I often find myself with random balls of yarn that I want to use up in a useful way, without too much waste, and I have come across a good way of doing so – the stash-buster beanie!

I have previously used Daisy Farm Crafts design for an easy crochet beanie and noted that it used exactly 100g of chunky yarn to make an adult sized hat using a 7mm hook. A bit of maths suggested that I could make smaller hats with less yarn, and use the weight of yarn I had available to dictate the number of chains to start with.
| Weight of yarn (g) | Starting chain | No. of SC | No. of HDC | Total no. of stitches |
| 100 | 41 | 10 | 30 | 40 |
| 80 | 33 | 8 | 24 | 32 |
| 70 | 29 | 7 | 21 | 28 |
The hats are made as a rectangle and the starting edge is joined to the last row. This means that you can just keep going until you have (nearly) run out of yarn – which feels pretty efficient to me.
I haven’t made any hats with less than 70g of yarn yet, but I think the same principle would apply. What I have done is used various mixtures of yarns to make up the equivalent of chunky weight, e.g. 2 x dk, or 1x aran with 1x 4ply, and both of these worked well.
The hats are topped off with a 7cm bobble, which uses about 14g of yarn. This can either be made before the rest of the beanie, so your calculations are based on the weight of yarn that you have left, or you could use a commercial bobble, or choose some contrasting scrap yarn to use for the bobble – all of these work!
If anyone in the UK is looking for a really worthwhile place to send crocheted or knitted items to, then I can recommend ‘Knit for Peace‘ – a long-established charity which donates knitting to people in need.



















