Jojoland Crimson Sage Socks Knitting Pattern
By Jojoland
Specifications
| Brand: | Jojoland |
| Yarn Weight: | Fingering |
| Designer: | Lijuan Jing |
| Craft: | Knitting |
| Format: | Downloadable PDF |
| Techniques and Construction: | Seamless, Top Down, Worked In The Round |
Product Description
Jojoland Crimson Sage Socks
Project Overview
The Jojoland Crimson Sage socks are a downloadable knitting pattern designed for crafters seeking to create a pair of seamless, top-down socks. This pattern combines classic sock construction techniques with a decorative stitch pattern, resulting in a finished garment that features both structural integrity and visual interest.
What Is Being Made
These are knitted socks constructed using the top-down seamless method. The pattern produces a complete pair of socks worked in the round, beginning at the cuff and progressing downward through the leg, heel, foot, and toe sections. The design incorporates the Crimson Sage Stitch, a charted stitch pattern that appears on the front of the foot, adding decorative detail to the finished socks.
Construction Techniques
The Jojoland Crimson Sage socks employ several key knitting techniques:
- Top-Down Construction: The socks are worked beginning at the cuff and progressing downward, allowing for easy adjustments to leg length before committing to the heel.
- Worked in the Round: Using multiple needles (three needles are referenced in the pattern), the socks are constructed circularly, eliminating the need for seaming.
- Seamless Method: The top-down, in-the-round approach creates socks without seams, providing a smooth, comfortable fit.
- Heel Construction: The pattern includes a turned heel worked using short rows, creating a reinforced heel cup. The heel flap is worked back and forth, then stitches are picked up along the selvedge edges to form the heel gusset.
- Gusset Shaping: Strategic decreases on needles #1 and #3 gradually reduce stitches from 78 to 60, shaping the foot to fit smoothly over the instep.
- Toe Shaping: The toe is completed using a standard decrease method, working decreases every other round until 28 stitches remain, then continuing decreases every round until 24 stitches remain. The final stitches are grafted together using the Kitchener stitch for an invisible seam.
Stitches Used
The pattern incorporates fundamental knitting stitches combined with a charted stitch pattern:
- Knit Stitch (k): The primary stitch used throughout the socks, forming stockinette stitch on the leg and heel sections.
- Purl Stitch (p): Used during heel construction to create texture and structure.
- Slip Stitch (slip 1 purlwise): Employed in the heel flap to create a neat, reinforced edge suitable for picking up stitches.
- Knit Two Together (k2tog): A right-leaning decrease used for shaping the gusset and toe.
- Slip, Slip, Knit (ssk): A left-leaning decrease used for balanced shaping on opposite sides of the foot.
- Purl Two Together (p2tog): A decrease used during the purl rows of heel construction.
- Crimson Sage Stitch: A charted stitch pattern worked over 32 stitches (with 6 additional stitches for balancing on the front of the foot) that provides decorative detail. This stitch is maintained on needle #2 throughout the foot section while stockinette stitch is worked on needles #1 and #3.
- Kitchener Stitch (Grafting): Used to seamlessly join the final 24 toe stitches together, creating an invisible closure.
Materials and Gauge Information
The pattern is designed for use with Jojoland yarn, though specific yardage and weight details are not provided in the pattern excerpt. The construction method requires three needles appropriate for working small circumferences in the round, typically double-pointed needles or circular needles sized for sock knitting. The pattern references a total stitch count of 60 stitches for the finished foot, distributed across three needles with 20 stitches per needle during the gusset shaping phase. The final grafting requires an 18-inch yarn tail for weaving in ends and completing the toe closure.
Pattern Structure and Finished Details
The sock pattern is organized into distinct sections: the leg (
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