Lowland Driving Mitts
- Yarn Weight
- Aran
- Needle Size
- 5.0 mm (US 8)
- Gauge
- 18 sts × 24 rows = 4 in (10 cm) in stockinette
- Construction
- Drop Shoulder
- Fit
- Children's
- Sizing Range
- Child · Adult Small · Adult Medium · Adult Large
The Lowland Driving Mitts is a pair of mittens designed to actually keep your hands warm. The cuff is long enough to disappear under a coat sleeve, and the fabric is dense without being stiff. They are a winter-grade make.
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This is a comfortable easy-level make. You should be at home with knit and purl, basic increases and decreases, and the idea of working in the round (or, if the pattern is flat, with seaming a couple of edges at the end). Nothing here will surprise you, but there's enough texture or shaping to keep things interesting after the first few inches.
Stranded colorwork sections should be worked with relaxed floats — a generous float on the wrong side does more for the finished mitten than any other single thing. Catch floats longer than five stitches as you work them.
Designed by Hester Vaughn and offered as a free pattern, the Lowland Driving Mitts is a good pick for a project that respects your time and rewards your attention.
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A note on yarn substitution: stay close to the fiber content suggested when you can. Wool-forward yarns will block out evenly and develop a soft halo over the first few wears; cotton and linen blends will hold their crispness but won't bloom in quite the same way. If you are substituting, knit a generous swatch in the substitute and live with it for a day before you commit to the project. The fabric will tell you whether it wants to be a sweater.
Blocking matters more than gauge — and gauge matters a great deal. Wash your finished swatch the way you intend to wash the finished garment, lay it flat, and measure once it is fully dry. The numbers you measure off the needles are not the numbers you will wear. Pin out lace and colorwork firmly; let plain stockinette relax into shape on its own.
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Choosing a size: take an honest measurement of the fullest part of your bust or chest, and look at the finished bust measurement of the size you are considering. The difference between those two numbers is your ease. For a relaxed, modern fit choose 2 to 4 inches of positive ease; for a closer, set-in look choose 0 to 2 inches; for a slouchy, oversize feel choose 6 inches or more. The pattern photos give you a sense of what each ease looks like on the model — yours will look different, and that is the point.