Category: Patterns

Unlock Secrets with a Key to Your Heart

Unlock Secrets with a Key to Your Heart

Crochet key with a heart shaped handle.
Craft your own key to your heart, and give it to someone special!

Have you ever come across an unsuspecting crafting project from your past? This week while I was tidying up my Ravelry page I discovered one of the first patterns that I wrote when I was in high school. At first I thought I would just remove the pattern, but then I decided to revisit the pattern and post it here for you! It is a telling look at a the key to my teenage heart!

A Key to the Past

Screenshot of the original blog post for this pattern, created in 2012.
Flashback to when I originally posted the pattern on my first blog. It feels like a lifetime ago!

A Key to My Heart was originally published in 2011. We are talking over a decade ago! Clearly I knew back then that I wanted to do more with my passion for yarn related mayhem. It has taken a considerable amount of time but finally I am trying again! The inspiration for the pattern came from necklaces that I saw on Etsy that were beautifully crafted to look like a key with a heart shape on the end. Obviously I decided to recreate the look with a crochet version.

Notes Before You Begin

In order to have success making the heart shaped handle of the key you will need to be familiar with the magic ring technique.  If you are unsure as to how to do this, there are many tutorials online that can help you. Here is my favorite tutorial. You can also take a look at my Magnetic Mini Pumpkin pattern, which utilizes the same technique.

Three different keys, from left to right: two color key with pink heart and grey handle; smaller grey key made with fingering weight yarn; all pink key.
Change it up by using different colors and weights of yarn to make the perfect key to your heart.

The Key to My Heart is a pattern where gauge is not important. I like to use a thinner worsted weight yarn, such as Caron Simply Soft, and a size G6 crochet hook. You can enlarge the final product by using a thicker worsted weight yarn and larger hook. A micro version made with fingering weight or even embroidery thread would be adorable too!

Abbreviations and Materials

Here are all of the abbreviations, in US standard crochet terms, that are used in the pattern:

  • ch – chain
  • sc – single crochet
  • dc – double crochet
  • sl – slip stitch

The materials that you will need include:

  • Crochet hook, size G6/4 mm or size desired to obtain finished size
  • 5 yards Light worsted weight yarn like Caron Simply Soft
  • Scissors
  • Tapestry needle

Create Your Key, Customized to Your Heart’s Desire

The heart part is made in the round, and the key part is worked in rows.

Round 1:  Begin with making a magic ring, ch1, do not tighten the ring;

Round 2: Without turning the work, dc 2, sc 3, dc 1, sc 3, dc 2.  At this point, you will tighten the magic ring so that there is no hole in the center of the heart. Sl into the ch 1 space. Fasten off.

Now you have the handle part of the key, a small heart. You will begin the key part next:

Row 1:  Join the working yarn in the dc 1 spot on the bottom of the heart, ch 11, turn

Row 2: Starting in the second ch from the hook, (sl, ch3, sl) into the same space, sl into the next ch space, (sl, ch 3, sl) into the next space,  sl in the remaining 7 ch spaces and secure into the dc where the yarn was joined at the bottom of the heart

Fasten off and weave in all loose ends.

You Hold the Key in Your Hands

The keys to your heart might unlock all your secret wishes.

Congratulations! You now have a cute little heart key that you can use for anything. Try making a small one to wear as a necklace, or use them as a decoration on a hat. They also make for fun decorations around the house, or as play toys.

Leave a comment and let me know how you plan to use your finished product. Check out my other patterns like the cozy Ladybug Mittens.

Magnetic Mini Pumpkins

Magnetic Mini Pumpkins

I tried to resist all the beautiful fall projects popping up on Instagram but I only lasted 10 days before I started making pumpkins. Now, I am not all about the pumpkin spice craze. I like pumpkin donuts (seriously, try them!), but I don’t need shampoo and candles and hand sanitizer and tea all flavored pumpkin spice. So when all the knit and crochet pumpkins started showing up August 1st, which must be an unofficial start to autumnal preparations, I thought they were cute but unnecessary. Then I remembered I had a bunch of little magnets, and I could make my own army of magnetic mini pumpkins.

Three magnetic mini pumpkins, two yellow with brown stems and one orange with green stem, hang suspended from a hook with blue sky and trees in the background.
Magnetic mini pumpkins can hang suspended from anywhere magnetic!

That was the end of my fall crafting holdout. These little pumpkins are basically potato chip crocheting; you can’t stop at one! Plus with magnets it is fun to hide them all over the house in unsuspecting places.

Check out my tutorial below for a step by step guide on how I make my magnetic mini pumpkins. If you want a nice, printer friendly version of the pattern head on over to my Etsy and Ravelry pages to download a copy! If you don’t crochet, you can check my Etsy shop for seasonal listings of already made and ready to ship pumpkins.

Continue reading “Magnetic Mini Pumpkins”
Ladybug Mittens: Bobbles for Everyone!

Ladybug Mittens: Bobbles for Everyone!

My first pattern, Ladybug Mittens, is now out on both Etsy and Ravelry. These mittens are perfect for the lingering cold days of spring. Even though it is April, the snow keeps flying here in the Rocky Mountains.

Ladybug mittens set across an evergreen bush covered in fresh snow.
Ladybug Mittens keep you warm in the snow.

Ladybugs have always been some of my favorite spring time features. They hover through the air and stick on your shirt if they choose to land on you. When I first saw the bobble cast on, I immediately was reminded of spots on a ladybug. Oddly enough I also think the bobbles remind me of scallops, but those aren’t as cute to wear on your hands.

The pattern includes both written and charted instructions. No matter how you like to read your knitting patterns, there is an option for you! The mittens work up really quickly with worsted weight yarn and US size 9 needles. You can make a pair in a weekend and be ready to rock your new mittens to work on Monday!

There are five bobbles on the back on the mittens to make the ladybug spots really stand out. Bobbles are a great way to add texture and depth to a project. They can also be easily omitted if they aren’t your style. Make the mittens your own!

Close up bobble from the back of the mitten.
Bobbles along the cuff and back of the hand make for fun design elements.

Designing this pattern was a lot of fun, and also challenging because I had to slow down and write out what I was doing. I also had to remember to change where the bobbles went to make the right and left mitten different. Even after chanting reminders to myself, I ended up making 2 right hand mittens instead of a matching pair the first time I knit them. At least they are cute and will make for great gifts for my friends!

Be sure to check out the pattern, and let me know what you make! Share your projects on Ravelry and Instagram with the hashtag #ladybugmittens

Link to Etsy listing

Link to Ravelry listing