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apr102009

Lazy Daisy Baby Jacket

This baby jacket suits a newborn baby. It's knitted just using the garter stitch – and some daisy stitches. The daisy stitches are really lovely, and really not that hard as long as you get your head around them. Well worth a try!

Collar up or down – nice both ways.

What you need
We used 100% wool yarn requiring a 3 mm needle.
You need one 50 g ball for the main colour, but you can use scrap yarn for the stripes.
Long circular needle 4 mm (The daises are better to knit on slightly larger needles than the yarn says.)
4 buttons
Needle for assembly

How we did it
The whole thing is knitted back and forth.

The body piece
Cast on 97 stitches. Knit 8 rows.

Here comes the daisies, pay attention;)

Change colour and knit one row.
K1, purl 3 stitches in the next three stitches.
This is how you purl three in three:


Put the needle into the next three stitches as if you would purl three together.

Wrap the yarn around the needle as you do when knitting a purl.

Pull the yarn back up through the three stitches. DON´T pull the stitches off the left needle.

Now, wrap your yarn all the way around the needle.

Make sure the yarn is wrapped all the way around. It´s supposed to be in front of the needle as you put it back into the three stitches as you did to start with.

Wrap the yarn around and pull it back up.

You now have three stitches on your right needle.

Lift the stitches off the needle. Make sure they´re in the same order as you knitted them in, the Yo in the middle.

*K1, purl three in three* Repeat from * to* the entire row. Finish with a knit stitch.

Change colour. Knit one row.
Knit another row with daisies. This time around, however, you´ll knit the daisies between the row of daisies you already have. Therefore you start by knitting 3.
*Purl three in three, K1* Repeat from * to * until you have three stitches left on the needle, knit these.

Continue knitting the daisies, starting with one knit stitch and three knit stitches every second time as above. We knitted 20 rows of daisies (40 rows including the rows of knitting in between).

Cast off for the arms. Use the main colour and knit like this:
K 20, cast off 6 stitches, K 45, cast off 6 stitches, K 20.
Let the body piece rest until you´ve knitted the arms.


Arms
Cast on 28 stitches.


Knit back and forth until the arm measures 15 cm.
Increase one stitch in each side every 3 cm, four times in total = 36 stitches.
When the arm is 15 cm long, cast off 4 stitches in each side and make another arm just like it.

Now it´s time to put the arms onto the body piece needles. Use the main colour. Do it like this:
Knit the first front piece, WHILE you´re decreasing 3 stitches along the distance.
Knit the first arm where the whole for the arm is (Make sure that you knit it on the right way, meaning that you start knitting where you naturally would if you were to continue the arm.).
Knit the back piece, WHILE you´re decreasing 6 stitches along the distance.
Knit the other arm.
Knit the second front piece, WHILE you´re decreasing 3 stitches along the distance.

Knit one row.

It's time to start the raglan decrease. This means that you knit together the two first stitches before and after each arm, and also the two first and last stitches on the arms.
To be exact:
Knit the first front piece until two stitches remain. Knit these together. Knit the first two stitches on the first arm together. Knit the arm until two stitches remain, knit these together. Knit the first stitches on the back piece together. Knit the back piece until two stitches remain. Knit these together. Knit the first two stitches on the second arm together. Knit the two last stitches on the arm together. And finally knit the first two stitches on the second front piece together.

Decrease like this every second row 14 times in total. The last time you decrease the two first and the two last stitches on the row as well. You still have some stitches left on the needles.
Assemble the loose ends on the body piece before you start the front bands/collar.

Front band /collar
Using the same circular needle as you still have stitches left on, pick up 36 stitches on along the side of the front piece. Repeat on the other side. You´ll now knit the front bands and collar in one.

Knit 4 rows.
On the fifth you make button wholes. We made four of these on the right side of the jacket. Don´t make wholes more than a cm or so above the daisies. You make one button whole by knitting two stitches together, and then you out your yarn over the needle, making an extra stitch for the next row.

Knit until you have seven rows in total. Cast off LOOSELY along the side until there´s no more daisies, knit until the daisies start again, and cast the rest of the stitches off LOOSELY.
Cut the yarn.

Start knitting the collar, 4 rows in total.

1st and 2nd row: Decrease one stitch on the beginning and the end og the rows.
3rd and 4th row: Decrease two stitches at the beginning and the end of the rows.

Cast off LOOSELY.
Assemble the arms and armpits.

The perfect gift for a newborn baby;) We didn´t have one, and ended up with a lion as a model.

This is a free jacket knitting pattern from pickles.no. We’ll be thrilled if you use it. Please link to us if you do;)

Reader Comments (18)

What a wonderful sweater! I think I will just have to make one!

april 22, 2009 | Unregistered Commenterkate

hi.
i love this baby sweater. can you tell me what the gauge was?

thanks

april 22, 2009 | Unregistered Commenterlucinda

Thanks! It´s already been given away, but we´ll see what we can do;)

april 22, 2009 | Registered Commenterpickles

thanks. i appreciate it, even if its just a rough estimate. trying to figure out which yarn to use.
i have a couple friends having babies and it would make the most perfcet gift!

april 22, 2009 | Unregistered Commenterlucinda

Ok, my friend says you´ll need about 20 stitches and 36 rows to get a 10x10 cm piece. This is the yarn if it helps. It says you need 26 stitches to get 10 cm, but as I jused larger needles it sounds about right.

april 24, 2009 | Registered Commenterpickles

thanks so much! that was the gauge i was hoping for! i will post a finished pic on my blog and link to you! lucends.blogspot.com

lucinda

april 26, 2009 | Unregistered Commenterlucinda

I am trying to print out this pattern and I don't get pattern printed on page - just prints left hand column!??? It also listed the name of the project at top of page and page numbering and left column . . . but no printing of pattern.

februar 20, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterLinda

cute sweater! trying it for myself, but have a few questions about the pattern.

1. for the instructions "Knit back and forth until the arm measures 15 cm.
Increase one stitch in each side every 3 cm, four times in total = 36 stitches.
When the arm is 15 cm long, cast off 4 stitches in each side and make another arm just like it." What does that mean? I knit until the arm is 15 cm. Then I increase 2 stitches each row over 4 rows and each one of those increases should be about 3 cm in from the edge of the piece? Then, on my fifth row, I CO the first four stitches, knit to the last 4, then cast off those last 4. Which now means the piece isn't really 15 cm, it's 15 cm plus five rows--yet the pattern says "when the arm is 15 cm long" both before knitting four rows of increase and before knitting a fifth row of casting off stitches.

2. When attaching the arms, what does it mean to decrease stitches "along the distance?" Does it mean to decrease anywhere as you knit across?

Thank you! :-) And thank you for posting the gauge :-)

april 11, 2010 | Unregistered Commenterbatya

Absolutely adorable!

The K7 in the first par of the hat pattern means knit 7 rounds, right?

januar 4, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterLizzieK8

Hi,
I Love this pattern ! ! !
Please, can you gives me the color and yarn used to do this?
thanks

januar 27, 2011 | Unregistered Commenterchorelie

My question/comment is the same as Batya's in her comment of April 11, 2010.

In the turban, does the K7 in the first part mean knit 7 rounds?

mars 7, 2012 | Unregistered CommenterLouise Milne

It is corrected now:) Thanks for letting us know:)

mars 12, 2012 | Registered Commenterpickles

Such a cute pattern! I'm almost done the cardigan :)
I was just wondering with the leftovers from one of the contrast colors.. will I have enough to make the turban? Can you tell me how many grams the turban weighs so I can check?
Thanks!
Amanda

juni 14, 2012 | Unregistered CommenterAmanda

Sorry, we don´t have this info. It´s probably enough:)

juni 17, 2012 | Registered Commenterpickles

I picked up 36 stitches going down the right side of the sweater (for the band/collar), but how do I pick up 36 stitches on the other side? My wool is attached to the end of the right side, so I can't use it to pick up stitches on the other side :(

juli 10, 2012 | Unregistered CommenterJillian

Jillian, you will have to cut the yarn and weave it in later :)

juli 10, 2012 | Registered Commenterpickles

I have some confusion about the hat. When you knit the two together on the round after the knot...that leaves 59 stitches on the needles. How do you evenly decrease and I'm not sure what that means to decrease evenly 12 stitches? It looks really cute so far.
I'm using a Cascade 220 Superwash Sport and it's beautiful.

desember 2, 2012 | Unregistered CommenterBrenda

You knit 2 together evenly.

desember 3, 2012 | Registered Commenterpickles

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