DROPS Big Merino
DROPS Big Merino
100% Wool
from 3.50 £ /50g
Get the yarn to make this pattern from 21.00£.

The yarn cost is calculated from the pattern’s smallest size and the yarn’s cheapest product type. Looking for an even better price? You might find it on the DROPS Deals!

DROPS SS24
DROPS 146-16
DROPS design: Pattern no mb-002
Yarn group C
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Size: S/M - L - XL /XXL – XXXL
Chest measurements: 82/88 - 96 - 106/118 - 126 cm
Materials: DROPS BIG MERINO from Garnstudio
300-300-350-350 g, colour no 09, lavender

DROPS CIRCULAR NEEDLE (80 cm) SIZE 5 mm - or size needed to get 17 sts x 22 rows in stocking st = 10 x 10 cm.

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Alternative Yarn – See how to change yarns here
Yarn Groups A to F – Use the same pattern and change the yarn here
Yarn usage using an alternative yarn – Use our yarn converter here

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DROPS Big Merino
DROPS Big Merino
100% Wool
from 3.50 £ /50g
Get the yarn to make this pattern from 21.00£.

The yarn cost is calculated from the pattern’s smallest size and the yarn’s cheapest product type. Looking for an even better price? You might find it on the DROPS Deals!

Pattern instructions

NOTE: This pattern is written in British English. All measurements in charts are in cm. For conversion from cm to inches - click here. There are different terms for crocheting in British and American English. If this pattern includes crochet, click for "crochet terms" here. For this pattern in American English, please click here.
GARTER ST (back and forth on needle):
K all rows. 1 ridge = 2 rows K.

PATTERN:
See diagram A.1, diagram shows all rows pattern seen from RS.
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BOLERO:
Worked back and forth on circular needle to make room for all the sts.
Cast on 107-117-127-137 sts on circular needle size 5 mm with Big Merino. Work in garter st until piece measures 7 cm. Then work as follows from RS: 3 sts in GARTER ST - see explanation above, A.1A (= 6 sts), A.1 B over the next 90-100-110-120 sts, finish with A.1 C (= 5 sts) and 3 sts in GARTER ST. Continue A.1 with 3 sts in garter st in each side. REMEMBER THE KNITTING TENSION! When piece measures 11-11-12-13 cm, cast on 10 new sts at the end of the next 2 rows for sleeve = 127-137-147-157 sts. Work as follows: 3 sts in garter st, A.1A (= 6 sts), A.1 B over the next 110-120-130-140 sts, finish with A.1 C (= 5 sts) and 3 sts in GARTER ST. NOTE! Continue A.1 so that A.1 fits before inc for sleeve. When piece measures 45-50-55-59 cm, cast off 10 sts at beg of the next 2 rows = 107-117-127-137 sts. Work as follows: 3 sts in garter st, A.1A (= 6 sts), A.1 B over the next 90-100-110-120 sts, finish with A.1 C (= 5 sts) and 3 sts in garter st. When piece measures 49-54-60-65 cm, work in garter st over all sts. Cast off when piece measures 56-61-67-72 cm.

ASSEMBLY:
Sew side and underarm seams in one inside 1 edge st - see dotted line on chart.

Diagram

symbols = K from RS, P from WS
symbols = K 2 tog
symbols = slip 1 st as if to K, K 1, psso
symbols = 1 YO between 2 sts
symbols = slip 1 st as if to K, K 2 tog, psso
symbols = how to use the garment
diagram
diagram
Do you have a question? See a list of frequently asked questions (FAQ)

Knitting tension is what determines the final measurements of your work, and is usually measured per 10 x 10 cm. It is provided like so: number of stitches in width x number of rows in height - eg: 19 stitches x 26 rows = 10 x 10 cm.

The knitting tension is very individual; some people knit/crochet loosely while others work tightly. You adjust the knitting tension with the needle size, which is why the suggested needle size is only meant as a guide! You need to adjust this (up or down) to ensure that YOUR knitting tension matches the knitting tension provided in the pattern. If you work with a different knitting tension than provided you will have a different yarn consumption, and your work will have different measurements than what the pattern suggests.

The knitting tension also determines which yarns can replace each other. As long as you achieve the same knitting tension you can replace one yarn with another.

See DROPS lesson: How to measure your tension/gauge

See DROPS video: How to make a gauge tension swatch

The required amount of yarn is provided in grams, eg: 450 g. To calculate how many balls you’ll need you first need to know how many grams are in 1 ball (25g, 50g or 100g). This information is available if you click on the individual yarn quality on our pages. Divide the amount required with the amount of each ball. For example, if each ball is 50g (the most common amount), the calculation will be as follows: 450 / 50 = 9 balls.

The important thing when changing from one yarn to another is that the knitting/crochet tension remains the same. This is so that the measurements of the finished piece will be the same as on the sketch provided. It is easier to achieve the same knitting tension using yarns from the same yarn group. It is also possible to work with multiple strands of a thinner yarn to achieve the knitting tension of a thicker one. Please try our yarn converter. We recommend you to always work a test swatch.

Please NOTE: when changing yarn the garment might have a different look and feel to the garment in the photo, due to individual properties and qualities of each yarn.

See DROPS lesson: Can I use a different yarn than the one mentioned in the pattern?

All our yarns are categorised into yarn groups (from A to F) according to thickness and knitting tension – group A contains the thinnest yarns and group F the thickest. This makes it easier for you to find alternative yarns to our patterns, should you wish to switch yarn. All yarns within the same group have a similar knitting tension and can easily replace each other. However, different yarn qualities have different structures and properties which will give the finished work a unique look and feel.

Click here for an overview of the yarns in each yarn group

At the top of all our patterns you’ll find a link to our yarn calculator, which is a helpful tool should you wish to use a different yarn than suggested. By filling in the yarn quality you wish to replace, the amount (in your size) and number of strands, the calculator will present good alternative yarns with the same knitting tension. Additionally it will tell you how much you’ll require in the new qualities and whether you’ll need to work with multiple strands. Most skeins are 50g (some are 25g or 100g).

If the pattern is worked with multiple colours, every colour will have to be calculated separately. Similarly, if the pattern is worked with several strands of different yarns (for example 1 strand Alpaca and 1 strand Kid-Silk) you will have to find alternatives for each, individually.

Click here to see our yarn calculator

Since different yarns have different qualities and textures we have chosen to keep the original yarn in our patterns. However, you can easily find options among our available qualities by using our yarn calculator, or simply pick a yarn from the same yarn group.

It is possible that some retailers still have discontinued yarns in stock, or that someone has a few skeins at home that they would like to find patterns for.

The yarn calculator will provide both alternative yarn as well as required amount in the new quality.

If you think it's hard to decide what size to make, it can be a good idea to measure a garment you own already and like the size of. Then you can pick the size by comparing those measures with the ones available in the pattern's size chart.

You'll find the size chart at the bottom of the pattern.

See DROPS lesson: How to read size chart

The needle size provided in the pattern serves only as a guide, the important thing is to follow the knitting tension. And since knitting tension is very individual, you will have to adjust the needle size to ensure that YOUR tension is the same as in the pattern – maybe you’ll have to adjust 1, or even 2 needle sizes, up or down to achieve the correct tension. For this, we recommend that you work test swatches.

Should you work with a different knitting tension than the one provided, the measurements of the finished garment might deviate from the measurement sketch.

See DROPS lesson: How to measure your tension/gauge

See DROPS video: How to make a tension/gauge swatch

Working a garment top-down provides more flexibility and room for personal adjustment. For example it is easier to try the garment on while working, as well as making adjustments to length of yoke and shoulder caps.

The instructions are carefully explaining every step, in the correct order. Diagrams are adjusted to the knitting direction and are worked as usual.

The diagram depicts all rows/rounds, and every stitch seen from the right side. It is read from bottom to top, from right to left. 1 square = 1 stitch.

When working back and forth, every other row is worked from the right side and every other row is worked from the wrong side. When working from the wrong side, the diagram will have to be worked reversed: from left to right, knit stitches are purled, purl stitches are knit etc.

When working in the round every round is worked from the right side and the diagram are worked from right to left on all rounds.

See DROPS lesson: How to read knitting diagrams

The diagram depicts all rows/rounds, and every stitch seen from the right side. It is worked from bottom to top, from right to left.

When working back and forth every other row is worked from the right side: from right to left and every other row is worked from the wrong side: from left to right.

When working in the round, every row in the diagram are worked from the right side, from right to left.

When working a circular diagram you start in the middle and work your way outwards, counter clockwise, row by row.

The rows usually start with a given number of chain stitches (equivalent to the height of the following stitch), this will either be depicted in the diagram or explained in the pattern.

See DROPS lesson: How to read crochet diagrams

Instructions for working several diagrams after each other on the same row/round, will often be written like so: “work A.1, A.2, A.3 a total of 0-0-2-3-4 times". This means you work A.1 once, then A.2 is worked once, and A.3 is repeated (in width) the number of times provided for your size – in this case like so: S = 0 times, M = 0 times, L=2 times, XL= 3 times and XXL = 4 times.

The diagrams are worked as usual: begin with the first row in A.1, then work the first row in A.2 etc.

See DROPS lesson: How to read knitting diagrams

See DROPS lesson: How to read crochet diagrams

The total width of the garment (from wrist-to-wrist) will be larger in the larger sizes, despite the actual sleeves being shorter. The larger sizes have longer sleeve caps and wider shoulders, so there will be a good fit in all sizes.

The measurement sketch/schematic drawing provides information regarding the full length of the garment. If it’s a jumper or a jacket the length is measured from the highest point on the shoulder closest to the neckline, and straight down to the bottom of the garment. It is NOT measured from the tip of shoulder. Similarly, the length of yoke is measured from the highest point on the shoulder and down to where yoke is split into body and sleeves.

On a jacket measures are never taken along bands, unless specifically stated. Always measure inside band stitches when measuring the length.

See DROPS lesson: How to read a schematic drawing

Diagrams are often repeated on the round or in height. 1 repeat is the diagram the way it appears in the pattern. If it says to work 5 repeats of A.1 in the round, then you work A.1 a total of 5 times after/next to each other in the round. If it says to work 2 repeats of A.1 vertically/in height you work the entire diagram once, then begin again at the start and work the entire diagram one more time.

Chain stitches are slightly narrower than other stitches and to avoid working the cast-on edge too tight, we simply chain more stitches to begin with. The stitch count will be adjusted on the following row to fit the pattern and measurement sketch.

The rib edge is more elastic and will contract slightly compared to, for example, stocking stitch. By increasing before the rib edge, you avoid a visible difference in width between the rib edge and the rest of the body.

It’s very easy to cast off too tightly, and by making yarn overs while casting off (and simultaneously casting these off) you avoid a too tight cast off edge.

See DROPS video: How to bind off with yarn overs (yo)

To achieve an even increase (or decrease) you can increase on, for example: every 3rd and 4th row alternately, like so: work 2 rows and increase on the 3rd row, work 3 rows and increase on the 4th. Repeat this until the increase is complete.

See DROPS lesson: Increase or decrease 1 st on every 3rd and 4th row alternately

Should you prefer to work in the round instead of back and forth, you may of course adjust the pattern. You’ll need to add steeks mid-front (usually 5 stitches), and follow the instructions. When you would normally turn and work from the wrong side, simply work across the steek and continue in the round. At the end you’ll cut the piece open, pick up stitches to work bands, and cover the cut edges.

See DROPS video: How to knit steeks and cut open

Should you prefer to work back and forth instead of in the round, you may of course adjust the pattern so you work the pieces separately and then assemble them at the end. Divide the stitches for the body in 2, add 1 edge stitch in each side (for sewing) and work the front and back pieces separately.

See DROPS lesson: Can I adapt a pattern for circular needles into straight needles?

Pattern repeats can vary slightly in the different sizes, in order to get the correct proportions. If you’re not working the exact same size as the garment in the photo, yours might deviate slightly. This has been carefully developed and adjusted so that the complete impression of the garment is the same in all sizes.

Make sure to follow instructions and diagrams for your size!

If you have found a pattern you like which is available in women’s size it’s not very difficult to convert it to men’s size. The biggest difference will be the length of sleeves and body. Start working on the women size that you think would fit across the chest. The additional length will be worked right before you cast off for the armhole/sleeve cap. If the pattern is worked top-down you can add the length right after the armhole or before the first decrease on sleeve.

Regarding additional yarn amount, this will depend on how much length you add, but it is better with a skein too many than too few.

All yarns will have excess fibres (from production) that might come off as lint or shedding. Brushed yarns (ie hairier yarns) have more of these loose, excess fibres, causing more shedding.

Shedding also depends on what is worn under or over the garment, and whether this pulls at the yarn fibres. It’s therefore not possible to guarantee that there will be no shedding

Below are some tips on how to get the best result when working with hairier yarns:

1. When the garment is finished (before you wash it) shake it vigorously so the looser hairs come off. NOTE: do NOT use a lint roller, brush or any method that pulls at the yarn.

2. Place the garment in a plastic bag and put it in your freezer - the temperature will cause the fibres to become less attached to each other, and excess fibres will come off easier.

3. Leave in the freezer for a few hours before taking it out and shaking it again.

4. Wash the garment according to the instructions on the yarn label.

Pilling is a natural process that happens to even the most exclusive of fibers. It's a natural sign of wear and tear that is hard to avoid, and that is most visible in high friction areas of your garment like a sweater's arms and cuffs.

You can make your garment look as new by removing the pilling, using a fabric comb or a pill/lint remover.

Still can't find the answer you need? Then scroll down and leave your question so one of our experts can try to help you. This will be done normally within 5 to 10 working days.
In the meantime, you can read the questions and answers that others have left to this pattern or join the DROPS Workshop on Facebook to get help from fellow knitters/crocheters!

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Comments / Questions (114)

country flag Ava Goei-Vujovich wrote:

First row in A: K3, K2 tog, YO = 6sts. then B: YO, slip 1 as if to K, K1, psso, K5, K2 tog, YO, K1 = 12 sts (repeat B), and work C: YO, slip 1 as if to K, K1, psso, K3 = 5sts. B should only be multiples of 10, not 12.

07.03.2019 - 11:35

DROPS Design answered:

Dear Mrs Goei-Vujovich, when working B you decrease 1 stitch 2 times (slip 1, K1, psso + K2 tog) and increase with 2 YOs = number of sts is the same = 10 sts. See previous answer for whole repeats on the row. Happy knititng!

07.03.2019 - 12:19

country flag Ava Goei-Vujovich wrote:

I believe your reply at 9:43 is incorrect. I have just tried in in a total of 21 stitches for a A,B,C section. It makes the entire section of section B : 12 stitches for a standard repeat when it should be 10! Standard repeat of 10 stitches and section C is 5.

07.03.2019 - 11:27

DROPS Design answered:

Dear Mrs Goei-Vujovich, B is a 10 sts repeat: *YO, slip 1 as if to K, K1, psso, K5, K2 tog, YO, K1*, repeat from *-*. And you will work: 3 sts in garter st, A.1A (= 6 sts), repeat A.1B a total of 9-10-11-12 times (= over the 90-100-110-112 next sts), work A.1C (= 5 sts) and finish with 3 sts in garter st. Happy knitting!

07.03.2019 - 12:18

country flag Ava Goei-Vujovich wrote:

In section B, row 1, I start off with a *1 YO, sl1, K1, psso, k5, k2tog, 2 YO*, and then repeat from* to * for the next 90-100-etc stitches, until the last 5 stitches of that row?

07.03.2019 - 06:16

DROPS Design answered:

Hi Ava, You are right, apart from at the end of the sequence it is 1 YO, K1, 1 YO, not 2 YOs. This sequence is repeated until the last 8 stitches, finishing with A.1 C (5 stitches) and 3 stitches in garter stitch. Happy knitting!

07.03.2019 - 08:06

country flag Ava Goei-Vujovich wrote:

Agree not a well worded pattern & diagram explanations. In section A, I K2tog (4 & 5th stitch together), then immediately following: do I do 2 times YO followed by a sl1, K1, psso?

07.03.2019 - 06:07

DROPS Design answered:

Dear Mrs Goei-Vujovich, on first row in A.1, work A.1A as follows: K3, K2 tog, YO - then work B: YO, slip 1 as if to K, K1, psso, K5, K2 tog, YO, K1 (repeat B), and work C: YO, slip 1 as if to K, K1, psso, K3. On row 15, work the last 2 sts in A tog with the next st in B, then work the last 2 sts in B with next st in next B / in C. Happy knitting!

07.03.2019 - 09:43

country flag Marcia Ebert wrote:

I have started knitting this pattern and realize that there are directions for knitting the RS but not for wrong side. Is this done in stockinette stitch except for pattern stitches? Garter stitch is the border stitches but what do you do on the wrong side in the middle. It looks like every other row of the pattern stitch on the diagram is plain so is it purl on the wrong side. Is this correct?

21.01.2019 - 04:51

DROPS Design answered:

Hi Marcia, All the rows in the diagram show the stitches from the right side, so between the lace pattern you work stocking stitch (knit from the right side and purl from the wrong side). Happy knitting!

21.01.2019 - 07:01

country flag Marcia Ebert wrote:

The pattern calls for knitting A then B then C That would be following the pattern right to left. Is this correct? It would be much easier to follow it left to right. I find this confusing. It is a pretty sweater.

15.01.2019 - 04:08

DROPS Design answered:

Dear Mrs Ebert, diagrams are worked top down, from RS read from the right towards the left and from WS from the left towards the right. Work A, then repeat B and finish row with C. On row 15, work the last 2 sts in A/B together with the first st B/next B/C. Happy knitting!

15.01.2019 - 09:39

Carla wrote:

Drops 146-16. I’ve never read a pattern like this before and I’m very lost is there a tutorial showing what to do after doing the garter st for 7cm??

12.11.2018 - 00:51

DROPS Design answered:

Dear Carla, you can find the videos, related to this pattern at the left of the page, below the pictures. Also there are detailed explanation of the symbos of the pattern chart. If you need further help you can also ask for it in person in the store where you bought your DROPS yarn from. Happy Crafting!

12.11.2018 - 01:50

country flag Kitty Neijssel wrote:

Voor dit patroon zou voor maat XXXL 350 gram nodig zijn. Ik heb dus 7 bolletjes besteld. Al na 1 bolletje zag ik dat die hoeveelheid lang niet genoeg zou zijn. Na 4 bollen ben ik nog niet op de helft. Volgens mijn berekening heb ik nog 2 bollen nodig. Ik ben zeker geen beginnende breister ( ex-lerares Textiele Werkvormen en gedegen hobby-breister). Alles klopt volgens de stekenproef e.d. Ik ben een enthousiaste fan van Drops en tot nog toe heb ik nog nooit een probleem gehad met de patronen.

26.03.2018 - 13:20

country flag Anna wrote:

Da quale lato va letto il diagramma A1? La linea tratteggiata è la manica?

20.11.2017 - 07:53

DROPS Design answered:

Buongiorno Anna. Il diagramma si legge dal basso verso l’alto e da destra verso sinistra (lavorando avanti e indietro, i ferri pari si leggono da sinistra verso destra). Nel grafico con le misure, le linee tratteggiate sono le parti che verranno cucite: dovrà cucire sotto le maniche e i lati del davanti e dietro. Buon lavoro!

20.11.2017 - 11:04

country flag Natasja wrote:

Hi. Im about to cast on for the sleeves, and i dont understand the 10 st. Is it 10 st in each side or 5 st in each side, and how ?

07.08.2017 - 12:24

DROPS Design answered:

Hi Natasja, You cast on 10 new stitches at the end of the next 2 rows, so 10 stitches at the end of the first row and then 10 new stitches at the end of the next row. So 20 stitches all in all. I hope this helps. Happy knitting!

07.08.2017 - 15:53