ADVERTISEMENT

Join the Knitting Bracket Challenge to Score a Cozy Pattern!

Help us choose the winning pattern and snag it free for a limited time.

Farm & Fiber Knits Editors Nov 3, 2025 - 6 min read

Join the Knitting Bracket Challenge to Score a Cozy Pattern! Primary Image

Help choose the 2025 favorite fall accessory—and get it free for a limited time! Photos by Gale Zucker

Autumn is here, which means it’s time to dig out your favorite cool-weather accessories—think cozy hats and cowls, toasty socks, and warm mittens. To jump start your fall and/or holiday knitting, we’d like to offer our readers a free pattern for one full week this November. But first, we need your help in crowning the Farm & Fiber Knits 2025 Favorite Fall Accessory.

This will be played similar to how the brackets work for the annual NCAA college basketball tournament known as March Madness. In this “tournament” of favorite fall projects, eight patterns will compete for the 2025 Favorite Fall Accessory. Then, the winning pattern will be made available free to our audience for a one-week period starting November 17, 2025.

Help us crown the winner by visiting your favorite Farm & Fiber Knits pattern listed below and clicking on one of the reactions under “What do you think?” on the library pattern page.

Click any of the reactions to submit your vote.

Here are a few more details (no purchase necessary, and anyone, anywhere can add their vote!):

Vote now for your favorite project in the first round.

And the contenders are:

Mountain Sorrel Cowl, by Tamy Gore
This cowl is knitted on the bias with a structured selvedge edge, then seamed to create a cowl that’s easy to wear and style. A garter-stitch base with slip-stitch panels and dropped stitches creates a light and cozy combination that is perfect for autumn or any time of the year.

Twisted-Stitch Cowl, by Meg Swansen
The three main motifs of these textured cowls are all taken from Twisted-Stitch Knitting by Maria Erlbacher, an Austrian knitter who wrote a series of booklets on the technique. The motifs are separated by a “filler” that may be expanded or reduced as desired.

Woodcutter Socks, by Rachel Coopey
Inspired by the hero of the Little Red Riding Hood fairy tale and reminiscent of tall, strong trees, these classic socks are knit with a luscious, naturally dyed organic Merino yarn.

Farmer’s Favorite Socks, by Debbie O’Neill
These comfy socks have a touch of colorwork and surprise cables running up the backs of the heels. Knit up in soft, lofty DK-weight wool, they fly off your needles—making them a good fit even for the sock-averse knitter.

Rustic Colorwork Cap, by Jen Geigley
In the countryside, on campus, or on the slopes, this beanie is a quick knit in worsted-weight yarn with clever crown shaping and a band of graphic colorwork. Plus, it would make a great teach-your-friend-to-knit colorwork project.

Montadale Beanie, by Benjamin Krudwig
The Montadale yarn in this hat is known for its soft, springy nature. Create the texture of the Montadale Beanie as you work in the round using simple combinations of knit and purl.

Mosaic Mitts, by Sandi Rosner
Using only one color at a time, you can create complex geometric colorwork with only slipped stitches and knit stitches. Knitting these mitts from side to side allows you to keep the palms and thumbs plain and simple, while showing off your mosaic patterning on the back of the hand

Columbia Mittens, by Star Athena
Wrapping the cable pattern around the heel of each hand is a quirky design element that makes these mittens interchangeable. When you press your hands together, as though holding a book open, the full motif appears.

Follow us on Instagram @FarmFiberKnits for updates to see if your picks have made it to the second round and then vote again! The winner will be crowned on Monday, November 17th so act fast!

Have fun playing along! And we hope this collection will inspire you to cast on a favorite accessory or two this fall.

ARTICLES FOR YOU