Barnacle Fingerless Gloves by Katherine Walters

Barnacle Fingerless Gloves

Knitting
March 2023
yarn held together
Lace
+ Lace
= Light Fingering ?
6 stitches and 12 rows = 1 inch
in mock cable ("barnacle stitch")
US 2 - 2.75 mm
372 - 383 yards (340 - 350 m)
customizable
English
This pattern is available for free.

Carrying on with the barnacle theme in some of my recent designs, (also known as a mock cable ribbing), I wanted to make myself a longer pair of wrist warmers.

In the 1960s, I was a little girl and was utterly fascinated whenever my mother got ready for a more formal event. I recall one in particular where she wore a long dress and elbow length gloves. I was besotted by those gloves! I thought she looked like a princess.

As I approached my 60th birthday I made myself a promise to embrace my inner princess more often and decided I just must have a longer pair of fingerless mittens. As these were knit in mohair/silk and are quite warm, I opted for a forearm length. The beauty of this pattern is you can make them as long or as short as you wish.

This pattern has the potential of being a stash buster as well. There was 38g of yarn in my sample (17g per ball). You could theoretically use a partial ball (18g or more) of laceweight as a main color and then work smaller amounts in as the second strand. This could be done systematically by winding off pairs of small balls of contrasting yarn; or by being completely organic as it comes out of the stash basket!

In any event, two balls of Berocco Aeriel will give you one very long pair of fingerless gloves (mine are about 13 inches long unstretched), with plenty of each ball leftover to go towards another pair. If you don’t have any laceweight yarn, check the sale bins at your local yarn shop as you only need two complimentary colors.

Materials

For this project you will need:

  • 2.75 mm double pointed needles
  • two balls of laceweight yarn - I had two complimentary skeins of Berocco Aerial in my stash (one in Silver and one in Lagoon). You will hold the two strands together throughout. Conversely, if you’ve got a favorite skein of light fingering yarn, it may also do the trick.
  • tapestry needle to darn in the ends
  • small scissors
  • notebook or app to keep track of what you are doing

Pattern adjustment considerations: The mock cable rib I’ve dubbed “the barnacle stitch” has a lot of stretch in it. Please take the time to knit a decent size swatch to confirm your gauge and to check how much stretch you get. This will help you decide if you want to make the same size I did, or wish to scale up or down.

As the pattern is a four stitch repeat, you will want to go up or down in multiples of four stitches. I cast on 48 stitches. After having worn mine several times, the forearm section is 4.75 inches in diameter while just below the base of the thumb is 3.25 inches in diameter, but the stitch count remains the same throughout.

If you wanted to make a slightly smaller pair, you might try 44 stitches or 40. Conversely, if you need a larger size, you might try 52 or 56 stitches. Again, how much your swatch stretches is important here as you can take advantage of it. Stretching the fabric a bit is preferrable to having the work seem baggy around your wrist.

My suggestion to you is measure the widest part of your hand as if measuring for gloves and then measure where your gloves will begin on your forearm. The number of stitches you cast on must accommodate these two widest points. The pattern starts at the forearm and works down to the hand, so after you’ve done a few inches, slide your work onto a narrow circular needle of piece of scrap yarn and try it on your arm. If you need to start over with more or less stitches, now is the time to find out!

The pattern is available for free on my blog.

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