Clare Hutchinson
Patterns available as Ravelry Downloads
Knitting: Cowl
This pattern is also available as a paper copy or a kit (3 colour or 24 colour) on our website.
Crochet: Tote
This bag is very simple to do, 22 separate squares are stitched together to form the bag and an edging applied and handles sewn on afterwards. The sample was lightly felted afterwards to make it a bit sturdier but this is optional.
Knitting: Fingerless Gloves
This pattern is for fingerless mitts with a sideways cabled cuff and celtic key design around the fingers. It uses two hanks of Kinross 4ply, 50g of each colour. The cuff is knit back and forth then seamed and the stitches for the body of the mitt are picked up from the edge and then knit in the round. The key design is stranded.
Crochet: Shawl / Wrap
This pattern covers three simple shapes, a top-down triangle, a crescent, and a sideways triangle. Once you’ve done the set up rows you can carry on until you run out of yarn.
Crochet: Beanie, Toque
This pattern is in UK terminology, conversions included in the abbreviations.
Knitting: Shawl / Wrap
Silver Glen is a very pretty glen in the Ochils near Tillicoultry. The walls of the glen are covered in mosses and vines, like the trailing leaves in the edging of this shawl. Years ago silver and tin were both mined in these hills.
Knitting: Beanie, Toque, Cowl
The pattern includes instructions for either the hat or the cowl, depicting some familiar sights from Tenterden in Kent, including a windmill, some converted oast housesm, an apple and a hop flower, and St Mildred’s Church. Around the base runs the Kent and East Sussex steam railway. You can omit the trains for a snugger fitting hat.
Knitting: Beanie, Toque, Cowl
The pattern includes instructions for either the hat or the cowl, depicting a geographically inaccurate representation of Ayrshire, a county on the west coast of Scotland. There’s the Barony A Frame, the Burns monument in Alloway, Turnberry Lighthouse and of course, Ailsa Craig, all nestling on a bed of waves. You can omit the waves for a snugg...
Knitting: Beanie, Toque, Cowl
A geographically inaccurate skyline of the Yorkshire Dales, with Bolton Abbey, Skipton Castle, sheep, and even a bit of Ilkley Moor, with the Ribblehead Viaduct circling the top. The colourwork is stranded and there are some quite long floats to carry so be sure you’re comfortable catching floats before you start.
Knitting: Scarf
The Law Hill is a lovely gentle walk in Clackmannanshire, easy to do with different sections as you go up through woodland, over streams and out into the fields. This scarf reminds me of that because it’s easy to do and has short, interesting sections to keep it fun.
Knitting: Cowl, Beanie, Toque
The pattern includes instructions for either the hat or the cowl, depicting a geographically inaccurate representation of Newcastle, including the Angel of the North, the Tyne Bridge, the cathedral, castle keep and the Civic Centre, with the Great North Runners around the brim.
Knitting: Beanie, Toque
This pattern is knit from the bottom up in the round using traditional fair isle motifs and stranded knitting.
Knitting: Christmas Stocking
The pattern uses 12 colours of 4ply in total, 20g/100m of the main colour and 10g/50m Miniballs of the other 11 colours. The colours used in the sample shown are Tudor (main colour), Putty, Blueberry, Cumin, Rosebud, Seaholly, Marble Gemstone, Atlantic Spray, Crab Apple, Spice, Marzipan and Confetti. It would also work well in two colours. The ...
Knitting: Beanie, Toque, Cowl
The pattern includes instructions for either the hat or the cowl, depicting a geographically inaccurate representation of Stirling, the ancient capital of Scotland. There’s Stirling Castle, the Wallace Monument, the Bridge Clocktower (on the Customs roundabout) and a unicorn from the amazing recreation of the ancient Hunt for the Unicorn tapest...
Knitting: Beanie, Toque
Designed for the lovely new yarn produced by Annfield farm, this simple cabled hat uses one hank of their DK yarn.
Knitting: Beanie, Toque, Cowl
This pattern was originally designed to celebrate the Glasgow School of Yarn 2021.
Knitting: Beanie, Toque, Cowl, Fingerless Gloves
This pattern includes instructions for a cowl, hat and fingerless mittens with a patchwork design. The pattern is written for Miniballs - 10g balls of pure wool 4ply yarn spun in Scotland by JC Rennie. Other 4ply yarn can be substituted, you need the following total yardage for the designs:
Knitting: Mid-calf Socks
Caw paw socks! These fun bed socks are super cosy. They can be knitted with stripes in 3 colours or just 2. The Truffle comes in 6 natural shades so you can match the colours to your own cat!
Knitting: Cowl
This is a very simple pattern to knit with striking effect. The self-striping yarn with the fluffy Truffle work together to make a soft, snuggly, warm cowl that looks great on both sides.
Knitting: Shawl / Wrap
A bias knit rainbow using Kinross miniskeins, 7x20g with approx 82m in each colour. Starting at the tip of the red and with little light waves where the colours change. An easy, straight forward knit in a beautifully soft lambswool yarn. Named for the famous Pink Floyd album cover.
Knitting: Beanie, Toque
This hat was designed to celebrate Perth Festival of Yarn, a wonderfully woolly event held each year in Perth, Scotland. It is knit in the round from the brim up. The colourwork section is charted.
Knitting: Cowl, Beanie, Toque
This pattern was written to celebrate EYF - Edinburgh Yarn Festival. There are many iconic buildings in Edinburgh, it’s hard to choose a handful to put on a hat. If you’re not sure, the buildings are Nelson’s Monument (where they do the 1 o’clock gun), tenement buildings on West Bow, Dugie Stewart’s monument on Calton Hill, St Giles cathedral, ...
Knitting: Cowl
This pattern is designed for the Miniball gradient packs. It started out as overlapped hexagons, you can almost see them still, but the overall effect is Not Hexagons, hence the name. The cowl is knitted in the round as a tube and then the ends joined together. You can either do a provisional cast on and then graft the ends or cast on normally ...
Knitting: Beanie, Toque, Fingerless Gloves
This pattern is named for my daughter, who can be seen modelling the smallest size.
Knitting: Cowl
This cowl is knitted in the round as a tube and then the ends joined together. This cowl uses the Miniball 10 colour gradient set. The colours are blended into each other with a simple and easily memorised stranded colourwork section which resembles the joints used in woodworking.
Crochet: Scarf
A light, summery scarf like a bouquet of flowers! You can join the motifs as you go, and it’s easy to make a triangular shawl rather than a scarf by changing the arrangements. The many shades of Miniballs (over 90!) are ideal for this, the sample shown used the ‘Berwick Blooms’ 10 ball gradient pack, or you can choose your own combinations.
Knitting: Shawl / Wrap
This is a pattern for three simple shawl shapes that work brilliantly with the Miniball 100g gradient packs. The 10g Miniballs in over 90 colours allow you to choose pretty much any gradient you like!
Knitting: Fingerless Gloves
These mittens were originally knitted as a swatch to match the Spark Hat by Jo Kelly at EYF 2016.
Knitting: Shawl / Wrap
This is a top-down crescent-shaped shawl with radiating cables that start tightly twisted and then unravel as they get to the border. The final unravelling of the strands of the cable is achieved with simple dropped stitches. Knitting in lambswool spun in Scotland which softens significantly when washed.
Knitting: Mittens, Fingerless Gloves
Simple cables wind their way up the thumb of these cosy mittens. The instructions include both full mittens and a fingerless version. The full mittens do not use all of the single 50g hank of Kinross 4ply. This yarn is made in Kinross, Scotland and is incredibly soft and versatile.
Knitting: Mid-calf Socks
This pattern is a response to all the wee balls of left overs from previous sock projects. Not enough for a sock blanket project? Make more socks! My first pair used 11 different scraps, some as small as 5g.
Knitting: Beanie, Toque
This simple, slouchy hat was inspired by the traditional factory roof line known as ‘northlights’, often used by the many mills that once filled the local area. The yarn used is made in one of the last remaining mills near here.
Knitting: Cowl
Single length cowl (60cm) requires one hank each of two shades (shown in Scots Pine and Lichen). Double length cowl (120cm) requires two hanks each of two shades (shown in Thistle and Thrift).
Knitting: Shawl / Wrap
I love to buy laceweight and I love to use laceweight but I don’t need it very often. So I have lots of laceweight in my stash waiting to be used. Just doubling it up seems like cheating somehow. Why not just buy thicker yarn in the first place? But this shawl needs laceweight - it’s Totally Not Cheating! But it’s faster and more wearable than ...
Knitting: Fingerless Gloves
Inspired by the matt on the floor of the janitors office in Bramble Brae Primary School.
Knitting: Cowl
I’ve always liked playing with moebius strips made from newspaper and wanted to apply that to knitting somehow. This is the second iteration - cf. ‘A Very Silly Idea’.
Knitting: Cowl
I loved playing with moebius strips made of newspaper as a child and I’d been wondering how to apply those concepts to knitting. This was the first result. You knit a strip, sew it into moebius loop then cut down the middle. I added a couple of reversible cables - why not? - but really it’s just a very simple idea. The steek is done by dropping...
Knitting: Feet / Legs - Other, Boot Cuffs / Toppers
I made these because my new boots were rubbing at the back of the calf. They are quick to make and there’s a blank chart so you can get creative on the pattern. There are four colours in these ones but the pair weighs only 20g so they could be made with fewer colours. Miniballs are perfect for this, but any scraps of 4ply/fingering weight yarn ...
Knitting: Beanie, Toque
This pattern uses the yarn held double throughout. The miniballs are graded to mimic the sunset colours in the sky with the darkest colour as the foreground. The hat is knit in the round with stranded colourwork.
Crochet: Scarf
A simple and quick one skein shawl that is crocheted from side to side, increasing until you reach the centre then decreasing. It is written in US terms with the relevant UK terms in the abbreviations section. The optional border down the two shorter edges can be worked in a contrasting colour.
Knitting: Shawl / Wrap
A top-down semi-circular shawlette that can be easily adapted to heavier yarns or larger sizes. As written the pattern uses a single hank of Wee County Yarns Hand Dyed Shetland 2ply laceweight (300m). You start with a garter stitch tab and there are four increases per right side row. The increases are in the holes which are placed according to ...
Knitting: Beanie, Toque
A very simple hat that shows off a single hank of hand dyed yarn. It makes a roomy slouchy hat or you can knit it shorter to make a beanie hat. Knitted in the round with no seaming. The slouchy hat with a large pompom uses all but a few grams of one hank.
Knitting: Shawl / Wrap
A top down triangular shawl using two colours of 4ply. The lace border is a stitch known as ‘seafoam’ lace, so I’ve named this pattern after the Solway Firth off the coast of Dumfries and Galloway. When the wind gets up then great lumps of seafoam come flying over the headlands. The lace border is made by dropping multiple yarn overs.
Knitting: Beanie, Toque
This is an easy cabled hat done in the round. It has two sizes in the pattern but it is a very stretchy design so will fit a range of sizes. It uses less than 100g of King Cole Fashion Aran or King Cole Merino Blend Aran.
Knitting: Cowl
A quick cowl with dropped stitches and cables that is knitted flat and then seamed or grafted. It is made using less than one ball of King Cole Riot DK but would look good in a range of yarn weights and types.
Knitting: Shawl / Wrap
This pattern was named for one of the two streams that runs down the Ochils (the range of hills that runs along the north of the Wee County) - the Burn of Care and the Burn of Sorrow, which join at the Castle Campbell and become the Dollar Burn.
Knitting: Fingerless Gloves
This is a free pattern that uses 5 JC Rennie Miniballs, or oddments of 4ply in 5 different colours. The pattern can be also bendownloaded from our website as a PDF. The mitts are knitted in the round using two colour stranded colourwork techniques. There is a thumb gusset which is fully charted in the instructions as well as having written inst...