A heavy ball cap with heat pressed sticker label and metal back adjuster.

The Rake Hat is worn at a raked angle, slightly on the side of the head, but is also the sort of cap which Tom Rakewell might have worn in Hogarth's etchings had he been born two centuries later.



Named for the See-er, another name for an oracle, or wizard, the pattern is based on a 1940s British army hat made for Sikh soldiers, conical in shape so that a turban could be wound around it.

Named for the See-er, another name for an oracle, or wizard, the pattern is based on a 1940s British army hat made for Sikh soldiers, conical in shape so that a turban could be wound around it.



The Paper Boat Hat is shaped as the simplest possible hat design- a triangle drawn across the top of the head.



The Drawn Knitted hat is constructed as a tube, then pulled together with a drawthread at the top, and hand sewn together, forming a gathered top with only one seam.





The earliest computer systems used punchcards adapted from knitting machines. Pop Punch is a collaborative project with a coder and a sound designer: between the three of us we’ve come up with a programme which converts the tracks of a vinyl LP into knitting patterns.


Purl Edge Sailing Mittens are knitted in a plain stitch, then both ends, at the fingers and wrist, are turned back on themselves showing the reverse 'purl' stitch, giving body to the mittens and making them particularly comfortable.
