inchainz: (i can has yarn?)
inchainz ([personal profile] inchainz) wrote in [community profile] knitting2010-10-24 05:33 pm
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Hat Blocking Question

Hi everyone!

I made this Boyfriend Hat out of a wool-blend yarn (75% acrylic/25% wool, since I'm sensitive to wool) & would appreciate some ideas on how to block it so it gets nice & slouchy.  Right now the decrease section sticks up from the body of the hat like a nipple on a baby bottle.  It needs blocking anyway to even out that section (2x2 rib into 1x1 rib), but I can't get my head around a good shape/form to use.

Sorry if this is too vague, I'm having trouble getting my head around the explanation too.  TIA for your help!

ginny_t: several skeins of sock yarn, text reads "See the hope in small things," a Tom McRae lyric (knitting)

[personal profile] ginny_t 2010-10-25 12:48 am (UTC)(link)
I think some people use a balloon.
pinesandmaples: My hands making the rock symbol.  (knitting: gloves)

[personal profile] pinesandmaples 2010-10-25 01:01 am (UTC)(link)
I am shameless with blocking. I use my own head for hats, my own hands for gloves/mittens, and my own feet for socks.
ginny_t: several skeins of sock yarn, text reads "See the hope in small things," a Tom McRae lyric (knitting)

[personal profile] ginny_t 2010-10-25 12:53 pm (UTC)(link)
But cold! Wet wool smell so close to your nose! You are hard core.
laughingrat: A swirly blue and white background over which is a picture of a red apple and the caption Spinner Apples. (Spinner Apples)

[personal profile] laughingrat 2010-10-25 01:36 pm (UTC)(link)
You haven't washed fleece yet, have you. :-D WET WOOL SMELL GUUUUUUUD
ginny_t: several skeins of sock yarn, text reads "See the hope in small things," a Tom McRae lyric (knitting)

[personal profile] ginny_t 2010-10-25 02:36 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh, nononono! My instructor made processing fleece sound like so much fun that I've been scared off. O_o
pinesandmaples: Your author with a statue of Jefferson Davis. (South: Jefferson Davis)

[personal profile] pinesandmaples 2010-10-26 02:48 am (UTC)(link)
I live in New Orleans. That explains a lot.
ysobel: (Default)

[personal profile] ysobel 2010-10-25 01:19 am (UTC)(link)
I've seen people use plates (for beret type shapes) or inverted bowls, placed so it shapes the main body of the hat but not the edging.
sarah: (worsted)

[personal profile] sarah 2010-10-25 03:54 am (UTC)(link)
Second on the inverted bowls: I generally raid my tupperware to find something suitable.
hugh_mannity: (Default)

[personal profile] hugh_mannity 2010-10-25 02:15 am (UTC)(link)
Acrylic doesn't block. You'll probably not have much success with it.
tephra: Photo portrait of a doll with shaggy, dark orange and copper hair, wearing a pink slouchy hat and sky blue glasses. (Genma Knits)

[personal profile] tephra 2010-10-25 04:57 am (UTC)(link)
Actually acrylic can be blocked. It is, however, a one shot deal for the most part, too much heat and you kill the elasticity.
pinesandmaples: Text only; reads "Not everything will be okay, but some things will." (theme: two)

[personal profile] pinesandmaples 2010-10-25 09:53 am (UTC)(link)
I wouldn't heat-block a hat, especially my first time out. Imagine how heartbreaking it would be to melt one side to the other! (And with my luck--and my awesome iron--that would happen.)

I also refuse to find out what acrylic + my iron will do. My iron is too nice to come close to anything that melts.
tephra: Photo portrait of a doll with shaggy, dark orange and copper hair, wearing a pink slouchy hat and sky blue glasses. (Genma Knits)

[personal profile] tephra 2010-10-25 07:47 pm (UTC)(link)
Put the hat over a bowl (particularly if you only really want to smooth out the crown) and you can't melt the hat to itself. :) If your iron has a good steam jet (one of mine does, one does not) you don't need to get the iron any closer than about 6-8". Though I do recommend practicing on swatches until you get used to how a particular yarn reacts to the steam, some need more heat than others.
aunty_marion: Keeper of the Knitronomicon (Knitronomicon)

[personal profile] aunty_marion 2010-10-29 05:45 pm (UTC)(link)
I use a small football (soccer ball) for hats.