0

Your Cart is Empty

Patterns
Our shop
Kits
  • New! Celebrate this chapter of Ysolda.com as it comes to an end with a special, personalised bundle of our best products, hand-picked by our team just for you.

  • sundries
    gift 2019
  • Subscribe to our Colourwork Club for a gift that lasts well into the new year. Your recipient will receive a new colourwork kit in Janurary, February and March

  • Last minute shopping? Gift cards are delivered electronically - forward the email or print it for your recipient. A range of amounts are available and gift cards don't expire.

  • Wee Cria KAL — Finishing

    June 03, 2014

    It won’t be long now before the recipient is snug in their wee Cria!  Now that all the knitting is done its time to work on the finishing touches.  Spending a bit of time on the final details can make such a huge difference and give you a really beautiful finished sweater.

    Sewing up pockets

    Whether you’ve made faux or real pockets, use a new piece of yarn to sew up, and not the ends hanging out of your knitting.

    Faux pockets

    Use whip stitch to sew down the small flap, and sew up the small gaps at each side.

    Real pockets

    Sewing up the pocket is a little fiddly. I found it easiest to work from the right side and turn the inside of the pocket out. Fold the pocket flat in half, and sew the top of the pocket to the bottom of the garter stitch edge. 

    Then seam up the edges of the pockets and sew the top corners of the inside to the sides of the pocket opening.

    Weave in all the ends. At the underarms if you notice that there are small holes at the edges of the picked up stitches close them up at the same time you weave in the ends.

    Sew on buttons

    I haven’t chosen buttons yet, so I’m blocking the cardigans first. I use safety pins to mark where the buttons will go, it helps to make sure they’re in the correct place and they are evenly spaced.

    Block to measurements

    Blocking garments is just as important as blocking shawls, although the results aren’t quite as dramatic. Blocking washes the fabric you’ve been handling and stuffing into your bag, evens out the stitches or plumps them up. Hopefully you wet blocked your swatch so you won’t get any unpleasant surprises. If you have Little Red in the City the blocking information is on pages 78 – 81. Stephanie Pearl-McPhee wrote a great post a few months ago Blocking a Little Sweater, and if you aren’t convinced blocking is necessary I suggest giving it a read.

    The basics of sweater blocking: soak in lukewarm water, squish out excess water, lay flat to dry, adjust to measurements given. And that’s it — admire your work and enjoy!  We’d love to see in progress pictures as well as finished sweaters in the Ravelry thread, there are some beautiful wee Cria’s there already!



    Also in Journal

    A white woman holds a cake of yarn with a lit birthday candle in it.
    20 Years of Ysolda Knitting Patterns: Part 2

    June 23, 2025

    June 2025 marks twenty years of designing knitting patterns for Ysolda. In this blog post she picks her favourite from each year for 2015 to 2025,
    Read More
    A white woman holds a cake of yarn with a lit birthday candle in it.
    20 Years of Ysolda Knitting Patterns: Part 1

    June 19, 2025

    June 2025 marks twenty years of designing knitting patterns for Ysolda. In this blog post she picks her favourite from each year for 2005 to 2014.
    Read More
    The beginning of a mattress stitch in contrasting yarn
    Learn to Knit: Mattress Stitch

    March 29, 2023

    By following our step-by-step mattress stitch knitting tutorial, you'll learn how to make your seams look beautiful and how best to prepare your knitting so that when you seam it with mattress stitch, it goes smoothly on the first try.
    Read More