patterns >
Brioche(ish) and 1 more...
> Akin






Akin
This Pattern is Retired
I have a lot of patterns! But I also tend to get overwhelmed if I have to deal with them all at once. So I’ve picked 12 of my favorites (the Core Collection) that will usually be available. And every few months, I decide on a theme or a technique and make a handful of related patterns (the Rotating Collection) available for a little while (then they go away again).
The other patterns are retired and are not generally available. However, because I know some folks will want them, I make many the retired patterns available for a few weeks every November. If you want me to tell you when they’re back, subscribe to the mailing list or patreon, and I’ll be sure to let you know!
- If you see the buy buttons on a pattern’s page, you’ve caught it on one of the days it’s available!
- If you don’t see the buy buttons on a pattern’s page, it’s not currently available.
- If you want to hear when the retired patterns are available (most likely in November), subscribe to the mailing list or patreon, or keep an eye on my instagram.
Is it brioche? Eh, sort of. It’s brioche adjacent. It’s approximately brioche. It’s akin to brioche. But it’s not quite the same. You do one little thing different (swap in slips where you’d normally work a purl, if you really want to know), and you get that lovely field of not-quite-solid color.
Did this come about because I lost track of what I was doing, did something a little bit wrong, didn’t notice for a while, and absolutely loved how the fabric came out? Yeah, more or less. But let’s just have that be our little secret. I’m a firm believer that if you do it with enough verve, a lot of mistakes (at least knitting mistakes) come out pretty cool. This feels like a perfect example.
If you’ve done brioche before, you’ll be on very familiar ground. If you’ve not done brioche before, this won’t be any harder to learn (because really, brioche is one by one ribbing with some yarn overs thrown in for variety, it’s not nearly has hard as people make it seem). Either way, you’ll likely be playing with something new, and you’ll get to see just how much difference a tiny little change can make!
General information
This delightfully detailed pattern walks you through creating these lovely mitts.
Skills & scope
Ok so this does use brioche, and some people convince themselves brioche is scary (I should know, I used to be one of them). But don’t worry, because as long as you can knit, purl, slip a stitch, and work a yarn over (and as long as you don’t spend too much time talking yourself into believing it’s hard), you can totally do this. No really, you can. Plus the nifty not-quite-brioche bits are going to be new to most everyone, so we’ll all be doing something new. And we knitters are a clever bunch, and you’ve already learned lots and lots of new things, so I know you can do this too!
The pattern uses charts, so you will need to know how to follow a knitting chart.
Yarn, gauge & sizing
The mitts comes in three sizes (26, 28, and 30 stitch cast ons) and are written for seven gauges (from three to six stitches per inch in half stitch increments).
That means you can use just about any weight of yarn from fingering up through worsted, and there will be a size to fit pretty much anyone’s wrist.
The mitts in the pictures took about 150 yards of a chainette yarn at 4.5 stitches per inch. They used about 90 yards of the yellow you see on the leaves, about 60 of the blue in the background.
If you’re using thinner yarn, you’ll need more yarn! I’d recommend having a total of 200 yards for bulky yarn, 250 yards for aran or worsted, and 275 yards for dk, just to be safe! And keep in mind you’ll use about half again as much of one color than the other.
Tools & supplies
You’ll need needles that let you work in the round (circulars or DPNs) in whatever size lets you get a solid fabric with your chosen yarn, needles one size bigger than that, plus the general knitting tools you need for most projects (scissors to cut your yarn, a darning needle to weave in ends, the occasional stitch marker, a bit of scrap yarn).
4054 projects
stashed
2385 times
- First published: April 2025
- Page created: March 31, 2025
- Last updated: January 27, 2026 …
- visits in the last 24 hours
- visitors right now


