patterns >
Mason-Dixon Knitting Outside the Lines
> Heartbreakingly Cute Pilot Cap
![](https://images4-f.ravelrycache.com/uploads/Gidgeflibbit/1824071/2848500442_f0ac765d33_o_thumbnail.jpg)
![](https://images4-f.ravelrycache.com/uploads/Gidgeflibbit/1824071/2848500442_f0ac765d33_o_small2.jpg)
![](https://images4-g.ravelrycache.com/flickr/2/9/4/2946815907/2946815907_n.jpg)
![](https://images4-g.ravelrycache.com/uploads/MiniLaura/579234718/2867811903_a66e820df8_b_small.jpg)
![](https://images4-f.ravelrycache.com/flickr/2/9/8/2981306147/2981306147_n.jpg)
Heartbreakingly Cute Pilot Cap
Pattern Description from Mason-Dixon Knitting Outside the Lines: “Hearbreakingly cute. That’s not a term we casually throw around. Cute things abound, but it is the rare thing that is so cute you can feel a crack forming in your heart. A baby decked out in an old-fashioned, ear-insulating pilot cap certainly qualifies. Like the wildly popular Hearbreakingly Cute Baby Kimono, which appeared in our first book, this bonnet shows Cristina Shiffman’s love for ingenious one-piece construction of three-dimensional garments. Cristina used seed stitch for a sophisticated look, and added I-cord ties to make the cap more comfortable under chubby chins. This pattern is useful for another reason. I don’t know about you, but the hull of the SS Kay’s Stash is encrusted with single-skein barnacles of Koigu. in the quest for great ways to use this exquisite handpainted merino wool, this pattern is a great destination.”
Materials:
- Super fine yarn
- 1 skein Koigu KPPPM, 100% merino wool, 1.75 oz (50g), 175 yd (160m), in color P609
- Size 3 (3.25mm) single-pointed needles (for body of cap) and double-pointed needles (for I-cord ties)
- Split-ring stitch marker
Difficulty: As easy as loving a baby’s big ol’ head.
Note: “To simplify the instructions, the pattern is written in sections, but there is no binding off between sections. Slip a split-ring marker into the right side of the piece to help remind you which side you’re on; move the marker to the first row of each section to help you keep track of rows. Slipping the first stitch of each row purlwise keeps the edges neater.”
![](https://images4-f.ravelrycache.com/uploads/nobody/1649961/51mnijzxp8l_square.jpg)
44349 projects
stashed
49172 times
- First published: September 2008
- Page created: September 14, 2008
- Last updated: November 17, 2018 …
- visits in the last 24 hours
- visitors right now