patterns >
Grace Breyley's Ravelry Store
> Medusa




Medusa
Medusa is the crowning glory for a Halloween costume. It is a hat or wig depending on your point of view. It began as an experiment to see what could be accomplished with a wealth of iCord and certainly turned heads on public transit on the way to a party.
The pattern is sized for an adult woman but with a loose flexible fit to hide a variety of hairstyles. The hat could be scaled down to child size by casting on fewer stitches, adding a stitch marker or two and reducing the number of rows in and above the band.
At least 3 skeins of yarn are needed but it won’t use all of them. I originally used a vintage wool and Cascade 200 Heathers in case it needed felting but it didn’t. This could be a good stash-reducing project for anyone with a green palette. A non-animal fibre in a worsted weight could also be substituted.
88225 projects
stashed
46833 times
- First published: September 2013
- Page created: September 9, 2013
- Last updated: April 4, 2019 …
- visits in the last 24 hours
- visitors right now