0 Cart
Added to Cart
    You have items in your cart
    You have 1 item in your cart
    Total

    Blog

    Sizing Ursa & Ursa Minor

     Here at EWE, we spend a lot of time talking about how to knit sweaters that fit. There is nothing worse than spending all that time on a beautiful garment only to finish it and block it and find that what you created doesn't work for your body! In my knitting practice, I usually decide what size to make based on 3 factors:

    1. Any specific fit details provided in the pattern
    2. How the finished garment looks on other folks with similar measurements/proportions to me
    3. Any modifications I need to make for my yarn/gauge

    In this post, I will walk you through these steps for Ursa and Ursa Minor — my own patterns that will be released on Ravelry this Friday, March 29. The photos you see here are from my wonderful test knitters — to whom I am so very grateful! 

    Ursa is a cropped raglan pullover with a wide v-neck in a bulky weight yarn with half-brioche stitch detailing. The sweater is seamless, knit in one piece from the top down, allowing you to try it on as you go. 

    Ursa Minor is the same sweater in size and structure as Ursa, but instead of the half-brioche stitch detailing, it features broken rib and no triangle along the bottom hem.

    Yarn requirements in Ranger Bulky:

    (4, 4, 4) [5, 5, 6] {6, 7, 7}

    Yarn requirements by yardage:

    (450, 500, 550) [600, 675, 750] {825, 900, 950}

    Yarn requirements by meter:

    (415, 460, 505) [550, 620, 690] {755, 825, 870}

    1. Fit details for Ursa and Ursa Minor

    The sweater is designed to be worn with 2-6” of positive ease at the bust and +/- 2" of ease in the bicep. My vision for the design was to pair relatively fitted long sleeves with some subtle flare from positive ease in the body, which is cropped to end at your natural waist. Thus, if you are trying to decide between sizes, I recommend you consider the bicep measurements as well as the bust.

    And yes, if the cropped look isn't for you, the pattern includes notations to help you lengthen the body (and the arms) according to your preference.

    Ursa and Ursa Minor both include instructions for adding optional bust darts for 3 cup sizes: C/D, E/F, and G/H.

    To determine if you should add bust darts, measure your upper bust circumference (your chest at your underarms). If the difference between this measurement and your full bust measurement is less than 2”, you do not need to add bust darts. If it is 2” or greater, determine your cup size as follows: 2–3” difference = C/D, 3–4.5” difference = E/F, 4.5”+ difference = G/H.

    There is enough ease in both sweaters to accommodate a wide range of bust sizes comfortably even without bust darts. However, if you have 2” or more difference between your upper bust and full bust measurements, the front of the sweater will rise up unless you add extra length in the front, which is what the optional horizontal bust darts will do.

    2. Fit examples from test knitters

    Before I decide what size to knit in a given garment, I always want to see how the finished garment looks on other folks with similar measurements/proportions to me. So here is a roundup of some of my fabulous Ursa and Ursa Minor test knitters, with notes about the ease at the bust and bicep in their sweaters and links to their Ravelry project pages for more details.

    Jessamy –  size 34 (Ursa Minor)

     

    Ease at Bust: +1"

    Ease at Bicep: +1.5"

    Body length: 7.5"

    👉 Jessamy's project page on Ravelry
    👉 Follow Jessamy on Instagram

    Yasmeen – size 38 (Ursa)

      

    Ease at Bust: +5.5"

    Ease at Bicep: +2.75"

    Body length: 9"

    👉 Yasmeen's project page on Ravelry
    👉 Follow Yasmeen on Instagram

    Anoush – size 42 + C/D bust darts (Ursa)

      

    Ease at Bust: +8.5"

    Ease at Bicep: +2.25"

    Body length: 8"

    👉 Anoush's project page on Ravelry
    👉 Follow Anoush on Instagram

    Shasha – size 46 (Ursa)

      

    Ease at Bust: +4"

    Ease at Bicep: 0

    Body length: 9"

    👉 Sasha's project page on Ravelry
    👉 Follow Sasha on Instagram

    Kaylee – size 46 (Ursa)

       

    Ease at Bust: +5"

    Ease at Bicep: 0

    Body length: 10"

    👉 Kaylee's project page on Ravelry
    👉 Follow Kaylee on Instagram

    Valerie – size 46 + C/D bust darts (Ursa Minor)

      

    Ease at Bust: +4"

    Ease at Bicep: +1.5"

    Body length: 10"

    👉 Valerie's project page on Ravelry

    Rachael – size 50 + G/H bust darts (Ursa)

      

    Ease at Bust: 0

    Ease at Bicep: 0

    Body length: 9"

    👉 Rachael's project page on Ravelry
    👉 Follow Rachael on Instagram

    Madison – size 54 (Ursa)

      

    Ease at Bust: +5"

    Ease at Bicep: +3"

    Body length: 8"

    👉 Madison's project page on Ravelry
    👉 Follow Madison on Instagram

    Jacqui – size 54 + E/F bust darts (Ursa)

      

    Ease at Bust: +5"

    Ease at Bicep: -1"

    Body length: 8"

    👉 Jacqui's project page on Ravelry
    👉 Follow Jacqui on Instagram

    Whitney – size 58 + G/H bust darts (Ursa)

      

    Ease at Bust: +3"

    Ease at Bicep: +2.75"

    Body length: 9.5"

    👉 Whitney's project page on Ravelry
    👉 Follow Whitney on Instagram

    Pam – size 62 + G/H bust darts (Ursa)

      

    Ease at Bust: +3"

    Ease at Bicep: +1.5"

    Body length: 10"

    👉 Pam's project page on Ravelry
    👉 Follow Pam on Instagram

    3. Modifications for yarn/gauge

    Ursa and Ursa Minor were designed for Ranger Merino Bulky, a super squishy 90% Merino/10% Rambouillet wool with a loose ply and some drape. If you substitute a stiffer bulky weight yarn with less drape (like Quince & Co. Puffin) and you are between sizes, you might consider sizing down. Conversely, if you substitute a lighter bulky weight yarn (like Brooklyn Tweed Quarry) and you are between sizes, you might consider sizing up. 

    Of course, all these decisions depend on you first having a gauge swatch — yes, I implore you, do a gauge swatch before you finalize your size choice! 😏 

    Finally, about row gauge: there are notes in the pattern to help you modify your sweater if your stitch gauge is right but your row gauge is slightly off. 

    The Bulky weight wools we carry are:

    Ramona Cardigan Hack

    The Ramon Cardigan by Elizabeth Smith has long been one of my favorite knitting patterns. Most of the staff here at EWE have knit it (several times), and it is my go-to for teaching first-time sweater knitters. I was looking for an easy pullover to use in a class and decided it would be fun to knit the Ramona as a cropped pullover — which is my favorite sweater style this season!

     

    To knit the Ramona as a pullover, you will ultimately want to add 2 inches worth of stitches to the front of the sweater. If you are knitting at the pattern gauge this is 7 or 8 stitches, or equivalent to the width of the button band when knitting it as a cardigan.

    Follow the instructions in the pattern until you have finished rows 1 and 2 in Raglan & Neck Shaping Part 3 (you can find the pattern here). After these 2 rows cast-on your extra front stitches (7 or 8) and join to work in the round, doing increases on every other round (instead of every right side row).

      

     

    When knitting stockinette stitch in the round, you will knit every round, which is different from knitting flat, where you knit on the right side and purl on the wrong side.

    The other important change is knitting the broken rib detailing on the shoulders, side seams, and hem. For the armhole shaping you will need to alternate knitting and purling every other row between the raglan markers (the same goes for the side seam of the body). On the hem, the broken rib is knit this way:

    Round 1: k1, p1 repeat to end of round

    Round 2: knit all stitches

    Rpeat these 2 rounds until the hem is the desired length.

    You can do the shaping on the sweater the same way as for the cardigan, although I eliminated the shaping on my version since I knit it a bit more cropped than the pattern. The body on my sweater is 9". 

    I did not make any changes to the sleeves, and I simply picked up and knit the neckband in the round instead of flat.

    Good luck with your cropped Ramona pullover hack! We'd love to see what you make, so if you post pictures, tag the shop @ewefibers and #ewemakers so we can see.

    My sweater is knit in Quince & Co. Osprey in Honey. If you want to order yarn for your own cropped Ramona, call the shop at 434-409-9095 or email us at info@ewefibers.com. If you email us, please include the color/quantity and your billing/shipping address.