Hope everyone had a great holiday weekend. I am suffering a little from turkey hangover, but that is a good thing!
If you read my last post, I included a hat I had just knit for my DD, called the Rikke Hat. So cute and so stylish. I had a skein of Madelinetosh DK in Tart (can’t resist Tart!) sitting around so I decided to make another: my Red Rikke.
In the original pattern, you knit garter stitch in the round: knit one round, purl one round. When you make the transition, you end up with what looks like a seam. I have no problem with that — it looks like a very perfect, neat seamline. BUT, in a hat, it means that (like any seamed hat) you kind of have to be careful to center the seam when you put it on. This can be annoying. So, I tried something different on my Red Rikke.

I used a slip stitch at the transition point (which is the center spoke in the photo). The transition is hiding behind the slipped stitch. To do this I worked the pattern as follows:
Round 1: knit
Round 2: p12, slip 1 as to purl with yarn in back
The last st of the second round is the slipped stitch. I continued in this manner – changing needle size when indicated – until the desired length (~6 1/2 inches for my hat), ending with Round 2.
Decreases
I did centered double decreases every 4th row as follows:
Round 1: knit to 1 stitch before slipped st, slip 2 sts tog as to knit (like a k2tog but just slip the sts to the right needle), k1, pass the 2 slipped sts over (the last decrease will use the first st of the next round)
Round 2 & 4: p to slipped st, slip 1 as to purl with yarn in back
Round 3: knit
I continued in this manner until there were 24 sts remaining, and then I did the last decrease on the next knit row…8 sts.
The advantage is that you can throw the hat on any which way and it should still look good. The hat is still wet or I would try to get a photo on someone’s head. Not mine, though. I have a very large head and I am afraid to stretch it out! I made it kind of small so it will fit snuggly. It can always be stretched but if it is too big, too bad.
Feel free to use this modification if you like.
PS — It appears from looking at Ravelry that quite a few have used this little mod!! 3/10/2024