Mitten Sewing Pattern – Cozy and Quick Handmade Gift

Sew a pair of warm, cozy mittens for you or for a gift.

Are you looking for a last-minute handmade gift for a friend or family member? Perhaps you would like to get ahead on Christmas gifts this year? You have come to the right place. Mittens are the perfect gift for anyone living in less than balmy climes: great for your parents’ aging hands, your teenager headed back to college, your trendy friend living in snowy New York City, or your friend tending chickens in freezing rural Saskatchewan. Warm and cozy with a simple silhouette, these mittens will look like a pair of bespoke mittens bought from an artisan market. Your giftee will be tickled and overjoyed.

Versatile mitten sewing pattern

Flexible to be sewn with new, scrap, or thrifted fabrics, this mitten pattern also includes alternates to accommodate preferences for finishing your mittens by hand or by machine.

Check out #LovelyEnoughMittens on Instagram to see examples of the beautiful and varied mittens people are making with the pattern.

Download your pattern and start making mittens for you and your loved ones today!

Materials for Sewing Mittens

(for a pair of mittens, any size)
my downloadable mitten pattern
– mitten fabric, ⅓ yd (wool suggested, woven or knit)
– batting, ⅓ yd (optional, cotton or wool)
– lining, ⅓ yd (any soft woven or knit)
– elastic, 8” (¼” – ¾” wide)
– embroidery floss and needle, if you choose to attach elastic and finish wrist by hand

Skill Level – Advanced Beginner

Cozy and quick mitten pattern for your or for a gift! | by Lovely and Enough
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Make Mittens from Old Sweaters

Have you wandered through a craft fair and coveted the cozy patchwork mittens made out of old sweaters, only to flip over the price tag and experience sticker shock? Well, here’s your chance to make your own pair for a fraction of the cost. Swing by your local thrift store or pull an old sweater out of your closet that you never wear and get to work making your very own sweater mittens.

Sizing your sweater mittens

The stretchiness of the sweater will provide a more pliable mitten. This might feel looser than a mitten of the same size made out of woven fabrics. Thus, even if you are using a bulky lining fabric, like minky or sherpa, you probably don’t need to size up like you would otherwise.

That said, if you use a layer of batting, this will remove all stretch again, so plan accordingly. Adding a layer of batting can be nice to keep your hands warmer, especially if the sweater has a loose weave that could let through wind and cold drafts.

Felt your sweater before making

Another option for looser weave sweaters is felting. The easiest way to go about this is to wash your wool sweater in hot water and dry on high. The felting process makes the wool fibers open up (when hot) and then close around each other as they cool, creating a denser fabric. Take note that this will shrink your sweater and could affect whether you have enough material for your mittens. Check out this post at Instructables for more on felting sweaters.

 

Perfect Scrap Buster

This mitten pattern is a perfect scrap buster. The pieces can quite easily be cut out of scrap fabric from another garment project. Leanne of The Bristol Stitchery whipped up a beautiful pair of mittens from her garment sewing scraps. She used waterproof fabric for the exterior and double-lined them to make an ultra-warm and weatherproof pair of mittens. You can check them out and ask her more questions on her Instagram.

Beautiful mittens made using scraps from other garment projects. Mittens and image by Leanne of The Bristol Stitchery.

Beautiful mittens made using scraps from other garment projects. Mittens and image by Leanne of The Bristol Stitchery.

 

Quilt Mittens

Have you been ogling those quilt coats that are all the rage? Well, take it a step at a time and start with some quilt mittens! My mitten pattern is easily adapted to using a quilt block for the back of the hands. Check out the mitten below made with a Christmas Joy Quilt block.

You can find more quilt mitten inspiration on my Quilt Mittens post, as well as a free tutorial for pattern hacking my mitten pattern to make quilt mittens on Lo & Behold Stitchery.

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Tips for Sewing Your Mittens

As I have sewed mittens and experimented with the pattern, I have developed a few tips for success.

Tip 1: How to secure a long zigzag stitch in the seam allowance

Use a very wide and long zigzag stitch, as this helps to maintain the elasticity. However, using a very long zigzag stitch makes it tough to reverse at the start and the stop of the seam inside of the seam allowance. To remedy this, I came up with a little trick.

 In order to squeeze reversing a long zig-zag stitch into the seam allowance, start with your machine set to a very very short, wide stitch. Sew a handful of stitches in the seam allowance, reversing. Then lengthen the stitch to sew across the wrist, without cutting the thread. Finish the seam by shortening the stitch again and reversing in the seam allowance.

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Tip 2: How to create a neat, secure seam at the base of the thumb

Start by pinning the thumb to the thumb-palm seam so that you don’t accidentally sew it into the edge seam. A binding clip or straight pin is perfect for this job. In order to more easily stitch these seams open, wait to trim the thumb seam until after you have attached the front of the mitten to the back. Lastly, make sure to reverse when crossing the junction at the base of the thumb. This is a seam that will take a lot of strain during wear and benefits from the extra reinforcement

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Tip 3: How to keep the wrist elastic taut while hand sewing

Cut a piece of cardboard to slide inside the wrist to keep the wrist elastic taut while hand sewing. The size of the cardboard will depend on the size mitten you are making. It should be about 3–4” long. The widths are as follows: small–4”, medium–4½”, large–5 ⅛”. I also like to put a piece of painter’s tape on the edges to keep it from snagging the batting.

Slide the cardboard inside the wrist, and use a binding clip to secure the elastic at either end of the cardboard. Voila, you are ready to hand tack the elastic!

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Tip 4: How to avoid fluffy linings poking through blanket stitches

I found that when blanket stitching my wrist edges that if my stitches were initiated from the inside of the mitten, then I would inevitably pull fluffy white Sherpa tufts through with each stitch. This left me with a finished edge that didn’t look as neat as I wanted. To avoid this, sew the blanket stitch by pushing needle from the outside of the mitten to the inside as this avoids pushing fuzzy lining through to the outside with each stitch.

In the picture below, the top mitten was stitched from the outside and the bottom mitten was stitched from the inside. I know it’s subtle, but the white fluff balls at the base of each blanket stitch are more visible in person.

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Share Pictures of your Handmade Mittens

I would love to see what you make, so tag your pictures on Instagram with #LovelyEnoughMittens. Can’t wait to see the mittens you create! Stay warm and cozy.

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Flitting Quilt Pattern

To celebrate my new quilting fabric collection, Coastal Orchards for Benartex, I designed a free quilt pattern! It is called Flitting.

Flitting Quilt comprised of modern Hourglass Blocks in Coastal Orchards fabrics | by Kelsey Williams of Lovely and Enough

Inspiration

Flitting was inspired by the swooping of butterflies as they flutter through orchards and gardens. When photographing a butterfly in flight, it is almost impossible to get a crisp shot that showcases the butterfly’s wings. Instead each snapshot captures the butterfly at a different angle with their wings at different levels of extension. This quilt represents that beautiful but erratic flight.

 

Difficulty Level: Beginner

This quilt pattern is definitely beginner-friendly but offers a finished product that looks more difficult than it is.

Confession: The hardest part for me was remembering which of my light-colored fabrics corresponded to which fabric in the pattern. That’s why in the pattern I suggest creating a cheat sheet for yourself!

 

Block Highlight: Hourglass Block

This quilt introduces the hourglass block (also sometimes referred to as the quarter-square triangle), and it is one of my favorite blocks. I love how easy it is to make four hourglass blocks at once, and I enjoy playing with how much white fills each block. Check out my Hourglass Block Tutorial to see pictures and read tips.

 

I’m working on my sample for the quilt, so check back next week to see a finished Flitting Quilt or

follow along on Instagram at #LovELyFlittingQuilt

DIY Professional Quilt Labels

If you've been wanting to make professional quilt labels from the comfort of your home, this is for you. In a matter of an hour, you will have color-fast printed labels to stitch onto backings or into bindings! My favorite part about this version is that I don't have to rely on my hand-writing; I can design my labels with real fonts, which lends a crisp and professional look to the labels.

Supplies:

  • freezer paper

  • fabric

  • computer + inkjet printer with black ink

  • rotary cutter + cutting board

Step One: Design and Test Print

Design your labels and test print them on a piece of printer paper. Test printing is a good idea so that you catch mistakes before it is on your fabric! The design must be in black for it to be wash-fast.

You have options here: I like to fold my labels in half and sew them into the binding, so I leave a large portion blank below each label for the back. I also like to print cut lines, so that is is easy to trim the labels to the correct size. You can also print something on this side if you want! Or you can print labels that will remain flat and are stitched onto the backing. The sky is the limit.

Step Two: Cut

Cut freezer paper to 8.5" x 11"

Step Three: Iron

Iron your freezer paper to the back of the fabric you would like to print your labels onto. Give yourself a small margin of fabric around the edge of the paper. You want a warm dry iron (around the wool setting).

Step Four: Trim

Trim the fabric to the edge of the freezer paper. If you iron on the freezer paper before trimming, it minimizes fraying of the fabric which could jam up your printer.

Step Five: Print!

Run your freezer-paper-fabric combo through you inkjet printer just like a normal sheet of paper. Make sure you are printing on the fabric side!

Step Six: Peel and Heat-set

Peel the freezer paper off the back of your fabric and heat-set the black ink for washfastness. Simply press with a hot dry iron for ~30 seconds.

Step Seven: Cut

Cut out your labels!

Step Eight: Fold

(optional)

This step is optional depending on whether you are folding your labels or not, but I press mine in half.

Step Nine: Fray Check

Fray check the edge of your labels to avoid nasty fringes and fraying through the lifetime of the label.

And voila! You have made professional quilt labels from the comfort of your home for a fraction of the cost of ordering them from a company!

NOTE: DO NOT DO THIS WITH A LASER PRINTER.

THE FREEZER PAPER WILL MELT AND RUIN YOUR PRINTER.

DIY Quilt Labels | Make Your Own Professional Labels with Just a Printer and Freezer Paper

Special thanks to my mom who took all the photos for me and has made me my quilt labels the past two years. She is truly amazing.