Since my last post, I’ve gotten about halfway (40/85 rows) through the White Frost beanie!
Here’s my current progress:

Adjusting Gauge
I had a few false starts on this project since I was worried about the gauge and sizing.
I had settled on following the pattern for a size Medium, since that fit the desired head size. The pattern suggested using needles of size US 6 and 7. However, when I tested out my gauge with the larger needles, my swatch was a lot larger than expected. Since I didn’t want the hat to come out unnecessarily big and floppy, I decided to switch down my needle size to US 5/6. With that smaller needle size, my gauge swatch still came out a bit big, but I felt it was alright just from eye-balling it.
Knitting in the Round
Joining
In-the-round is definitely my favorite needle style, and I even prefer to use circular needles when the project isn’t in-the-round. So you’d think I would be pretty good at joining at the beginning, after casting-on, to continue the piece in-the-round. But for whatever reason, I always find myself redoing the cast-on and join since I end up with a bit of a gap at the join.
Initially I was doing the following to join:
- Cast-on 1 more stitch than the pattern calls for
- Slide the first switch on the right needle (the first that was cast-on) along the circular needle, up to the tip of the right needle
- Slip that switch over to the left needle, so the first and last cast-on sts are adjacent on the left needle.
- Work those two sts together as the first st of the pattern
I had seen this method of joining online and thought it would work here, but I kept seeing a gap at the join as I knit the later rows.
So I looked up other methods and ended up liking the one where you basically *swap* the first/last sts to link the ends together. This way of joining ended up producing no noticeable gap, so I’ll definitely default to that one in future projects.
Cord Length
Another issue I kept hitting was with the length of cord between the circular needle ends. Initially I used a longer cord than necessary (24 inches I think?) and kept having to bunch the sts and cord up in weird ways to slide them up to working position. Eventually I switched the cord to a shorter one (15 inches) and that worked out much better!
Cable Pattern
I really like the look of the cable pattern here, which has the look of a chain-link fence!
I was trying to account for cable splay near the edges of the cables, but it turned out to be a big hassle to focus so much on my tension as I went. After I had finally restarted enough times, I just ignored the cable splay and let it turn out however it would. But looking at the picture above, I’d say it really isn’t that noticeable (except maybe to other cable-knitters 😁).
What’s Next?
Continue Pattern
Most of the remaining rows are just repeats of what I’ve already done, so that’ll just take a few days to complete.
Decreases
The last bunch of rows is where the beanie gets closed up with decreases.
Looking ahead in the pattern, the decreases seems to just be k2togs, so nothing fancy.
Pompom
I received the faux fur pompom in the mail:


There’s a little loop which I can use to attach it to the apex of the beanie.
Right now I don’t know exactly how I’ll attach it, but I’ll deal with that when I get closer to the end 🤷♂️.
See you at the next update 🫡





























