Spiral crochet fun

Yes, I’m still stash busting. I had yellow and blue yarn of the same weight, so decided to try a spiral crochet hat. (Yellow and blue are Down Syndrome awareness colors.) I really like the technique! It makes a seamless round, is easier to keep track of the start of a row, and the center looks neat! This particular stripe is rather bold, but I’m definitely going to try this again with other yarns.

Start of two color spiral

For this hat I chose a half double crochet (hdc) stitch because I think it comes out softer and more dense. Crocheting a flat circle with hdc is a bit trickier than with double crochet. I increase by odds, rather than singles, until the circle is larger. Each hat has been slightly different on the count because I’ve used different yarn weights and hook sizes. For this two color hat, I put 2 single crochet and 3 hdc of each color in the magic circle, this helps the center spiral stay neat. The first row (which is half of each color), I did an increase in all 10 stitches. The second row I increased in one stitch, and hdc in the next. This is the same for the start of a double crochet circle. In the third row it deviates: I increase in one stitch and hdc in the next 3. Fourth row increase, then 5 hdc. (See? 1, 3, 5… odds.) This works for awhile, then I usually have to go back to just adding 1 hdc for each round.

Crocheting while tending a fire made to create hardwood ash for the chicken’s dust bath

I finished this hat cloche style. From the circle to the tops of the ears I did no increases, then I increased only in the blue row. Although I stitched the whole hat one color around at a time, I finished with the colors ending on opposite sides of the hat, and decreased stitch size (hdc, sc, sl) to blend in the end.

Finished hat showing tapered opposite ends

Yup. The cat is “modeling” the hat.