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Friday
14Nov2008

Whit's Knits: Baby Mocs

These super easy baby booties are such a breeze to knit that a set of three would be a perfect gift. I would love if people used this pattern as a starting point to make booties unique to their own inspirations. Change the colors and duplicate stitch designs to make a set of Christmas booties, Jungle booties, Flower Garden booties, Art Deco booties, Pirate booties - the list is endless! Whether you stick with our Native American inspired moccasins or come up with your own theme, it would be really fun to see the fruits of your labors - please share your links!

Materials

Blue Sky Alpaca's 100% Sportweight Alpaca. (One skein would be enough for at least two pairs of solid color booties, but if you want to encorporate contrast colors, you can use scrap yarn or buy several skeins and have enough yarn for a lot of booties!)

These colors (from the top) are:

  • Natural White 500
  • Natural Light Tan 504
  • Natural Copper 502
  • Scarlet 518 and
  • Capri 539

Tools:


The Pattern

Gauge

6 stitches = 1 inch in stockinette stitch with larger needle

Finished Size

3 1/2 inches from heel to toe (to fit infant)

Cuff

With US #2 double pointed needles and the Contrast Color (CC), loosely cast on 30 stitches.

Join for working in the round, being careful to not twist the stitches.

Round 1: *K1, p1, repeat from * to end of round.

Repeat Round 1 four more times.

Changing to US #4 double pointed needles and the Main Color (MC), knit 7 rounds.

Instep

Round 1: K20, bind off 9. (21 stitches)

Round 2: Bind off 1 and place a removable marker (or scrap of yarn) on that stitch, bind off 8 more, k11. (12 stitches)

Put the remaining 12 stitches onto one needle and working just those stitches back and forth...

Work 9 rows in stockinette stitch (ie purl 1 row, knit 1 row), starting and ending with a purl row.

Row 10: K1, ssk, knit to the last 3 stitches, k2tog, k1. (10 stitches)

Row 11: Purl

Rows 12 and 13: Repeat Rows 10 and 11. (8 stitches)

Row 14: Repeat Row 10. (6 stitches)

Bind off (in purl) the remaining 6 stitches.

Sole

With the US #4 needles and the CC and starting with the marked stitch at center of the heel, pick up the 9 bound off stitches of the side of the heel...

...pick up 9 stitches along the instep...

...pick up 5 of the bound off stitches across the end of the toe, 9 stitches along the other side of the instep, and the 9 bound off stitches of the other side of the heel. (41 stitches)

If you haven't already, distribute the stitches evenly on three needles. You can also remove the marker or scrap yarn and just allow the tail to remind you of where the end of the round is.

Purl 1 round.

Knit 1 round.

Purl 1 round.

Next Round: K3, place a marker, k2tog, k11, ssk, place a marker, k5, place a marker, k2tog, k11, ssk, place a marker, k3. (37 stitches)

Purl 1 round.

Next Round: K3, slip marker, k2tog, knit to 2 stitches before next marker, ssk, slip marker, k5, slip marker, k2tog, knit to 2 stitches before next marker, ssk, slip marker, k3. (4 stitches decreased)

Repeat the last two rounds 2 more times. (25 stitches)

Purl 1 round, removing the markers.

Next Round: K3, k2tog, k3, ssk, k1, slip 1, k2tog, pass the slipped stitch over, k1, k2tog, k3, ssk, k3. (19 stitches)

Next Round: Purl to the last stitch, purl the last stitch together with the first stitch of the round. (18 stitches)

Slip the next 9 stitches onto one needle and the last 9 stitches onto another needle.

Use the Kitchener Stitch to graft the bottom of the sole together. (Or if you're more comfortable with a three needle bind off [the end of the 70's Ski Hat pattern shows the steps for a three needle bind off], you can turn the booties inside out and use that.) I used the Kitchener Stitch...

Weave in the ends and you're finished with the basic bootie!

Embellishing

Use the Duplicate Stitch or basic embroidery to decorate the booties.

I used the Duplicate Stitch on the toes...

...and sometimes on the cuff too.

Here's what this bootie ended up looking like:

Make the other bootie to match.

They're so fun and fast to make, that I made a couple of other pairs. Copy these, be inspired by them, or totally make up your own patterns!

Make a whole set!

Reader Comments (26)

These are adorable! My daughter was just asking me about socks for her daughter... but she is 9mo old and her feet measure 4.5 inches. I've no idea about changing knitted projects to make them larger - how would I go about doing this? I'd love to make these for her w/ little flowers on the toes.
Thanks for the project!
November 15, 2008 | Unregistered Commenterrobin
I love these. I've been looking for booties for a baby boy and these will be great! Thanks for sharing your lovely work.
November 15, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterRomy
So awesome! Can't wait to try to make them. Thank you so much for your generous tutorial. They will be going to a premie who is 3 weeks old today! (hopefully they will be done by the time he is ten!)
Amy in Sebastopol
November 15, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterAmy
How adorable!! I was just looking for some easy-but-cute booties for my unborn niece. Thanks for the tutorial.
November 15, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterAbril
I really like these...I was looking for a gift for my nephew who is about 4 months old. These would work and look like they work up pretty quickly. Thanks!
November 16, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterJoan
Thank you so much for your generous tutorial. They will make wonderful gifts.
November 16, 2008 | Unregistered Commenterginger
These are some of the cutest booties I've ever seen!
November 17, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterShelly
I LOVE 'EM!! Absolutely have to make some for my new niece (now at 9 months, but tiny). We are Native American descendants, and these are just perfect for Christmas! Thank you so much for sharing them and your tutorial (I'm just learning to knit)!!
I LOVE these - any chance you'll post it with larger sizes? My 19 month old daughter would look so cute in these...
November 20, 2008 | Unregistered Commenterkarmamama
I made my first bootie today! It looks so cute and really didn't take too much time....considering that I just taught myself how to use DPN last weekend! Can't wait to make a ton! Thanks for the fantastic tut!
November 24, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterLauren
Your tutorial is wonderful. It has inspired me to knit some booties and I do not even know of a baby to receive them yet. Maybe they will go into my granny hope chest. Thank you for sharing your talents with your friends!
November 25, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterLue - knitrlue
Is there any reason that the instep sts couldn't just be put on waste yarn instead of binding off and picking up?

The booties are very cute and look to be easy to do. Thanks for sharing!
November 25, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterLizzieK8
Hi Lizzie,

Yes! You can definitely put the heel stitches on scrap yarn or holders instead of binding off. (I didn't do it that way because I thought picking up the stitches would give the bootie more of a moccasin feeling by creating a structured seam where the bottom meets the top.)

I think you should try your idea, which has the beautiful advantage of being easier, and see if you like it. I'd love to hear about it!

Thanks for sharing your ideas and good luck!

Whitney
November 25, 2008 | Unregistered Commenterpurlbee
Thank you so much for the pattern and the instructions. Two friends of mine are going to have a baby in a few weeks, so I will make booties for them. Almost everyday I look your page. Always I find something wonderfull!!!
November 27, 2008 | Unregistered Commentersofia
What lovely socks and brilliant instructions. My niece has just had a very prem baby (ten weeks early) and this pattern is great for keeping tiny feet warm. (will just use finer yarn). Thanks
Scrapy-p
November 29, 2008 | Unregistered Commenterscrapy-p
Thanks for the instructions! I just made my first pair. The first one took me a little while, but the second was a breeze to make. I love them. My friends will be very happy with the booties.. :-)
February 9, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterAdrian Hidalgo
I love this pattern and appreciate the detailed instructions and pictures but I really stuck! I can't figure out which 9 stiches to pick up along the insteps since I have 14, from the 14 rows(not counting the last heel round). Did you pickup the last 9 all the way to the toe, leaving the ones for the arch not picked up. Thanks for any help-I 'm not experienced enough to see/understand in advance how the sole construction works..
March 15, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterDiane O'
Hi Diane O' -

To pick up 9 stitches along the 14 rows of the instep you have to skip a row every now and then. Just try to keep the skipped rows as evenly spaced as you can (pick up 2, skip a row, pick up 2, skip a row, etc).

Picking up stitches is often an imprecise science, causing lots of knitting woes. Luckily, it's a pretty forgiving process and usually turns out great in the end!

Good luck and please let us know if you have any other questions!

Whitney
March 16, 2009 | Unregistered Commenterpurlbee
I can't thank you enough for the quick response...I will continue on. We have a new grandson arriving any day now!
March 16, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterDiane O'
I love them!
March 21, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterRetro Elephant
I finished them and my daughter in law was thrilled. They are so cute. My older grandson (the big brother) now wants some moccasins too. He is almost 5. Any suggestions for sizing this pattern or is there another one out there for young children?
Thanks again for such a great pattern. I'll be making another pair for my niece, due in September!
April 7, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterDiane O'
question for anyone who tried these; do they really stay on the baby? my GF is knitting booties for soldiers who just had babies, and she tried multiple patterns on a nephew that simply kicked them off with natural baby kicking motions. If these stay on, I would be thrilled to give her the pattern.
April 8, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterDiana Stafford
I just made these and they were really super easy to make! it was my first DPN project and I felt like the pattern held my hand the whole way. The hard part for me was doing the embroidery! Now my husband wants a pair but I don't know how to scale up a pattern!
August 26, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterJess
Oh, these are so cute! I wanted to make them for my baby boy (not born yet) but unfortunately did not have the right yarn at hand ... so I had to make some regular socks from another pattern. But still love the shoes! I put a link to your pattern iinto my blog
http://muffinsnmore.blogspot.com/2009/09/babysocks-done.html

Thanks for sharing such a cute pattern!
September 28, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterMiss Muffin
I made a pair of these and love them! i have been trying to experiment with felting these, but they just get a little too tiny, and my efforts in altering the pattern aren't quite working out. Could you by any chance give some alternate sizing options? the felted version looks so sweet! Albeit tiny and sweet.
September 28, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterAairyn
I would also love to know how to size these up!
November 2, 2009 | Unregistered Commenterrobin

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