Sooo my trip planning is going kind of poorly. One of the airlines I have tickets with (Siem Reap Airways) got blacklisted by the EU for inadequate safety standards and suspended all flights about 6 days after I bought the tickets. Supposedly we can still fly with their parent carrier (but is that any better?) And then tonight, at Stitch ‘n’ Bitch, I broke my glasses! The earpiece just snapped right off. We’re leaving on Monday and tomorrow and Friday we’re supposed to get 6-12 inches of snow, so I’m not sure I want to venture out to the optometrist until the weekend. Not sure what to do about this, and I can’t find my spares. For the moment, I’m supergluing the broken pair back together. Things are not going well!
But I do have something knitting-related that I’m happy about, at least. More than one thing, but I don’t know how many of them I’ll get a chance to write up before I go.
Some background: my absolute favorite mittens are my Bird in Hand mittens (pattern available here.) The only problem is that when it gets down to below zero, like it was here in Madison the other day,
stranded worsted weight knit at a fingering weight gauge, while plenty warm, just isn’t quite warm enough. I wanted a pair of thrummed mittens like the ones I made Rahul (see the guts? I didn’t have a picture of them last time)
but I also wanted to wear my favorite mittens.
So I decided to retrofit my mitts with afterthought thrums!
They are invisible from the outside (aside from the mitten looking a little puffy, and fitting tighter than it used to) and super warm.
Here’s how to do it:
Gather your supplies:
- one pair of stranded mittens, preferably a pair with more ease in them than mine have,
- a couple of ounces of nice woolly roving, matching or not–mine is indigo and osage-dyed Corriedale from Handspun by Stefania, and really I should have used the random bright pink and orange roving I have lying around that I’ll never make anything with, rather than the expensive natural-dyed stuff, but I couldn’t resist the matching green. Whatever color you pick, it won’t show. The important thing is that the fibers should be at least a couple of inches long, and have some crimp, so they’ll stay in the mitten. There was a thread on Ravelry about thrummed mittens where someone suggested cashmere thrums. This is a bad idea, because down fibers are so short, they’ll never stay in place. You want something where you can pull off a decent-sized lock.
- a crochet hook of a decent size (I don’t know much about crochet hook sizing, but I think I used a G hook. Something a reasonable size for worsted-weight yarn)
Turn the mitten inside out.
Pull off a piece of wool about the width of your finger and a few inches long. This is your thrum.
Stick your crochet hook under a couple of floats. Do not go through the main part of the knitted fabric, just under the floats.
Fold the thrum in half and loop the middle over the crochet hook (sorry, this is a little blurry, but you get the idea).
Use the crochet hook to pull the center of the thrum under the floats.
Now go over the floats with the crochet hook and grab the tail ends of the thrum with it…
And pull these through the loop formed by the folded middle of the thrum.
Voila, a thrum attached invisibly to the inside of the mitten, after the fact!
Continue to attach thrums evenly across the back of the fabric so you have a nice woolly layer. I have a short attention span and a lot of Christmas knitting to do, so my mittens are still pretty much in the partially-thrummed state you see below, but it has really improved their insulating powers. (For one mitt. I have part of one mitt thrummed. But on Monday I will be in a place where it’s 80 degrees out, so I’m not in a huge hurry to get this done.)
Pretty awesome, right?
I hope this trick is useful to my fellow knitters in similarly fiercely cold climates!
What a great idea! Thanks for sharing.
It abounds in the awesome! Hmm, maybe I’ll make myself some Birds in Hand. Finally. 🙂
that is a great idea. i’m not a big fan of thrums (i don’t like the bulkiness) but now i want to knit an afterthought lining and sew it into my winter mitts. maybe out of cashmere. mmm, cashmere.
This is very cool, thanks for the tutorial! I think it would also be useful in making normal mitten patterns actually fit my small hands without having to resize the pattern.
That’s pretty sweet! Never thought of retrofitted thrums, but it works pretty darn well.
Very good idea. You are a genius.
The San Francisco climate, though freezing to me, may not warrant thrummed mitts….but yours REALLY make me want to make them anyway! The colors are so gorgeous together! WANT MITTENS NOW.
ooooh, that looks seriously warm! awesome idea!
I thought about doing the same to a pair of mittend knitted strandes! How funny is that! But I hope mine is going to look as beautiful as yours.
Great idea!
Very clever!
[…] but I’ve only now caught up with all my blog reading! Here is a great suggestion on how to retrofit your mitts! I’ll have to try this on my current mittens, as they are cold enough to freeze your […]
[…] OK, it’s 10 PM and I still have hours of work left to go, I can’t find my FAVORITE Bird in Hand mittens, and I missed my weekly knitting night at the wine store tonight because I was busy sorting through a […]
I was thinking it would work this way. So glad I found this and know you already figured it out. I am just doing my third pair of thrummed mitts and don’t trust them as if the thrums get pulled out, the stitch goes. I watched a tutorial on crochet mitts with thrums and it got me thinking. thanks for posting this! It is not only a better way, it is reversible when the thrums get worn out, also better with kids. What kid could leave them alone!