HEADBANDS GALORE!
What a great way to use up scraps of yarn. I was such a scrap yarn hording pack rat. I have made several headbands for myself in the past from waste yarn. But this was a total head band knitting blitz.
It’s for a fund raiser hosted by Friends of Melrose Library, which is where my ‘Off the hook’ knitting & crocheting group meets.
Some of the patterns were were from free patterns found on Ravelry.com My first thought was to do fast and easy.
One design which I got there was crocheted and was super fast and stretchy. The pattern is called, “Easy Lace Headband”. It a fast, mindless crochet and and it is nice and stretchy with good memory.
Another free design I tried was this knitted one called “Smidge Headband” Which is a basic knitted lace. It looks great, but isn’t very stretchy. It has to be made to fit someone which is not a great choice for a fundraiser, unless my head is ‘normal’ size?
Trying to find a band that would work well with my cotton yarn scraps, I found on Ravelry. A few said it was stretchy and a few said there was something wrong with the pattern and to follow this carlynn field website for the stitch, so I did. It does stretch, but isn’t very elastic, so I added 2″ of garter to the back, which has okay memory in cotton yarn.
Next I tried just simple seed stitch which made the most elastic headband, but got boring. Cast on a odd number of stitches, For all rows, repeat *k, p* to last stitch and k last stitch. It looks nice with these acrylic yarns, which have some sheen. The far left one I added a diamond of stockinette sts every few rows for a change up.
So when I brought this first batch to my knitting group we shared our experiences and one person had really out done themselves with elaborate cabled head warmer headbands.
So I decided to try new stitches and incorporate them into headband designs I experimented with all sorts of stitches from on stitch dictionary websites.
I after a few attempts, I didn’t like the garter stitch edges since it tended to curl under, so I tried I-cord edges, which look cool and are elastic , but don’t have much stretch. The I-cord edge pops best next to 1 or 2 purl stitch, so I looked for 6-8 stitch patterns that off set well with purl stitches.
Later I made the zig zag pattern in baby size. Which is cute, but simple garter or garter with a eyelet edge have a nicer soft stretch and are better for a baby. To make a ‘Garter with eyelet edge’: CO 8 to 15 stitches. Every row: k1, yo, k2tog, k rest of the row.
My own brain child was to garter stitch the back band 8 sts for ~2″ increase every other row to 12 sts, then take 4 sts off at a time to a dpn and make I-cord, when each I-cord was about 13-15″ long, braid and then connect pull out i-cord stitches until they were all even and reconnect to a straight needle, garter 12, and then decrease every other row to 8 sts, than garter for 2″. After 2 headbands of hand knit I-cord I decided to buy a little i-cord machine, which was faster, but tying in all the ends got tiring. They have good stretch & memory, but are a little bulky, so for myself, a flatter garter stitch at the back of neck.
And this was a double knit take off from my Claddagh potholder pattern. I had this on needles forever, and had just put aside since while it is lovely, it’s a tad to bold for me to wear.
I added a seed stitch backer to finish it off and give it better stretch.
Tags: baby, crochet, double knit, headband, I cord, knit