Thank you so much for sharing, I was very frustrated with the Oslo hat pattern and here you are rescued me from it can’t thank you enough! Please make more of these kind of videos 😊
Thank you so much for this explanation. I just couldn't see it and kept getting stuck. Finally just followed the instructions and did the turn and voila! It all makes sense now.
Woah I've been looking for a way to achieve the double folded look for ages but couldn't figure it out. This is exactly what i've been hoping to achieve, thanks so much!!
Shazam! On your last video, I asked you which hat (Musselburgh or Oslo) you would recommend for a somewhat beginner and can't really read patterns. You recommended the Oslo hat. I decided to check to see if someone made a video with some sort of explanation on how to do this hat... and saw this video of yours. I didn't even know you made this video. So, thank you very much for this explanation. I totally would have been stuck. I feel like this is my "advent video"... I will try to take on this hat after the holidays. I'm so excited. How I wish designers have this type of videos when they design something. It does not have to be a whole tutorial but this part in the pattern would be soooo helpful. I really can't thank you enough for making this video. I think I'm going to be ready after the holidays. 😊
Thank you so much❤ This will be my first time making the Oslo hat but I want to use softer yarn for the forehead. Now that i understand the construction better I know where to switch yarns ^^
Thank you, thank you, thank you. I was so confused but now i understand. It was so nice to find your video right away. I am knitting the smallest size but i actually want a smaller version. If i am not mistaken, i might be able to do this by reducing the cast on stitches by 8. Not sure if that will work for the decreases but i’m gonna see if i can figure it out. Thanks again for the video. 😊
OMG!! This is SO helpful!! It was driving me crazy cause I was just *so* confused as to why I was doing this and why I was turning to the WS 😂 thank you so much for making this video!!’
Thank you very much , I couldn’t understood what I was supposed to do … the pattern was not clear they shupd avechad some pictures of this 7 rws knitted the oter way …thank you again
I just got to the part where I have to knit the brim together I didn’t even read forward from that! Lol I’m glad I saw this video before I even start that
Do you think you could make a video demonstrating how you made your double brim? Your seam is so precise, I would love to see your technique in joining your cast on edge to you live stitches.
just wanted to say how much I appreciated this- making this hat for the second time, the first time I skipped this step and had the seam edge showing, which is fine but frustrating! not thinking of it like a gsr helps alot :)
Thank you, wanting to knit this hat for my husband for a while and was not able to do it….. I have started and cast on the man size but will be way to big……just don’t know how many stitches to cast on … with DK yarn? 😊
Thank you for this helpful tutorial! I am wanting to add a bit of fair isle color work above the brim but don't know how that will work after turning to knit on the wrong side. I am thinking about just doing the double sided brim and not bothering with folding it again which would cut out the need to turn to the wrong side. Any thoughts?
I was just watching another knitting podcaster talk about how she was bested by how confusing the Oslo hat pattern is, so this video being in my subscription box like an hour after i watched that video is very amusing to me lol
This video is incredibly helpful. A question - can you explain a couple of things - do you knit the slipped stitch that is now the end of your wrong side row and when do you go back to the right side knitting? thank you
The slipped stitch creates a “double stitch”, it looks like two stitches combined, and you knit them together so you are not increasing in the number of stitches. In this pattern you do not go back to knitting on the other side! The “wrong side” then becomes the “right side” for the remainder of the pattern so you can fold the brim up
Hi again! My question re the German short row turns. A commenter asked if you picked up the 1st slipped stitch as a double. Since I'm not real familiar with German short rows, could you demonstrate how you did this in the round?
I found your video at the best time! I've started an Oslo Hat, and so far it's going well. I knit my gauge and it was good, but who knows how gauge will work out. It'll be interesting for sure. This video is really helping a bunch! I have a rookie knit in the round question. I know stockinette fabric will just curl to it's heart content, so I'm having to get used to work curling up. Will this become less as the work progresses after doubling up after working the cast on edge and the working edge together? Will that additional weight help keep the curling down? Thanks!
Hi Reuben! So glad this was helpful! Yes, the stockinette will completely stop curling after you knit it together with the cast on edge! No need to worry about it after that point!
Hi. When you turned your work and brought the yarn to the back, did you create a double stitch and then just knit those two together on the next round?
Thank you so much for this video!! I’m just about to cast on and this is so helpful. I’m doing the mohair edition but I have sensitive skin and I’m hoping to skip the mohair for the part of the brim that will directly touch my forehead. I’m having trouble conceptualizing which part of the pattern I should leave the mohair out. Any tips?? Thank you!!
Hi Sarah! The part that touches your head is actually the part right after where the beanie will fold. I would recommend leaving the mohair out when you knit the brim together with the cast on edge, and then for a couple inches past that, making sure to add the mohair back in before the body of the hat becomes visible above the folded brim. I hope that helps! ♥️
Once you complete the turn, the brim is turned “inside out” and the rest of the hat is continued to be worked on the right side! So the decreases are worked on the right side
I want to do some color work on what would be the brim of the hat, so should I do that in the beginning of the brim upside down? I’m struggling on figuring out what is actually the outside of the finished piece
Thanks so much for posting this. Quick question. I am making the Oslo Hat for the second time. (The first time worked out great after watching your video). I was wondering why the section needs to be so big for the “purl side”. Every time I knit it, I second guess myself and wonder why the “WS” purling has to be 5” (size small). Any explanation why? Thanks again.
Hi Emma, I’m not sure I’m filling understanding your question, but when you start knitting, you’re knitting the brim that eventually gets folded and knit together with the cast on edge. Then you only continue to knit about 7 rows before you turn your work like shown in the video and then continue on.
So if I want to have 2 horizontal stripes of a different color showing when the brim is turned up, then I would start them a few rows after I start the hat?
Awesome! Yes… it is three layers… I knit one with a significantly shorter brim to only use one skein, but I felt like it lost the integrity of the pattern without the large brim
Hi. I’m hoping you can help me. So I don’t fully understand where the cast on is. I would like to use scrap yarn to stretch the amount of my main color I have. With the Musselburgh I do this by knitting my full skein, and then using waste yarn for the rest knowing that end will be folded underneath/ on the inside of the hat. Where would this be on the Oslo hat? My pattern says to knit 7.75 inches for the brim… so would I use the waste yarn for the first half of that or the second half? If I want it to not show when wearing the hat?
Ok, I had to think about this really hard because it's confusing, but I believe that the first half of the brim that you cast on and knit is what ends up on the inside. Additionally, after you complete the brim, there are a couple inches that are covered by the brim when it is folded up, so that could also be spot you could use scrap yarn on. Let me know if that works or if I was wrong! :)
@@knitcalifornia okay that’s what I was thinking too! But it was sooo hard for me to visualize. Thank you! That’s a great idea to add scrap yarn after the brim as well. :)
No, you do not turn again! Once you 'turn" the first time, you basically turn the knitting you have already done inside out and continue knitting in stockinette. This allows the brim to be folded up and the edge where you joined the cast on to the brim to be on the inside of the folded up brim! I hope that makes sense!
Thank you for this!!! I totally could not understand why we needed to turn 😅 I thought the double knitted fabric was the brim and it didn’t need to be folded over 😂 this was incredibly helpful ❤
Using a provisional cast on is easier than what the pattern shows. Just to be clear, the pattern isn’t actually a sewn cast on, she just picks up the cast on edge one stitch at a time which is a pain for most people.
This was helpful however this is meant to be constructive…less is more. Too much talking when we are just liking for the technique. The middle 2-3 minutes of this video was all that was needed. 👍🏻
This is so incredibly helpful! It's so hard to conceptualize this hat without seeing a visual. Thank you ❤
You're so welcome!
This was really helpful! I find the pattern a bit confusing so I appreciate this video a lot ❤
Thank you so much for going through this hat. I don’t think I’d have managed without your helpful tutorial and explanation.
Perfect explanation Thank you. Just bought the pattern today and planning on getting an Oslo started and this really helps 🙋🏼🏴
Thank you so much for sharing, I was very frustrated with the Oslo hat pattern and here you are rescued me from it can’t thank you enough! Please make more of these kind of videos 😊
I'm so glad I could help!
Thank you so much in this video.... i was up to the point of knittig 7 more row and had a puzzle mind... wa la... you helped out
Thank you so much for this explanation. I just couldn't see it and kept getting stuck. Finally just followed the instructions and did the turn and voila! It all makes sense now.
Thank you, thank you, thank you!! So very helpful for us visual learners! 😊
Thank you for this video. It was very helpful as it wasn’t making sense to me. I can now proceed with confidence. Thanks again!
THANK YOU! This is the first time I’ve been truly stumped by a pattern and just could not visualise it at all so this video is absolutely perfect 🙏
the best explanation for tutorial on this hat....thank you!!!
Glad it was helpful!
Omg you saved me! I understood the turn, but I was going to continue to purl! IMAGINE!!! Thank you so much 😭
Omg so glad this was helpful!
Thanks for this video. I had followed the instructions without any problems, but was second-guessing myself as to whether I was correct.
Woah I've been looking for a way to achieve the double folded look for ages but couldn't figure it out. This is exactly what i've been hoping to achieve, thanks so much!!
Thank you - I was about ready to give up on this pattern until I watched this.
Shazam! On your last video, I asked you which hat (Musselburgh or Oslo) you would recommend for a somewhat beginner and can't really read patterns. You recommended the Oslo hat. I decided to check to see if someone made a video with some sort of explanation on how to do this hat... and saw this video of yours. I didn't even know you made this video. So, thank you very much for this explanation. I totally would have been stuck. I feel like this is my "advent video"... I will try to take on this hat after the holidays. I'm so excited. How I wish designers have this type of videos when they design something. It does not have to be a whole tutorial but this part in the pattern would be soooo helpful. I really can't thank you enough for making this video. I think I'm going to be ready after the holidays. 😊
Thank you! This video is a must watch prior to knitting the hat. 😅
Thank you!! I didn't understand this very well, but now I can finish it! :)
OMG this is so helpful!! I am a new knitter working on my first Oslo (I suspect my first of many) and this really helped to clarify things!!
Super helpful. Thank you so much!!!
Thank you so much❤ This will be my first time making the Oslo hat but I want to use softer yarn for the forehead. Now that i understand the construction better I know where to switch yarns ^^
Thank you, thank you, thank you. I was so confused but now i understand. It was so nice to find your video right away. I am knitting the smallest size but i actually want a smaller version. If i am not mistaken, i might be able to do this by reducing the cast on stitches by 8. Not sure if that will work for the decreases but i’m gonna see if i can figure it out. Thanks again for the video. 😊
Thank you!! I am making this hat for the first time and I had no idea what the pattern meant
Thank you so much! I was all confused but all lightend up now. And I'm even from Denmark like the recipe. hahaha
Thank you so much, just got to this part on my hat and as a new beginner wasn’t 100% sure I was reading the pattern correctly. ❤
Thank you so much!!! I was very much confused
OMG!! This is SO helpful!! It was driving me crazy cause I was just *so* confused as to why I was doing this and why I was turning to the WS 😂 thank you so much for making this video!!’
Thank you so much ❤, you saved me from frogging😅
Thanks heaps for your interesting explanation of the Oslo hat. I am ready to cast on!!! Paula from Australia ❤
Thank you very much , I couldn’t understood what I was supposed to do … the pattern was not clear they shupd avechad some pictures of this 7 rws knitted the oter way …thank you again
I just got to the part where I have to knit the brim together I didn’t even read forward from that! Lol I’m glad I saw this video before I even start that
Perfect explanation ❤🧶💫
Super helpful, thanks!!
You are appreciated! ❤🧶🖖🏼
Incredibly helpful! Thank you!
This was very helpful! Thank you :)
Hello just found your podcast, so excited that you are close by, Hello from Ramona
Welcome!! So close!!
Do you think you could make a video demonstrating how you made your double brim? Your seam is so precise, I would love to see your technique in joining your cast on edge to you live stitches.
I’ll add that to the list of potential tutorials!
Yes I would love to see this also.
So helpful. Thank you, Leslie. Maria M.❤
Very helpful!!! Thank you! ♥
just wanted to say how much I appreciated this- making this hat for the second time, the first time I skipped this step and had the seam edge showing, which is fine but frustrating! not thinking of it like a gsr helps alot :)
So glad this helps!
Thanks! It's very useful ❤
Thank you, wanting to knit this hat for my husband for a while and was not able to do it….. I have started and cast on the man size but will be way to big……just don’t know how many stitches to cast on … with DK yarn? 😊
I would just follow the stitch counts as written and make sure your gauge is accurate!
Thank you, it help me alot ❤
This was so helpful, thank you!!
Glad it was helpful!
Super helpful! Thank you!
Thank you, that is a bit unclear on the pattern. This made it so much clearer!!
Thank you for this helpful tutorial! I am wanting to add a bit of fair isle color work above the brim but don't know how that will work after turning to knit on the wrong side. I am thinking about just doing the double sided brim and not bothering with folding it again which would cut out the need to turn to the wrong side. Any thoughts?
That would definitely be the easiest, and would use up less yarn!
thank you so much - this really helped me...
I'm so glad!
Thank you!!! Such a helpful video
Glad it was helpful!
Sooo helpful, thank you! Could you share which size you use for yourself? Thank you!
Usually the medium!
@@knitcaliforniathank you very much!❤
Light bulbs going off…..thank you!!!!! I could. Not figure out why I was turning this work.
I was just watching another knitting podcaster talk about how she was bested by how confusing the Oslo hat pattern is, so this video being in my subscription box like an hour after i watched that video is very amusing to me lol
😂😂
This video is incredibly helpful. A question - can you explain a couple of things - do you knit the slipped stitch that is now the end of your wrong side row and when do you go back to the right side knitting? thank you
The slipped stitch creates a “double stitch”, it looks like two stitches combined, and you knit them together so you are not increasing in the number of stitches. In this pattern you do not go back to knitting on the other side! The “wrong side” then becomes the “right side” for the remainder of the pattern so you can fold the brim up
This is on my list of makes this year. Thanks for sharing! 🧶🧶🧶
You’re welcome!
Hi again! My question re the German short row turns. A commenter asked if you picked up the 1st slipped stitch as a double. Since I'm not real familiar with German short rows, could you demonstrate how you did this in the round?
I found your video at the best time! I've started an Oslo Hat, and so far it's going well. I knit my gauge and it was good, but who knows how gauge will work out. It'll be interesting for sure. This video is really helping a bunch!
I have a rookie knit in the round question. I know stockinette fabric will just curl to it's heart content, so I'm having to get used to work curling up. Will this become less as the work progresses after doubling up after working the cast on edge and the working edge together? Will that additional weight help keep the curling down?
Thanks!
Hi Reuben! So glad this was helpful! Yes, the stockinette will completely stop curling after you knit it together with the cast on edge! No need to worry about it after that point!
Hi. When you turned your work and brought the yarn to the back, did you create a double stitch and then just knit those two together on the next round?
Yes! Exactly!
What yarn did you use and how many stitches did you cast on. The pattern say 112 but just watched another knitting showing how big hers turned out.
I typically use a superwash merino and I cast on the number of stitches in the pattern, if not more for an adult hat bc my gauge is very tight
thank you!!!
THANK YOU!!!!
Thank you so much for this video!! I’m just about to cast on and this is so helpful. I’m doing the mohair edition but I have sensitive skin and I’m hoping to skip the mohair for the part of the brim that will directly touch my forehead. I’m having trouble conceptualizing which part of the pattern I should leave the mohair out. Any tips?? Thank you!!
Hi Sarah! The part that touches your head is actually the part right after where the beanie will fold. I would recommend leaving the mohair out when you knit the brim together with the cast on edge, and then for a couple inches past that, making sure to add the mohair back in before the body of the hat becomes visible above the folded brim. I hope that helps! ♥️
My question is are the decreases done on the wrong side? After the second turn? Never thought this hat would be so confusing!
Once you complete the turn, the brim is turned “inside out” and the rest of the hat is continued to be worked on the right side! So the decreases are worked on the right side
Very helpful!
Glad it was helpful!
I want to do some color work on what would be the brim of the hat, so should I do that in the beginning of the brim upside down? I’m struggling on figuring out what is actually the outside of the finished piece
It would be the second half of the brim, upside down
@@knitcalifornia THANK YOU SO MUCH!!!
Thank you
Thanks so much for posting this.
Quick question. I am making the Oslo Hat for the second time. (The first time worked out great after watching your video).
I was wondering why the section needs to be so big for the “purl side”. Every time I knit it, I second guess myself and wonder why the “WS” purling has to be 5” (size small). Any explanation why?
Thanks again.
Hi Emma, I’m not sure I’m filling understanding your question, but when you start knitting, you’re knitting the brim that eventually gets folded and knit together with the cast on edge. Then you only continue to knit about 7 rows before you turn your work like shown in the video and then continue on.
Thank you so much!! I needed to see this.
That was really helpful. Could you show us how you set up the cast on please?
I just do a Long Tail Cast On for this hat!
So if I want to have 2 horizontal stripes of a different color showing when the brim is turned up, then I would start them a few rows after I start the hat?
No, I’m pretty sure you would want them closest to the last row of the brim, right before you join the last row to the cast on edge
Thank you!!!
And also would you mind sharing what yarn you used in your finished hat in this video?
The finished hat is made from Explorer Knits & Fibers Cashmere Fingering held double in the colorway Fiadh from her Ireland Collection.
Knits by Mandy just mentioned this video. Now I understand why so much yarn is needed. The brim is 3 layers! Duh....Rachelle in Seattle
Awesome! Yes… it is three layers… I knit one with a significantly shorter brim to only use one skein, but I felt like it lost the integrity of the pattern without the large brim
what yarn did you use for the beige hat? it looks so warm and squishy ,thanks
I used Explorer Knits & Fibers Cashmere fingering yarn :)
Hi. I’m hoping you can help me. So I don’t fully understand where the cast on is. I would like to use scrap yarn to stretch the amount of my main color I have. With the Musselburgh I do this by knitting my full skein, and then using waste yarn for the rest knowing that end will be folded underneath/ on the inside of the hat. Where would this be on the Oslo hat? My pattern says to knit 7.75 inches for the brim… so would I use the waste yarn for the first half of that or the second half? If I want it to not show when wearing the hat?
Ok, I had to think about this really hard because it's confusing, but I believe that the first half of the brim that you cast on and knit is what ends up on the inside. Additionally, after you complete the brim, there are a couple inches that are covered by the brim when it is folded up, so that could also be spot you could use scrap yarn on. Let me know if that works or if I was wrong! :)
@@knitcalifornia okay that’s what I was thinking too! But it was sooo hard for me to visualize. Thank you! That’s a great idea to add scrap yarn after the brim as well. :)
So once down with the “purls” you turn again? It didn’t say so I was confused
No, you do not turn again! Once you 'turn" the first time, you basically turn the knitting you have already done inside out and continue knitting in stockinette. This allows the brim to be folded up and the edge where you joined the cast on to the brim to be on the inside of the folded up brim! I hope that makes sense!
Bonjour s’est. Bête que quand vous avez fait la couture vous avait pas filmé car s’est pas évident pour les débutante 😂
great explanation!!! thanks so much for the podcast!! just like comment below i saw the same podcast....wish i knew to reach out.
Thanks for watching!
Thank you for this!!! I totally could not understand why we needed to turn 😅 I thought the double knitted fabric was the brim and it didn’t need to be folded over 😂 this was incredibly helpful ❤
Using a provisional cast on is easier than what the pattern shows. Just to be clear, the pattern isn’t actually a sewn cast on, she just picks up the cast on edge one stitch at a time which is a pain for most people.
To be clear, everyone should use whatever method works best for them!
How would you do this magic loop method?
Move the loops around so that the 'turn' is not at the edge of the loop, and it should be the same process!
Turns out I’ve made the Oslo hat incorrectly twice 😮 I guess I’ll have to give it a go the correct way.
Oh no! I’m sure it still looks great!
Great explanation thanks. The pattern does not give clear instructions.
Glad it was helpful!
This was helpful however this is meant to be constructive…less is more. Too much talking when we are just liking for the technique. The middle 2-3 minutes of this video was all that was needed. 👍🏻
I find some explanation is useful for some people.
So helpful!! Thank you!!