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Tuesday, February 7, 2023

Ponytail hat with reflective accents

 I was able to do some actual crafting, today!  I decided to crochet a ponytail hat, using the reflective thread my husband found for me, as an accent.


The yarn is Accent Brights from "Knit and Purl: Purveyors of Fine Yarn".  It's a 100% acrylic yarn produce in Turkey for Aldi.  My husband bought a case of it, each package containing 2 of 4 colours, to knit with, not noticing that it was a light weight yarn, when he wanted a medium weight yarn.  So I've been using it more than he has!

This hat was worked with two strands of yarn, plus the reflective thread, using a 6mm, or J/10, hook.  The design is about as basic as it gets.  I started with 8sc around a magic ring, then alternated rounds of double crochet and single crochet for the crown and body of the hat.  The reflective yard was used only in the single crochet rounds.  The body of the hat is 68 stitches around.


In this shot, you can see the hole for the pony tail to be pulled through.  It was made in a single crochet round by chaining 5 and skipping 5 stitches.  The next double crochet round was worked into, rather than around, the chain stitches.

The brim of the hat is just 4 rounds of single crochet.

I then wasted a bunch of yarn trying to make a pom pom, which I almost never do with my hats, on a pom pom maker, using templates from the card that each package of yarn came with.  The templates are basically circles, with a chunk missing.  The instructions said to wrap the yarn around the two, back to back templates, until the card could no longer be seen.  Then the wrapped yarn would be cut by sliding the scissors between the templates.  Yarn could then be wrapped around the middle to tie it off, and the templates removed.

Except that as soon as I started cutting the wrapped yarn, it basically started falling apart.  I even tried to thread the yarn to tie it off with, in between the templates and try and salvage the uncut wraps, but ended up cutting the tying yarn by accident.  So I ended up just using a rectangle of light cardboard, folded in half, with the tying yarn tucked across in the fold.  Once I was done wrapping, using up the last of the yarn, I tied it off, removed the cardboard, secured the tying yarn some more, then cut the loops.  It's looser and floppier than I originally wanted, but it works.  After trimming the cut ends to make them neat and even, I used a crochet hook to draw the two lengths of tying yarn through the top of the hat, then just tied it off on the inside with a shoelace knot.  This way, the pom pom can be easily removed for washing.  I'm pretty sure it would fall apart completely if it went through the wash!

The finished hat has a cozy stretch to it, and is comfortable to wear.  I plan to give it as a gift.  I hope the planned recipient likes it!