A couple of months ago, I shared a bit of a teaser with you about working with washing machine felt, with a simple technique for making a pair of five minute fingerless gloves.
These mittens are slightly more time consuming, but still really really simple and quick, an easy little hand sewing project to do in an evening in front of the TV. Better still, they’d make a great personal gift!
You’ll need the following –
- A washing machine felted sweater. See here for details on the (easy!) process.
- Some scrap cardboard, a pencil and scissors for the mitten template. A tailor’s chalk pencil is useful but not essential.
- Some thick thread for assembling your gloves. I used some multicoloured scrap knitting yarn in contrasting / coordinating colours. Knitting yarn, incidentally, makes really really *rubbish* sewing thread, so see if you have something better – embroidery floss would be great, or how about some really thin (3mm) ribbon? Decorative and contrasting is good – I like the effect – but you could go for something to blend into your sweater felt if you prefer.
- A really chunky hand sewing needle. I used one intended for use on sacking fabric with a bit of a spade-end, which makes a nice big hole in the thick felt so that the double thickness of thread passes through more easily.
To start creating your template, draw around your hand on the cardboard. This is the time to decide how long you want the cuffs of your mittens. Also, I suggest you have your fingers in a relaxed position slightly apart, not all cramped together – this should make the mittens more comfy later!
Next, I measured around the knuckles on my hand and compared the measurement to the appropriate part of the flat silhouette drawing on the card. You’ll find the circumference is more than twice the silhouette measure – your hand has depth! – for me this was about an extra 2cm. I don’t need a seam allowance for these mittens (more on this later) so I added about 5mm all the way around the hand silhouette. Smooth the shape off at this stage to make it nice and pleasing. [Those of you who have ever drawn a glove or mitten patten will spot my deliberate mistake here – if you haven’t, then I suggest you read the rest of the post *before* you go ahead and cut out your template!]
Cut out your cardboard pattern, and using tailors chalk if you have it (or anything else that will draw on your felt, if you don’t) mark up four copies onto the felt. Arrange the cuff end against the waistband of your felted jumper – this way, you get to cheat and use the waistband detail from the jumper for the cuff of your mittens.
The great thing about washing machine felt is that you’ve taken a knit fabric that would unravel, and solved this problem. You can slice it up just as you like and it behaves very much like polar fleece (and actually, if you have some scrap polar fleece – or you’re allergic to wool – it would make a great substitute fabric for this project). Now cut out your four mitten shapes and assemble them in pairs.
I mentioned earlier that I wasn’t including a seam allowance in the template. This is because the felt is really quite bulky fabric – great for nice warm toasty fingers in your mittens, but it would be really very cumbersome if you had it doubled – or more – at the seams. I’d guessed there must be edge-to-edge stitches, though I hadn’t used them before, and a bit of googling turned up a perfect solution for this project, which is called ‘Old German stitch’.
Hopefully this image illustrates it usefully, but briefly, you assemble the two edges to each other, with the thread emerging on top of one edge, passing into the gap, and going into the other piece from below, emerging on top, passing back through the gap, and so on. This produces an edge to edge seam without overlap which, because the thread crosses through the gap every time, is protected from the problem of the edges overriding which you’d likely get if you used a slip stitch.
Now, you can start to sew. I started at the wristband on the little-finger side of the pattern, and worked around progressively until I reached the tip of the thumb. I’ve mentioned that knitting yarn makes horrible sewing thread. This particular yarn tended to shred itself, after a while, and had hideous knot-holding properties which made it really challenging to start, finish, and join. Don’t say I haven’t warned you!
It’s at this point that my rookie pattern-cutting mistake becomes painfully obvious. The mitten is the perfect size on the palm and fingers, but far far too narrow on the wrist. A quick bit of wrist and mitten measuring confirmed that at the cuff, we were going to be about 5cm short. The only solution – other than starting again with a new sweater! – was to add an insert piece – a triangle, 5cm across the short edge, and as tall as the distance from thumb-tip to cuff. You can see this in the photo just above.
If you don’t want to make this as a three-piece pattern, then you should get this wrist circumference incorporated properly into your pattern template in the first place, adding an extra ~2.5cm to the cuff end below the thumb. Actually, I really like the three part shape, though it was a complete accident. I think it adds a nice detail, and gives proper ‘depth’ to the thumb construction.
You’re done at this stage, if you want to be. I decided I wasn’t bored of hand sewing yet, so I went on to add a row of blanket stitch along the cuff.
These are really great, warm, practical mitts. I’ve been wearing them loads over the past few weeks. They’re not waterproof, but they’re warm and cozy and have stood up really well so far to plenty of use.
Better still, the world is your oyster in terms of colours (so go on, raid that pile of old sweaters in the back of your wardrobe!) and detailing. You could even embroider the back of the hands, if you were feeling especially keen!
So, if you want to create a special, warming handmade gift this Christmas, you still have plenty of time to make these. Go on, you know you want to!
I’m trying to write a post a day during Advent, so, please come along with me while I try to Blog Advent – the Country Skills Way – and forgive me if I don’t quite manage it!
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