



3. *** This one is my fav **** Sheep& Stitch:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zok9hqyhTQ4

4. Clover Pom Pom Maker (why have I not done this? Seems to solve soooo many problems!!)



Looking forward to your comments, any suggestions you all have!! Please leave them! And if you'd like, you can tag me on Instagram @freckledgirlknits to show me your pom successes (and failures, too! We all have them!) ! :) :) :) 

























A Seafaring Man

What I'm Designing right now: 

My first hat pattern in like, oh, six years is about to enter testing. Tomorrow. I feel sort of nervous -- you know, because I've forgotten how the whole testing thing works! By tomorrow's end, I will be mostly relieved and hopeful (hopefully) that people will enjoy knitting the pattern. (By the way, if you'd like to be a tester, I am adding this pattern to the Free Pattern Testers forum on Ravelry. You are welcome to leave a comment here or a pm on Ravlery if you want me to tell you what time that will be :)

This week -- and yes, long before the pattern testing is finished, which takes usually about a month --  as an additional resource for the new pattern, I will be adding some how-to tutorials here on the blog on tassel making, pom pom making (God I hate those things...) and how to use the 3-needle bind-off. If you haven't tried it, it is a great way for a "seamless" seam and I love it in lieu of just sewing two fabric edges together. This will be a series of three posts and I will list them in the side bar as links for easy finding in the future.
Dusty tassels. I forgot I hadn't dusted the table. Forever.
These babies are about to be tested!

I also have a secret project in the wings which I think I am pretty excited about. working on that. More to come in a week or two or three, depending! Still have research to do on that.

What I'm reading: 

In addition to Treasure Island through the Craftlit podcast, I am also reading Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte. (I know tons of you read many books simultaneously, too. After all, reading follows our moods, right?) I have always put it off, but now I'm all in! What the crap?! Why didn't someone tell me this had ghostly stuff in it?! So fab. And, dear reader, you too can find a free version of Wuthering Heights on the Librivox app. If are a lover of classic lit and you have not yet checked out these free audiobooks? DO IT! And look for volunteer reader Elizabeth Klett whenever you can. She reads lots of Jane Austen, a wonderful version (dare I say the best?) Jane Eyre and many, many other titles.




Random Knitting Project:

Knitting Bee. Forcing me to open
my wallet...
Sweet Dreams Baby Blanket by Mrs. Moon. I am too old to be having a baby (I just slid under the closing door having Amy at nearly 40! And now Amy is 11!) but when I was at Close Knit on Alberta in Portland during the Rose City Yarn Crawl I saw this pattern. It was a completed project, just hanging there, tempting me. I don't know what it was. The pop of color on a gray background? The tiny, manageable crochet squares for a beginner crocheter like me? It would not leave my mind. By the last day of the crawl, I was at Knitting Bee and caved in. I love Plymouth yarns anyway, but I am really loving the Plymouth Dreambaby DK on the little #3 crochet hook. Butter in your hands. Butta I tell ya!! Maybe someone around me will have a baby. I do have 5 grown kids and only one grandson. So far.




Beans says, what does this all mean? I'm just a puppy.

Hey, Mom. Check my whiskers. I'm
nearly a man, now. 


Heroes are Here! New Pattern, Partie Deux! (Plus a little history on the caduceus)

Heroes! I created this pattern in honor of all the heroes in the medical field who go to work every day to help us all. Knit a hat, give...