I don’t know what to call these: wristlets, gauntlets or fingerless mittens. Whatever you call them, they are kinda cute and a lot of fun to make and wear.
I saw a knitted sample at Twist – Yarns of Intrigue and knew my knitting skills were not up to dealing with pesky double-point needles. But when I learned that they were made from my beloved Malabrigo worsted, I decided to try making up something similar in crochet. Yes, okay, mainly it was an excuse to buy more Malabrigo, but the nifty thing is how the variegated colorways go so beautifully with the kettle-dyed solids (which do have some slight variations in them, despite being “solids”). So I bought a variegated skein that would pair nicely with the leftover Cuarzo purple and the leftover Tuareg blue from the starry “slightly-more-than-one-skein-pattern” cowls I made, and retreated to my laBORatory to figure out a plan.
Designing these was a real learning experience and if you look closely you’ll notice that the two mittens are quite unlike each other because I tried different strategies on each one, but hey, they’re fun and funky and I’m happy with how they turned out.
The appearance of knitted ribs is created by crocheting one row into the fronts of the previous row of stitches, and then crocheting the next row into the backs of the previous row of stitches. You’re crocheting from elbow to palm and then back again, not round and round the wrist, which I didn’t realize when I made my foundation chain. I assumed I’d just keep going until they were the length I wanted, duh. Next time I will start with a chain that is an inch or three longer, because if you’re going to wear frilly wrist warmers you really ought to just go for the drama.
So you do this ribbed-looking panel and you fold it in half and stitch it into a tube that fits around your forearm and palm, leaving a gap a few stitches long for your thumb to poke through. I wanted my thumb to be warm — the poor little guy is already traumatized enough, being out there on the edge all by himself – so I picked up and single crocheted in the skipped stitches and a few others above and below the gap, and went round with double crochet a few times until a suitable thumb sheath was formed.
I’m not entirely thrilled with the ruffles on either mitten. Will try Plan C on the next pair. But the scalloped edging along the finger edge turned out festive enough.








