Handmade Gifts: Christmas 2024

I absolutely love making handmade gifts for special occasions, so I thought I’d put together a little round up of all of the homemade presents I made during the festive period. In this post, you’ll find all the details for each of these projects, including the patterns and materials that I used (for the knitted/crocheted projects)!

Table of Contents

Funfetti Socks

Craft: Knitting

Pattern: I didn’t use a strict pattern for these, but you can find all of my notes on the sock-making process on their Ravelry project page. In essence, this is just a cabled design with a shadow wrap heel and a rounded toe!

Yarn: Drops Fabel, in the shade Confetti Cake (924).

This was actually my first time knitting a pair of socks for someone other than myself! Luckily, they were for my mum, who keeps extensive notes on her own knitting projects on her Ravelry page, so I was able to piece together a pattern/stitch count that fit her perfectly, without her suspecting a thing!

I bought this particular yarn a while ago, because I thought it was SO pretty, and I kept it aside to use for this project. I really love how it looks knitted up!

Hosta Pillow

Craft: Crochet

Pattern: Hosta Pillow by Sidsel Sangild

Yarn: Stylecraft Special 4 Ply, in the shade Teal (1062).

Many years ago, I knitted a cabled cushion (this one, to be exact) as a gift. Back then, my knitting tension was not the best (read: I didn’t tension my knitting at allโ€” whole thing), so the cover ended up bigger than the cushion pad and I may or may not have had to fill in the extra space with toy stuffing… Anyway, this time around, I decided to stick to my strengths and make a crocheted cushion cover instead!

I really loved the design of this particular pattern and I have made crochet projects that use similar techniques before, so I decided to give it a go. It took me quite a bit longer to finish than I expected (it’s a little bit of an involved process), but I really like the finished product!

To ensure the cover is washable, I used an acrylic yarn and inserted a zip (by hand, with a good ol’ needle and thread). I used this 40cm, teal zip and, while it’s not an exact colour match, it is a similar shade to the ‘Teal’ Stylecraft shade. Speaking of the yarn… I was not a big fan, which was SO disappointing, because we all know how much I LOVE Special DK. Unfortunately I just found its 4 ply counterpart super splitty and annoying to work with, so I don’t think I’ll be using it again ๐Ÿ™ …

Pig in Blanket Ornament

Craft: Crochet

Pattern: Pig In A Granny Square Blanket by A Good Right Hook

Yarn: Oddments of Stylecraft Special DK.

The first of three ornaments that I made this year (for gifting purposes), this Pig in Blanket pattern came up so often on my Pinterest that I really couldn’t escape how cute it was, or avoid making it. I particularly liked the colours used in the pattern, so I rummaged through my stash of Stylecraft Special DK to find some shades that were as similar as possible!

I was so happy with how this one turned out and it was so quick to whip up (I’ve made a lot of amigurumi in my time, so I’ve had lots of practice with projects like this). I did make a few little changes here and there to this pattern, mainly to adapt it so that I could use DK weight yarn for each element (the original pattern uses DK, 4 ply, 2 ply and thread). Unfortunately, I seem to have mislaid all the notes I took on the process! You can find all the details (that I can remember…) for the adaptations I made on the Ravelry project page I made for this lil’ pig.

Cat Ornament

Craft: Knitting

Pattern: Cat Christmas Ornaments by Amy Gaines

Yarn: Oddments of Stylecraft Special DK.

The second ornament and another pattern that I just happened to see one day and immediately fell in love withโ€” I just think this cat is so cute! I also love how simple it isโ€” like a little cat bean bag! I used DK weight yarn for this project, instead of the worsted the pattern calls for, so mine was a little smaller than it should have been but, honestly, I feel like it’s kind of the perfect bauble size as it is? I did have to shorten the length of the scarf because of this though, to ensure it fit the cat correctly. You can find the Ravelry project page for this ornament here.

Stjรคrna Ornament

Craft: Knitting

Pattern: Stjรคrna by Karolina Eckerdal

Yarn: Drops Merino Extra Fine, in the shade Off White (01).

I’ve actually already written a whole post about making these Stjรคrna Ornaments, as part of my Blogmas At Home 2024 series! I had to include it here too though, because one of the four ornaments I knitted was for a present. If you want to read more about my experience making this, you can go directly to that post here!

Grace Blanket

Craft: Crochet

Pattern: Grace Blanket by Anita Gibney

Yarn: Wendy Supreme DK, in the shades Cream (WD02), Duck Egg (WD28), Rose (WD09), Soft Peach (WD52) and Natural (WD17).

Another project that I’ve already written a post on, I made this Grace Blanket way back in the summer, while watching the Olympics. Since then, it’s been hiding out in the airing cupboard, waiting to be wrapped and stashed under the tree, buy it’s finally out in the open now and living its best, blanket-y life! If you’d like to read more about my experience making this blanket, you can find the original post here.

Craft: Baking

Treats included:

Finally, we come to the only edible presents I made this year: my (kind of) cookie boxes. I dream of establishing a tradition where I make a ridiculous amount of cookies, box them up and deliver them to friends and family during Advent (social media and Hallmark films seem to have brainwashed me into obsessing over this particular American custom, and now I can’t get it out of my head…). This wasn’t quite that, but I like to think of it as a little stepping stone into that world.

My ‘cookie boxes’ this year, then, were a mix of cookies and non-cookie-but-still-very-festive treats. My German Mandelhรถrnchen were such a hit last year that I just had to make them again (and they were just as good as I remember!). I also branched out a little bit with another recipe from Anja Dunk’s festive cookbook, ‘Advent’: Vanillekipferl, which are these little, vanilla-almond crescent cookies. I did like these and I’m excited to play around with them a bit more next year, but the Mandelhรถrnchen are still my favourite Christmas cookies at the moment. The final cookie entry was a tiny gingerbread house, made using Mima Sinclair’s Light Gingerbread Dough recipe and some tiny gingerbread house cutters from Sรธstrene Grene (one of my favourite purchases of this festive season).

After that came the non-cookie confectionery, of which there were three types this year: my classic Peppermint Bark and Copycat Christmas Market Nuts (both well-established, festive traditions in my household now), as well as a new addition: Rocky Road Bark. This was a special request from my soon-to-be sister-in-law, which I made using a 50:50 blend of milk and dark chocolate, along with crumbled digestive biscuits, mini marshmallows and raisins.

To package up the cookie boxes, I used these craft paper treat boxes. I lined each box with baking paper, then arrange the cookies inside. Naturally, I ran out of room, so I had to put btoh the barks and the nuts into little treat bags alongside the box, instead. I planned to do this for the peppermint bark anyway, because I didn’t want the peppermint flavour to spread to all of the other treats, so I wasn’t too disappointed. After that, I just closed up the boxes, tied them up with twine and added a little gift tag, to explain all of the treats inside.

Final Thoughts

And that is everything I made to give to my friends and family over the holiday season! It’s not as much as I’ve done in the past (I really love making handmade gifts), but Christmas always seems to sneak up on me, no matter how early I try to start preparing, so I was still pretty impressed with my creative output this year!

I hope you had a lovely Christmas & New Year, and that you’re ready for lots more creative, crafty fun in 2025!

Gemma

xxx

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