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Every knitter has that one stitch they come back to again and again. It’s the one that feels like home the moment its on your needles. For some people, its garter, or ribbing, or good old stockinette. For me? It has always, always been seed stitch.

Its the texture I reach for without thinking; the thing my hands seem to know before my brain catches up. Ive designed a lot of seed stitch patterns over the years—cowls, sweaters, accessories— and whenever people ask me why I love it so much, I usually laugh and say ‘I don’t know!’ But the truth is, I think I do know.

Seed stitch is simple, but its not boring. The texture is delicious. Its rhythmic without being sleepy. And it just…works. With every yarn. Every gauge. Every color. Seed stitch is totally that song-on-repeat in your life. Familiar, comforting, and somehow always exactly the vibe you need.

I realized this way back when I designed the Gaptastic Cowl. The texture was so dimensional, so satisfying. So good that fifteen years later, people are still knitting that cowl. That blows my mind in the best way. (I’ll be hosting a KAL in December to celebrate its 15th anniversary!)

And honestly, seed stitch has followed me through my making life ever since. Whenever Im designing something new, I try other stitches. I really do. I experiment. I swatch. And then nine times out of ten, I find myself saying, ’What if I tried seed stitch, just to see?’ And then I see, and thats that.

My newest design, the Strange Brew Vest, is one of those seed stitch moments that just clicked. I knit it in my all-time favorite shade of chartreuse—that bright, fresh, mood-lifting color that somehow works with everything. If yarn could glow from within, this is what it would look like.

The thing I love most about wearing a seed stitch piece is that it looks so easy. You throw it on and suddenly your outfit has depth. It looks stylish in that quiet way that never tries too hard. With the Strange Brew Vest, I immediately started planning outfits in my head: over a white tee, layered with denim, under a jacket, with wide-leg pants. It’s one of those pieces you want to style five different ways before it even gets out of the blocking water.

But heres the thing: seed stitch isnt just for garments. It works its charm in accessories, items for the home, and basic everyday pieces.

Here are a few of my favorite patterns that celebrate this humble, perfect texture:

Seed Stitch Scarf by Camellia Fiber Co.

A long, cozy, endlessly wearable classic. Simple and low-stress in the best way, it’s perfect for settling in with your favorite show or audiobook.

Slipped Seed Stitch Hand Towel by Purl Soho

Seed stitch for the home, elevated with neat slipped stitches. Its meditative, useful, and honestly kind of fancy for a hand towel. The best kind of kitchen flex.

Raw Honey Mitts by Alicia Plummer

Fingerless mitts that use seed stitch to create a cozy mitt that hugs your hands. Quick, sweet, perfect for gifting.

The Wedding Necktie by Susan B. Anderson

Seed stitch as formalwear. I adore this. Its charming and unexpected, and the texture makes it feel extra special.

Blue Bayou by Isabel Kraemer

An allover seed stitch dream with total cozy-sweatshirt energy. Its one of those everyday sweaters that feels like home the moment you put it on.

Mabel Cardigan (by me, again)

Soft, minimal, and quietly stylish, and knit in MDK Atlas! It’s the perfect “live-in-it” cardigan. Easy to knit, even easier to wear.

Seed stitch is my forever stitch. Maybe itll become yours too.

P.S. If youre itching to cast on something seed-stitchy right now, my new Strange Brew Vest is 10% off on Ravelry with the code JEN10.

About The Author

Jen Geigley is many things: knitter, author, knitwear pattern designer, graphic designer, and knitting instructor. There is a modern sensibility and a ton of love in everything she makes.

You can see Jen’s work in many publications, and most exquisitely in the six pattern collections she created herself, from start to finish: WeekendEveryday, Visions, Visions Kids, Luna, and Chroma. Originally trained in the arts, Jen creates her own patterns, illustrations, schematics, and graphic design for these collections. She also designs for Quail Studio and for Rowan Yarns.

Jen’s designs for MDK Atlas yarn are stunning examples of her sense for graphic design and color combinations. You can find them here.

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20 Comments

  • My go-to is double moss stitch, for the same reasons. Easy and works with everything. Stockinette and garter are too much of the same thing for me.

  • Appalachian Baby Yarn has gorgeous baby blankets put seed stitch and variations on it that are a joy to knit.

  • I hear you! I’ve always loved it and sort of put it on a pedestal, for fear of having everything look alike that comes off of my needles. It has to be very deliberate, special, perfect yarn, perfect pattern. Love the movement, the flow, oh dear sweet seed stitch.

  • Jen, thank you for the suggestions-I love them all!

  • I also love seed stitch! Your Gaptastic Cowl is one of my favorite patterns to knit for a gift. I have made so many over the years.

  • I must learn to embrace seed stitch, moss stitch, flat knitting, frankly, anything that involves the “p” word (purling), anything that slows me down. I rationalize my avoidance because the majority of my projects are gift knits, but I am painfully aware that I am becoming a project knitter rather than a process knitter. In watching Jen’s YouTube videos, it seems she has discovered the secret of marrying the two – how did you manage to re-knit Alicia Plummer’s Finest Thing in 10 days!?!? In this vein I will be joining the Gaptastic KAL – yarn has been ordered (in chartreuse since it is my favorite, also), I’ve got the needles, most holiday knitting will be complete or almost. So, bring it on, Gaptastic. See you December 1st!

  • You are so right, Jen! Back in the dawn of the new knitting age (around 2004) when big box stores like A.C. Moore (RIP) starting selling even semi-luxury yarns at a 40% discount I scooped up some cashmere mix yarn in a worsted weight and made a seed stitch scarf. The pillowy depth and richness of that thing I have not been able to equal. And thank goodness I still have it, because those 40% days are gone. For me seed stitch requires concentration because you can easily go off track, so mostly accessories or trim for me. Your vest – between garment and accessory – is very tempting. I have some Atlas on hand. And as another side to seed stitch. If you use a variegated yarn, it can produce a pleasingly blurred, Impressionistic effect. Maybe swatch first. (Even though I didn’t.)

  • I love the look of it but struggle with how to weave in ends so they don’t show. Any tips on that?

    • If there’s no edging or seam to hide the end in, I do this weird thing where I weave it behind a purl bump on the RS then a purl bump on the WS, etc. Works pretty well, and even if I weave it all in on the WS, I think it looks pretty good.

  • I’m with you ! And I love how different lofts, twists and yarns can make things pop or be more linen-y and silky.

    • Yes! In some fibers seed stitch (which as a Rowanette, I still call moss stitch) has such a lush drape.

  • Oh my gosh! I made a seed stitch tie for my first hubby about a hundred years ago. (Or maybe it just seems like it) It is a beautiful stitch even though I’m slow at it because of all the purling. I plan to make another Reunion cardigan by Brienne Moody (a wonderful pattern) and instead of the garter stitch front, I’m going to do it in seed stitch.

  • Absolutely – here is the eye opener!
    next time gotta think “seed” instead of “garter”.

  • Oh, Jen- yes! Love seed stitch. Thanks for the pattern insp0! I am loving the new photos of you in your Strange Brew Vest. I’m trying to have one completed before NashYarnFest!

  • I love the seed stitch too! Thank you for the pattern suggestions, I love the Mabel Cardigan

  • I made a Gap-tastic Cowl for my daughter last week and she loved it! It was chunky yarn and quick to knit! It’s the type of project I always want to have on my needles!

  • Have been knitting g for 65 years and I still love the seed stitch. Perfect texture for spa/face cloths, etc. Will definitely knit one of these patterns!

  • My grandmother’s favorite stitch was seed stitch. I have pillows and shawls that remind me of her everyday. When I am stitching anything and it requires seed stitch, I feel like I am channeling my grandmother… a great feeling!!

  • I’m with you – I do love moss, seed, double moss and their kin.

  • I love seed stitch. I have a book of seed stitch patterns. It’s called Seed Stitch: Beyond knit 1, purl 1 by Rosemary Drysdale. This book has good patterns and pictures to decide which pattern you might want to try. There are also lots of projects. I highly recommend this book if you are looking for more seed stitch patterns and projects.

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