Saturday, December 27, 2008

windmill bag pattern

wow, has it really been since may that i last posted here? i'm not a very good blogger, am i?

so here is a pattern for a bag inspired by a level of ninjatown, the brilliant tower defense game for the nintendo ds. somehow four paths swarming with mr. demon's minions converging in the center of the screen ended up as a modular knitted bag pattern. it's not very complicated, but i think it's clever. maybe. a little.

windmill bag



yarn: sugar and cream or other cotton yarn. i used three colors, less than one ball of each, but color choice is up to you.
sticks: US 6 straights and dpns, or you can do the whole thing on dpns if you like.
notions: split ring stitch marker, tapestry needle or crochet hook for seaming.
gauge: not really critical, knit at a gauge you feel is comfortable for you.
finished size: my tape measure is lost, but the finished product will depend on your gauge and number of cast on stitches, so measuring mine wouldn't mean much anyway.
skills required: garter stitch, i-cord bind off, i-cord, and seaming. too lazy to type up tutorials for i-cord bind off, if you don't know how, google does! ^_^

panel 1
with color 1, cast on desired number of stitches. for mine, i cast on 20. at a standard worsted gauge of about 5 stitches per inch, i would say that 20 is the minimum for a decent sized bag.

knit in garter stitch for 100 rows (50 garter 'ridges') or until desired length. knitting longer will give you a deeper (and maybe more ridiculous looking) bag. at the beginning of each row, slip the first stitch purlwise with the yarn in front as if to purl, then move the yarn back through the needles and knit to the end of the row. this will leave a neat braided-look edge that will make seaming very easy. after a few rows, mark one side as the right side of your work.

when desired length is reached, make 3 stitch i-cord bind off with the right side of work facing you. continue until you have three stitches left, then work regular i-cord until the i-cord is the same length as the rectangular panel. bind off the i-cord however you like.

panel 2
with the right side facing and the i-cord off to the left, using color 2 pick up and knit 20 (or whatever number you cast on for panel 1) stitches along the lower right edge of panel 1.

continue to knit panel 2 exactly like panel 1.

panel 3
knit just like panel 2, except pick up stitches along the lower right edge of panel 2.
make sure to always pick up your stitches with the right side of the work facing you and the i-cord off to the left.


panel 4
again, knit just like panel 2, picking up the stitches from the lower right edge of panel 3. i used only 3 colors for my bag, so my fourth panel used all three of them together. to do this, pick up stitches with color 1, join and knit one row color 2, join and knit one row color 3, then alternate colors each row without breaking the yarn, continuing to slip the first stitch of each row to maintain the braided edge.
when you finish panel 4, seam the cast on edge of panel 1 to the side of panel 4.

see why i named it the windmill bag now? ^_^

seaming
check out my awesome not MS paint because i use a mac picture to see how to seam up the sides.

sew the red sides together, the green sides together, etc. weave in all the ends. tie two of the i-cords together in a double knot to make one handle, tie the other two i-cords together for the other. yaaaaay you made a bag. fill it with fun things!

10 comments:

NAVAL LANGA said...
This post has been removed by a blog administrator.
Lark said...

Clever, indeed! I really like this.

Fuji Mama said...

Such clever construction!!! VERY cool.

RoamingKnitter said...

Clever? You bet! Like your thinking on this. Simple bag with lots of WOW. Thanks for sharing the pattern.

Carol said...

What an awesome pattern! Found it on Ravelry and will cast on in the next couple of days. Thanks for sharing this with us!

gudrun said...

Hello, thank for this pattern, i´ve seen it at Ravelry today and cast on ....and finished also . It is a real cute pattern, ideal to use oddballs of yarn. Be free to have a look at myblog .
gudrun

Jakkeblue said...

I just cast-on this a.m.
This is a cool pattern, thank you.

cattiekit said...

Oh, I like how your scientific mind works with yarn!
This is *seriously* clever and I'm grateful you decided to share it with us Ravelers and beyond!

Jen said...

Neat idea for a bag! Good to see you back.

HappyPie said...

Just posted my bag on Ravelry. Thanks so much for sharing you pattern with us :)