I’ve always been a big reader. Even as a kid – in fact, I have a memory of being at nursery, about four years old, and being asked to read out loud while me and another kid were waiting for our parents to pick us up. The wee guy was quite upset and, given that I was a shy child, this felt like a big responsibility.

I clearly remember reading The Very Hungry Caterpillar, both on my own and with a parent. The mingled bright colours, the counting, the tactile holes in the pages, and the delicious foods (I, too, loved watermelon) combined to make it a winner in our house.

So naturally, when the first of my friends to have children told me they were expecting, I wanted to knit the caterpillar who’d given me so much enjoyment.

I have absolutely no idea where I got the hat pattern from, and I know for a fact I didn’t use a pattern for the body. I just bought a load of green yarn, in different weights, and knitted them up until I thought that strip was wide enough.

Did I use decreases to shape the body? I don’t know. I think I might have just pulled on the yarn to over-tighten the last row. That light khaki at the bottom seems shaped – but the top green stripe is as rectangular as can be. It’s a mystery.

Fortunately, the recipient was such a gorgeous child that the knitting couldn’t fail to look amazing.

I can get a little more insight by looking at the side of the body – maybe I sewed the shape in on either side? I certainly seamed it, because I didn’t learn to knit in the round until years later.

I do have a note from my Ravelry project that the eyes on the hat are i-cord, wrapped into a circle. I also recall much debate about the fact that caterpillars don’t have noses, but the one in the book does so on one went.

I look back on early projects like this with a mix of admiration that I achieved them at all, and amazement that I knew so little, including fundamental things like yarn weight. It’s only been in the last year or so that I’ve learned to do a mattress stitch so to an extent I’ve been freestyling it for ten years.

At the end of the day, though, none of that matters when faced with a joyful wee pal like this.


8 responses to “The Very Hungry Caterpillar”

  1. tierneycreates: a fusion of textiles and smiles Avatar

    Oh my goodness – that is absolutely adorable! What a sweet snuggly thing for a baby!

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    1. CA Avatar

      😊 It turned out super cute – and she has always been a very photogenic human! So it was a match made in heaven.

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  2. kiki Avatar
    kiki

    I’m fairly certain that’s the cutest little caterpillar I ever did see. Baby and suit are incredibly cute.
    I read your posts and can relate to so much. This may be slightly tangential, but did you find that you were freer and more willing to just ‘make something work’ when you knew less about knitting? I don’t know why, but I made more and fussed less when I knew less, I just made it work. It probably wasn’t beautiful to more experienced knitters, but I was proud to say I made it.

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    1. CA Avatar

      Oh thank you so much!
      I love a tangent. I think it’s a mix – there’s a freedom in ignorance, but a freedom in competence too. Being confident to an intermediate level means I’m much more likely to make adjustments to a pattern because I know what will happen if I do.
      I was certainly more delighted with my creations when I was starting out, though, because making anything at all seemed like a miracle! Where now I feel I can do better. But by nature I’m a ‘make it work’ person so I’m still OK with figuring it a workaround if I don’t quite understand the instructions, but I’m much less forgiving if it doesn’t LOOK right in the end.
      The carefree glee of doing things for the first time with no expectations is replaced adequately with the glee of doing things really well and being able to do more complex things, I think. It’s a different feeling but I still love it.

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      1. kiki Avatar
        kiki

        Thanks for joining me on the tangent train. That all makes perfect sense and I believe explains how I feel sometimes too. Now, a kind of perfectionist wave washes over me and I HAVE TO frog that incorrect line and make it right (depending on how far in I am) or – as you say – find a workaround. I’m certainly very hard on myself if it’s not going to plan, and that leads to projects that sit in the WIP basket for a time-out to think about how they’ve hurt my brain 🤣. I still enjoy the whole process, but ignorance certainly was a different form of bliss.

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  3. nanacathy2 Avatar

    That book is delightful. Your hungry caterpillar is super sweet. Respect that you created this.

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    1. CA Avatar

      It’s a lovely book isn’t it? Thanks so much!

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  4. Twiddle Muff for Fidgety Hands – The Crafty Yarnster Avatar

    […] variegated purple is similarly easy to pick out accent colours from (it was left over from making Very Hungry Caterpillar antennae). I even like the gentle undulation caused by the different yarn […]

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