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Chunky snood
Wrap up warm with a chunky snood this winter. Photograph: Claire Scully
Wrap up warm with a chunky snood this winter. Photograph: Claire Scully

How to make a chunky snood

This article is more than 13 years old
Celebrate Wool Week - and prepare for the wintry weather ahead - by knitting your own snood from chunky alpaca yarn

Days are getting shorter, the new season of your favourite TV show has just started, and Christmas is looming: it's time to pick up your knitting needles. Learning to knit (or refreshing your skills after a craft-free summer) gives you the perfect opportunity to get creative, use your hands for something other than updating your Facebook status, and produce great gifts for your friends and family.

And what better place to start than with this luxurious chunky snood? Also known as a cowl, a snood is a cross between a scarf and a hood (geddit?). It is the perfect accessory for a cold, blustery day when the wind whips your scarf off your neck faster than you can keep rewrapping it.

Skills

Cast on
Knit
Purl
Slip, slip, knit (ssk)
Knit two together (k2tog)
Cast off
Mattress stitch

Finished measurements

68cm circumference at cast-on edge
58cm circumference at cast-off edge
28cm from cast-on edge to cast-off edge

What you need

Yarn: 2 x 100g Blue Sky Alpaca Bulky in Wolf (1007)
Needles: 12mm

Difficulty

*

Tension

8 sts and 12 rows = 10cm/4in square in stocking stitch

What to do

Cast on 56 sts
Row 1: K
Row 2: P
Repeat rows 1-2 five more times
Row 13: K1, ssk, k to last 3 sts, k2tog, k1 - 54 sts
Row 14: P
Row 15: K1, ssk, k to last 3 sts, k2tog, k1 - 52 sts
Row 16: P
Row 17: K1, ssk, k to last 3 sts, k2tog, k1 - 50 sts
Row 18: P
Row 19: K1, ssk, k to last 3 sts, k2tog, k1 - 48 sts
Row 20: P
Row 21: K1, ssk, k to last 3 sts, k2tog, k1 - 46 sts
Row 22: P
Row 23: K
Row 24: P
Repeat rows 23-4 three more times
Cast off all sts
Sew up seam using mattress stitch

Suggestions for adaptation

Plain stocking stitch is perfect for showing off this lovely chunky yarn but for a more dramatic effect, try moss stitch (moss stitch uses up more yarn so you'll need to buy an extra ball).

Or make the cowl double the length so that it can be wrapped around your neck twice for extra warmth: cast on 140 stitches (standard straight needles won't be long enough to accommodate this many stitches so you'll have to invest in a 12mm circular needle and just use it as you would a pair of straights) and knit in stocking stitch for 30 rows. You won't need to bother with the decreases because the cowl doesn't need to fit snugly against your neck when it's doubled over.

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