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Knitting a Top This hat

by Glenna C

Summer is just getting started around here in Ontario, and I don’t know about you but I always like working on small, portable projects at this time of year! While I still think about sweaters and blankets and other ambitious projects, it’s always nice to work on small things that won’t take up my entire lap (or the whole sofa)! So, summer can be a perfect time of year to sneak in some gift knitting, especially if you are someone who plans their winter gift knitting well in advance. (I am actually not usually one of those people, but I always try to do better each year)! Socks and hats come to mind for small gifts for loved ones, and this week on KNITmuch, we’re going to go through the steps for knitting a Top This! hat.

So many animals to choose from!

So many animals to choose from!

Hello there, kitty! This is one of the adorable Top This! hat kit variations.

Hello there, kitty! This is one of the adorable Top This! hat kit variations.

If you’re a relatively new knitter, this will be a great week for you here on the KNITmuch blog. Hats are an ideal project to help you build up some knitting skills beyond the basic knit and purl. Knitting a hat will help you practice not just casting on and knitting, but knitting in the round and knitting some basic decreases. These are all great building blocks for bigger projects. These kits are made with self-striping yarn, which changes color as you knit it – so, even though there are stripes in these hats, you never have to stop and change yarn part way through.

And hello, Mr. Elephant! What's your name?

And hello, Mr. Elephant! What’s your name?

Children’s hats like these are also often smaller than adult projects, so you can finish them faster and feel satisfied. (One of these hats took me only 2-3 episodes of Miss Fisher’s Murder Mysteries on Netflix – it’s hard to beat that!) These kits have completely charmed me, I confess, and I’m already making a list of the little folks in my life who will be receiving them as gifts. They come with enough yarn for a hat as well as a little topper shaped like a little animal or fun toy, and this week we’ll walk through the steps to make one, using the grey and pink kitty (2nd photo), and this handsome green and yellow elephant (above).

Check the yarn label to find out what needle size is best.

Check the yarn label to find out what needle size is best.

The first step of embarking on any knitting project is to check that you’ve got the right knitting needles to work with. If you’re working with a brand new yarn, the best thing to do is check the label first. All commercially available yarn labels (or “ball bands”) will have a wealth of information on them, including recommended needle size, the fiber content (materials that the yarn is made of), and washing instructions. In this case, the yarn label also contains the hat pattern, on the inside.

We can see from the fine print here that this project requires 5.5mm/US #9 needles. Reading ahead in the pattern instructions inside, we can find out that these are recommended to be a 16″/40cm circular needle as well as double-pointed needles. Other things we’ll need for this project are things you will often need on hand almost all the time as a knitter, are stitch markers, yarn needles for sewing in ends when it’s all finished, and a row counter is optional if you like some help tracking how many rounds or rows you’ve knitted.

All the supplies we'll need to make one hat.

All the supplies we’ll need to make one hat.

In our next blog post we’ll get started and cast on! You can do a project along with us this week if you like, either just following along with the steps to make a hat, or knitting a Top This! hat of your own.

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14 comments

Alma November 6, 2019 - 5:22 pm

What about washing? Do you remove the topper?

Reply
Carla A. Canonico November 7, 2019 - 4:46 pm

Hi Alma, the topper is sewn on by hand, and all the yarn is a blend of acrylic yarn. It can be washed by machine and dried in the dryer. If the topper is sewn on properly and securely, there should be no issues with the topper. Thank you for visiting KNITmuch!

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Robin Archer October 26, 2018 - 2:41 pm

Not sure how to sew the topper on the hat. Do I sew through to the hat or just around the rubber disc?

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Marion January 6, 2018 - 8:11 am

Do you start the skein from the middle?

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Carla A. Canonico January 17, 2018 - 11:16 am

Hi Marion, This is a regular ball of yarn. You start the hat from one end of the ball and add the TOP This pompom once you finish the hat.

Reply
Stephanie R. August 3, 2017 - 12:44 pm

What gauge did you knit to for these hats? Did you use the recommended needle size? Do you usually meet gauge with the recommended size? I’m a very beginner knitter trying to figure this all out! Thank you for this helpful tutorial :)

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Carla A. Canonico August 15, 2017 - 12:32 pm

Hi Stephanie, thank you for your inquiry. We used the recommended needles on the ball band and got the same gauge as that found on the ball band. You can see these details in the fourth picture in this post. Thanks!

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Christine Watkins July 29, 2017 - 5:47 pm

How would suggest making this smaller. Would you just use the same count just smaller needles? Or would you decrease the stitches?

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Carla A. Canonico July 31, 2017 - 3:11 pm

Hi Christine! Thank you for your inquiry. Our knitting editor Cynthia MacDougall suggests the following: Look at the decreases at the top, and the ribbing at the bottom. There are probably 8 “wedges” to the decreases at the top. Without knowing the number of stitches, figure out how much smaller you need to make it, then cast on a multiple of 4 sts to get close to that. At the top, you have two options: either make 7 “wedges” with the same number of stitches as the pattern repeat, or, if your number divides evenly into 8, you can keep to the 8 wedges, and just follow the pattern from that point. For example, if the hat calls for 72 stitches, the first decrease round would be *k7, k2tog around, but if you have 64 stitches, you would do the first decrease round as *k6, k2tog around. – We hope this helps.

Even if she has an odd number at the top, (say she has 68 stitches), she can decrease 4 stitches evenly near the top of the “band”, to bring her decreases to a multiple of whatever the pattern is.

Hope this helps,

Cynthia

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Becky March 10, 2017 - 2:10 pm

Do you have a video of you actually knitting the Top This Hat?

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bonnie huelin June 15, 2015 - 10:30 am

where to buy kits??

Reply
Carla A. Canonico June 15, 2015 - 3:48 pm

Thanks for asking, you can find them at Mary Maxim’s, retail store or online, https://www.marymaxim.ca/ . Also The Yarn Guy at 15 Gower St, East York, Ontario http://www.sewknit.ca/ .

Reply
bonnie huelin June 15, 2015 - 10:24 am

where can the kits be purchased?

Reply
Carla A. Canonico June 15, 2015 - 3:49 pm

Thanks for asking, you can find them at Mary Maxim’s, retail store or online, https://www.marymaxim.ca/ . Also The Yarn Guy at 15 Gower St, East York, Ontario http://www.sewknit.ca/ .

Reply

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