For Christmas, #1 Son gave me Knitting For Peace, a wonderful book full of simple patterns that can be made with inexpensive yarn, and lots of stories and ideas about knitting for others.
He gave me the book a couple of days early, and we leafed through it together, looking at the pictures. When we cam to the picture of the Caps For Kids Swirled Ski Hat, #1 Son said Mom, if you knit that for me I would so wear it. Blue would be nice.
What more does a mother need to hear? It’s not often that #1 Son asks me to knit him anything. When he does, I believe in striking while the iron is hot (so to speak). Yarn was purchased that very day and the hat was cast on that very night. #1 Son had already received his big present from me, but I was determined that Santa would leave a hat under the tree for him.
I couldn’t hold him still long enough to take a picture of the hat actually on his head, but rest assured that it fits perfectly and he liked it.
The Particulars:
- Yarn: Karabella Aurora 8 (100% extrafine Marino wool/ 50g, 98m per skein) in colorways #1 (dark blue) and #44 (light blue) — about 1-1/2 skeins of the light and 1 skein of the dark. A second skein of the dark blue was needed to make the pompom after I totally messed up the first pompom, but those better at making pompoms than I could make one using the leftovers from the second light blue skein.
- Needles: US#7 (4.5mm) and US#8 (5 mm) — larger needles for the hat, smaller for the brim
- Pattern: Knitting For Peace: Caps For Kids Swirled Ski Hat
- Modifications:
- For adult size large, cast on 50 stitches and worked one extra pattern repeat.
- Used a provisional cast-on and then grafted the two sides of the hat together (hat is worked flat)
- Kitchener/grafted/tubular bind-off instead of standard bind-off (a little over-achiever, I know, but I just like that bind-off)
Blogging may be sparse or non-existent for the next few days. Not that there’s been an overwhelming amount the last couple of weeks. You know how the holidays are.


feed for comments on this post.



















That’s such a cool looking hat. I wonder if DH would wear it if I left of the pom pom? You always knit such fabulous things & it sounds like you’ve got a great kid!
1Remark from ~Kristie — Wednesday, 1/3/2007 @ 11:37 PM
Thanks! I do have a great kid! 😀 I wish everything I knit would turn out so well!
The hat is worked flat as a big parallelogram,and then one long side is gathered to shape the top. It really needs something on the top to hide the gathers, I think. But if your DH doesn’t like pompoms, a big button or something like that might be cool. I think it’s one of those patterns that can be modified easily to suit the wearer.
2Remark from Judy — Thursday, 1/4/2007 @ 8:00 AM