FALL is here! Free Crochet Pumpkins

Thank you so much for your support! I hope you enjoy these free patterns. If you would like an ad FREE printable PDF at an affordable cost, please visit my shops! Your support helps me to be able to continue bringing you more designs to share!

Fall has hands down, always, been my favorite season. Then when you add in the love for making all things cozy and it instantly doubles! Fall always feels like a slower season to me. The cooler weather ushers in that relaxing feeling in the air and school time is beginning, that means all the fun of getting new shoes, school clothes, books and pencils.

There is something that about the happy nostalgia that comes along with Fall. All the gorgeous colors the trees begin to make with the cool but warm winds in my area that rustles the leaves. All of these things together bring a warm and relaxing calm to my mind, and THEN all the fun food things begin!

Personally, I love pumpkin flavored everything and over the years that selection has completely

grown. It started with my love for Pumpkin Spice Lattes which tends to be my the main thing I get from the coffee shop as I haven't quite found a great home version. That pumpkin love quickly found the donuts that Entenmann's makes, and now it ranges to all sorts of snacks that my fam finds and it is so much fun to try all the new ones out there and see if it gets the seal of approval.

Pumpkins are my favorite change that comes with Fall. If I could I'd have a cute little pumpkin patch growing in my yard. I love to buy a bunch in the beginning of Fall and have them add to a comfy and pretty decor, then we enjoy digging out all the seeds and roasting them to be a healthy and yummy snack!

This year with quarantine I felt that the need to decorate inside is more important then ever. It's hard to notice time changing when we aren't outside or doing the normal weather activities. Decorating has already started the smiles. I had my kiddos help add the stems and decide where they go around the house and it was a fun way to get us all on board and share the Fall excitement. A goal with these was also to make them super beginner friendly. Knit and Crochet versions are both on my blog for free. Find the post for either craft or get both if you like!

It's fun to mix and match both if you knit and crochet. The crochet version has more sturdiness to it, is a bit more dense, with the same clean, modern lines as the knit. The knit version is a bit lighter and springier when stuffed. I really loved the simplistic texture of these both too, it has a lovely modern and farmhouse feel when added to the decor.

There are so many fun and adorable Pumpkin varieties out there! Both free and paid patterns. A fun idea would be to make these free ones, and mix and match with other textures and looks for a great display.

For a printable AD free PDF, please visit: My Etsy and Ravelry Shops!

Fall Crochet Pumpkins

By Whistle & Wool

www.whistleandwool.com

www.whistleandwool.etsy.com

Ravelry-Whistle and Wool

Join me on Instagram and tag your projects to @whistleandwool, #fallcrochetpumpkin

CROCHET PATTERN

Sizes: S, L


A bit of History behind the name: Fall (Autumn)

Before the 16th century, harvest was the term usually used to refer to the Fall/Autumn season. However, as more people gradually moved from working the land to living in towns, the word harvest lost its reference to the time of year and came to refer only to the actual activity of reaping, and autumn, as well as fall, began to replace it as a reference to the season. The alternative word fall for the season traces its origins to old Germanic languages. However, these words all have the meaning "to fall from a height" and are clearly derived either from a common root or from each other. The term came to denote the season in 16th-century England, a contraction of Middle English expressions like "fall of the leaf" and "fall of the year".


For more history behind the name visit : www.wikipedia.com

Description: A cute and very easy pumpkin for modern, farmhouse decor.

  • NOTES: Worked flat, seamed at the end.

Getting a close and accurate swatch will get you to the exact measurements given for the pattern.

***This Pattern is a copyright of Whistle and Wool©. You may not copy, alter, adjust, share, record, redistribute or resell my pattern. No tutorials or any kind of demonstrations may be made using any information contained in my pattern. I do not mind if you wish to sell a completed HANDMADE item and you are a small independently owned business. However, you do not have permission to use ANY of my photos. If you do sell a completed item, please list credit of the design belonging to me, Whistle and Wool and a link to my shop. www.WhistleandWool.etsy.com

Skill: Beginner; Using Basic Stitches

Pattern Size: S, (L)

What you need:

Lion Brand: Wool Ease Thick and Quick- “Moonlight” for L and “Wheat” for S featured

  • #6 Super Bulky, 107 yards per Skein

All sizes : 1/4 Skein

Hook: Clover Amour, L (8.0 mm)

Stuffing: 1-3 handfuls per pumpkin (or something similar to stuff the pumpkin)

1: Large-eyed blunt Needle for yarn (Seaming & Weaving in your ends)

1 Stem: 3.5-4” per pumpkin: Realeather Craft Lace 1:8 x 4 yards, in ”Toffee”

(Optional) Hot glue or another type of glue to secure the stem

(Optional) use a stick for the stem.

Gauge: 9sts x 11 rows= 4 inch square of sc

*Start with the suggested hook size:

  • If your swatch per 4 inches is larger, then you need to swatch again using a smaller hook.

  • If your swatch per 4 inches is smaller, then you need to swatch again using a larger hook.

Finished measurements: in inches

S: 4W x 2.25H, (L: 6.5W x 3.25)

Before seaming -laid flat L = 7.5 (10)”, W = 4.5 (6)”

Stitches to Know: Standard American Terms

sc- Single crochet

scBLO- Single Crochet into the back loop only

Sl St- Slip Stitch

*When cutting your working yarn, pull the yarn through the last stitch to secure it. Leave a long enough tail so you can sew in your ends easily.

PATTERN


Chain (loosely) 11 (15) starting in the 2nd chain from hook, continue to Row 1

Row 1: sc the row - 10 (14) sts- stitch count remains the same throughout the pattern

Row 2-20 (28): ch1, turn, scBLO the row

  1. Turn as if to start a new row

  2. Fold your rectangle in half lengthwise, bringing the starting chain Row to be behind your current row.

Seam Row: ch1,*Insert your hook into the back loop only of the row closest to you, then into a loop of the starting chain directly parallel, Sl St together

  1. Continue repeating after the *, until you have Sl St’d up the seam. It will look like a tube when done.

  2. Cut yarn leaving a 14” long tail, pull through the last stitch to secure.

Bottom of the pumpkin: Wrong side and Sl St seam still facing you

  1. Thread your needle with the end, weave it in and out along the bottom of your tube.

  2. Pull your yarn tight, cinching it up.Secure it with a knot. Cut yarn.

  3. Turn it right side out.

  4. Fill it with stuffing to a 75% capacity. 1-3 handfuls, depending on the size you’re making. It will be full but not overly stuffed. It needs to be compressible in the middle.

Top of the pumpkin:

  1. Now using a piece of yarn 14” long, weave along the top of the pumpkin.

  2. Cinch up the top, leaving a tiny space to insert your stem later in (approx. ⅛ of an inch opening) knot the ends together. Optional, leave a larger opening if using a stick, match width. Do not cut the yarn.

  3. Thread one tail with your needle, insert it down into the center of the pumpkin, out the other end. Repeat with the other one.

  4. Pull the yarns tight compressing the middle. Knot the ends together securing them.

  5. Trim and hide all ends inside the pumpkin with your needle.


Leather Stem (or use a stick)

  • Cut a 3 ½ (4) inch piece of leather, fold it in half and place it in the center of the pumpkin.You can use glue to secure it.


Voila, you’re done!

About Me:

I was taught to knit as a little girl and it was something I instantly loved and found so calming.

On a cold and rainy English day, my Gran taught me something that would forever remind me of her.

A feeling that would ring in my head just about every time I pick up my needles. For just a moment, I am back in England with my Gran, enjoying the inside. A beautiful grey moody sky going on around me.

Contact

Instagram @whistleandwool

www.whistleandwool.etsy.com

Ravelry- Whistle and Wool

Email: whistleandwool@gmail.com

Previous
Previous

Cobblestone Sweater - Knit Pattern

Next
Next

FALL is here! Free Knit Pumpkins