Fish Hat: Dead or Alive (Revisited)

Years ago I made a fish hat for my husband.  It’s in the shape of a real fish, complete with eyes, fins, and a tail.  That was some 10 years ago, and over time, I have probably made another half dozen.  The fish hat is clever and a fun way to use up your stash of left over yarn.  The pattern was published in the online knitting magazine, Knitty, and you can find it here Fish Hat:  Dead or Alive? Because the dead fish hat was so popular, the designer even opened up a special website for more information about her ingenious pattern. The beauty of this last link is that you can find the fish hat in crochet, for charity, using a knitting machine, in different languages. If you don’t want to knit, find the crochet version at that site.

Fish Hats from the Knitty pattern site.

I even created knitted, rather than felt cloth, eyes for the dead fish.  The pattern is below:

Fish Hat [Dead or Alive?] Eyes

Cast on 4 stitches. Knit front and back of each stitch – 8 stitches. Transfer to double point needles, place marker at round beginning.

Rnd 1: Knit

Rnd 2: Knit front and back each stitch – 16 stitches.

Rnd 3: Knit

Rnd 4: *Knit front and back, knit 1,* repeat to end – 24 stitches

Rnd 5: Knit

Rnd 6: *Knit front and back, knit 2,* repeat to end – 32 stitches

Rnd 7: Knit

Rnd 8: *Knit front and back, knit 3,* repeat to end – 40 stitches

Rnd 9 and 10: Knit

Bind off.

Here is the first fish hat I made.  I made it around 2008 for my husband.  It has the knitted eyes, which look pretty good, I think.

The most recent fish hat is all stripes and has crocheted eyes.  The eyes were all done with single crochet.  For these eyes, follow the same ideas as the knitted eyes, but crochet.  It works.

I like the knitted eyes better.

With limited amounts of yarn for the most recent fish hat, I had to be pretty careful about what I used.  For instance, the tail is in two colors, not one.  The pectoral fins are smaller, too, because I was running out of black yarn.

I spent the last week knitting up this most recent fish hat – good way to listen to an audio book or watch some TV and do something productive and satisfying while riding out a head cold.

If you need something to do with your stash and have worsted-weight yarn, make a fish hat!  I’ve made a Nemo (clown fish) and others, and everyone has liked them.  The yarn is worsted weight, and my preferred yarn is acrylic, specifically Vanna’s Choice, which I find to be a very nice yarn altogether.  The original fish hat is about 10 years old, and has been washed multiple times.

This one is for my SIL who, at Christmas, said, “I’d like a fish hat, too!”  So, here it is, ready for her birthday next month.

Below, a rogue’s gallery of the fish hat in action!

 

Busy, Busy, Busy!

This has been quite a busy time period since my last posting. Since then I have been knitting a number of hats, and writing up patterns. I even won a free copy of a pattern, and that has been a fun project as well – but to do the author justice, I will devote a separate post with pictures, once I am done with it.

Anyway, here is the new hat pattern: Checkerboard.

This hat is made out of Dale of Norway’s Falk, which is a wool yarn with a lot of bounce, is comfortable to wear, reasonably priced, and comes in a lot of different colors. If you are allergic to wool, or find it uncomfortable, a washable wool may be a good substitute.

I designed this hat to use up leftovers of yarn, as well as to have something to do with some color in it. Lately, I have been knitting a lot of textured patterns, enjoying the challenges and the pleasures of seeing a hat grow in texture, rather than color, which has been my historical preference. You wouldn’t believe that, seeing the patterns here, but it really is the truth!

Checkerboard is a very good project for the knitter who is ready to try stranded knitting. The 4×4 squares of color don’t require much work when it comes to knitting them up – they are really easy to do because you don’t have to count stitches. Instead, you just watch the colors. Row counting – well, most of us can count 4 rows of stockinette.

If you are a beginning stranded knitter, remember one very simple thing: carry the unused yarn loosely across the back of the knitting. This is very easily accomplished by periodically stretching out your knitting on the right needle as you go along.

Enjoy!

Yarn Stitch Markers for Lace Knitting

Whenever I knit lace, admittedly I look for pretty patterns that stay neatly between my stitch markers.  Even though the lace for Ishbel is simple, its set-up doesn’t allow for such structure.  Part of the pattern has a 3-stitch decrease, which gives the slant to the pattern.  However, this decrease also falls at the end of a pattern repeat, which means a pattern marker falls in the middle of the decrease. The marker needs to be removed to create the decrease, and then replaced.

To resolve this problem I did two things.  First, I moved the repeat over, so that the decrease began the pattern repeat.  Second, I decided to use strands of a contrasting yarn to weave in and out of the pattern.  This would allow me to not worry about markers falling off, or needing to be slid off needles with the potential for being dropped on the floor.  I chose to continue unraveling my poor Albatross Socks* and use its yarn.  The wine red of the yarn contrasts nicely with the turquoise of Ishbel, and its hard twist and fineness make it durable enough not to unravel while being used.  Also, it doesn’t stick to the turquoise yarn, or flake off little fluffs of color that will need to be picked out of Ishbel later on.

Yarn for Stitch Markers

It actually makes sense to use leftover yarn for stitch markers.  They probably did before the advent of modern knitting tools, such as plastic and metal rings to slide onto needles.  These markers could have been knotted into loops and strung individually between stitches, or as separate strands, woven back and forth as the knitting progressed.  I tried the former years ago, just because I didn’t have enough plastic ones.  They worked great – until I knitted them up into the pattern!  So, I came up with the idea of strands, which I pop back and forth as I work my pattern.  Not very easy to knit up a strand of yarn, and easy to move the strand from front to back, or back to front, using the hand not holding the yarn – for me, this is my left hand, as I am a right-handed knitter.

I have also found that a yarn has to be rather hard and un-fuzzy to work well.  Cotton yarn, if mercerized, is very nice because it is a firm thread.  Unmercerized cotton yarn is linty, and sheds onto the fabric being knit.  If you use cotton yarn for a stranded marker, be aware that it might want to unravel – cotton yarn doesn’t stick to itself like wool does.  Woolen sock yarn with a tight twist is one of my favorites to use for a pattern marker.

Making the Stranded Yarn Markers

To make yarn markers is very easy, and is just like making a pompom in the first steps. I use a book to wrap the yarn around. This book is about 5×8 inches. The yarn is wrapped around it, and then cut on one end only. Thus, the strand will be about 10 inches long.

Because the yarn was in a sock, it is all kinky, but this is actually a nice thing! As the yarn is used, it curls up, and stays out of the way of the turquoise. And, because it is wool, it actually lies close to the body Ishbel while I knit.

Setting Up Yarn Stitch Markers

Once the strands of yarn are cut, begin knitting the pattern as required. Wherever the stitch pattern begins and ends is where a strand is laid across the row below it, in between the last and first stitch of each lace pattern repeat. I usually drape the strand evenly, front and back, to lessen its chance of falling out, or being tugged out. As you progress in your knitting, the chances of the yarn being pulled out lessens.

Continue laying out the strands until the entire pattern area is marked.

Observe Your Knitting

As you can see from the above pictures, the strands are placed along the pattern repeats. This was done as the lace was established on the knit side. Returning along, purling, you can see what the strand will look like when you have knit passed its initial placement, turned your work, and are now purling.

This picture shows you what to do: simply bring one of the strand ends forward (or backward, your choice). You have now marked the next row.

This picture shows marking strands on either side of Ishbel’s fabric.

As your knitting progresses, you will begin to see the advantage of using stranded yarn to mark pattern repeats. I let the beginning of the strand dangle on the wrong side of the fabric; for Ishbel this is the purl side. The reason for doing this is that it does not leave a contrasting line dangling where it can distract me if I need to check my work. As the picture below shows, the strand weaves in and out as the knitting progresses.

On the front side, the yarn strands do not detract from observing if the lace pattern has any mistakes. If you look carefully, you can see the red yarn slants a bit here and there – that is because of the 3-stitch decreases creating diagonal stitches.

Finally, the strands will work their way through the entire pattern as Ishbel progresses. Even if there is not enough length for all the pattern repeats, a gentle tug will pull the stranding markers through the fabric. When Ishbel is finished, I will simply pull out all the yarn markers, and re-use them in another project.

Another Reason for Stranded Yarn Markers

In addition to using strands of yarn as markers for Ishbel, I have used them whenever a pattern calls for a regular marker movement.  Simply picking up a strand of yarn when the marker is ready to be moved is so easy compared to

  • slipping off a stitch,
  • manually removing the marker,
  • replacing the stitch on the left-hand needle,
  • putting the marker on the right-hand needle, and
  • continuing until all markers have been moved!

Anything to make lace knitting easier is worth doing, don’t your think?