{"title":"How to Knit Fingerless Gloves: Beginner Pattern in 7 Steps","canonicalUrl":"https://www.craftingstepbystep.com/knitting/how-to-knit-fingerless-gloves","category":{"slug":"knitting","name":"Knitting"},"creator":{"name":"Sheep & Stitch","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCXK_Yw8hCF-9oeccQP9Gs2g","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=44pwS8yzRH0"},"tldr":"Knit fingerless gloves with DPNs in 7 steps. Cast on, ribbed cuff, thumb gusset, bind off - a small project that levels up your knitting in the round.","totalDurationSeconds":2803,"difficulty":"medium","tools":["3.25mm double-pointed needles (set of 5)","3.75mm double-pointed needles (set of 5)","tape measure","stitch markers","tapestry needle","scissors"],"materials":["1 hank sport-weight yarn (~50-100g, like Malabrigo Arroyo)","scrap yarn for holding thumb stitches"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Step 1: Cast On with the Smaller Needles","text":"Pick your size first - measure around your fingers just below the knuckles, keep your hand relaxed, and match the number to the finished sizes in the pattern. Davina's hand measures 6.1 inches, which slots into size small. Round down if you are between sizes - the fabric stretches.With your smaller 3.25mm DPNs, long tail cast on 44 stitches for small, 48 for medium, or 52 for large. Then slide the stitches evenly across three needles - about 14, 15, 15 for the small. Join in the round by knitting the first stitch on the left needle with the working yarn from the right, pulling that join snug to close the gap."},{"number":2,"title":"Step 2: Work the Ribbed Cuff","text":"Now work 2x2 rib - knit two, purl two, repeat - for two inches on the smaller needles. The smaller gauge keeps the ribbing tight and stretchy, which is exactly what you want at the wrist so the mitt actually stays on.The rule for ribbing in the round is knit the knits and purl the purls. Two V-shaped stitches in a row mean knit two. Two bumpy stitches mean purl two. Keep going round after round until the cuff measures two inches from the cast on edge."},{"number":3,"title":"Step 3: Work the Setup Round with Larger Needles","text":"Switch to your larger 3.75mm DPNs by knitting your next round directly onto them. You are transferring stitches as you knit, not swapping needles all at once. The bigger needles loosen up the fabric for the body of the mitten.Setup round: knit 20 stitches (or 22 for medium, 24 for large), place a stitch marker, knit 4, place a second marker, then knit to the end of the round. The two markers bracket the four stitches that will grow into your thumb gusset. After the setup round, work two more plain rounds (three for size large) without any shaping."},{"number":4,"title":"Step 4: Increase for the Thumb Gusset","text":"This is where the tube becomes a mitten. Knit to the first marker, slip it to the right needle, then M1L (make one left) by picking up the running thread between the stitches from front to back and knitting into the back loop. Knit the four stitches between the markers, slip the second marker, then M1R (make one right) by picking up the running thread from back to front and knitting into the front loop.The pattern alternates increase rounds with two plain rounds, repeating the increase rounds 2-3 times depending on your size. Each pass adds two stitches to that thumb panel. Davina charts the rounds with little squares so she can tick them off as she goes. Steal the system - it is much easier than trying to remember which round you are on."},{"number":5,"title":"Step 5: Divide for the Thumb","text":"Knit to the first marker, then remove it. The 16 stitches between the markers (18 for size large) come off the needle and onto a strand of scrap yarn - thread a tapestry needle, run it through each stitch, and pull the yarn through. These stitches are held alive for the thumb later, so make the scrap yarn long enough that they cannot slide off.Remove the second marker. The gap left by the held stitches is bridged with a single stitch worked in the backward loop cast on - twist a loop of working yarn over your finger and slide it onto the right needle. Now rejoin and knit to the end of the round. You should see the start of a recognizable mitten shape."},{"number":6,"title":"Step 6: Knit the Body, Decrease, and Bind Off","text":"Knit straight in stockinette for 8 rounds (10 rounds for size large) above the thumb opening. This is the body of the mitten - the part that covers your knuckles. Count rounds by following one column of stitches up from the divide.Work one decrease round - k2tog, then knit to the end - to drop a single stitch. Switch back to your smaller needles and work 7 rounds of 2x2 rib to mirror the cuff. To bind off loosely enough for fingers to flex through, switch the right needle back to the larger 3.75mm and bind off in pattern - knit the knits, purl the purls, lifting each previous stitch over."},{"number":7,"title":"Step 7: Knit the Thumb and Finish","text":"Slide the held thumb stitches off the scrap yarn and back onto your larger DPNs. Distribute them across three needles, then pick up two extra stitches across the gap where you did the backward loop cast on - this closes any holes. Join the working yarn and knit a few rounds of stockinette, then bind off loosely.Cut a 6-inch tail, thread it through the tapestry needle, and weave in along the purl bumps on the inside. Snip close to the fabric so nothing pokes through. Cast on for the second mitten and do it all again - the second one always goes faster."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-21T13:56:14.167Z","published":"2026-05-20T14:35:19.526Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}