Coco’s Sweater: Mock Turtleneck Sweater for Cats

We lost Coco in late November. She was seventeen — a sassy Siamese calico mix we’d adopted off the streets of LA when she was just a kitten. She crossed an ocean with us and spent most of her life here in Finland. She outlived the apartment in California, the second apartment when we first arrived on a completely different continent, and made it all the way to this old house in the countryside where she could watch birds from every window.

But this post isn’t really about losing her. It’s about keeping her warm.


In 2011, we’d just moved from Southern California to Finland. Our first winter. The cats had never experienced cold — real cold, the kind that makes your nose hairs freeze. And Coco, being Coco, was not built for it.

She was a long cat. Tubular. The kind of cat who could stretch across your entire lap and then some, all elegant angles and too much spine for her own good. Regular cat sweaters didn’t fit her. They’d bunch up around her shoulders or leave her lower back exposed, and she’d wriggle out of them in protest within minutes.

So I made her one.

I finished it in the dark, actually, on a long car ride. I went off memory and some rough mental calculations, having checked the fit on the parts I’d finished by holding it up to her earlier that day. No pattern. Just a hook, some Novita yarn, and a very patient cat who tolerated being measured against crochet in progress.

It worked. The ribbed mock turtleneck stretched enough to slip over her head but held its shape once on. The single large armhole meant both front legs could move freely, no individual sleeves to fight with. The shaping in the back accommodated her shoulder blades when she shifted position. The belly shaping (added after the first version, when I realized she’d put on some winter weight) gave room for post-dinner pudge.

She wore that sweater for years. Not constantly (she wasn’t that kind of cat) but on the coldest days. When she’d seek out the warmest spots and still look disgruntled, the pink sweater would come out and she’d settle into it like it was her due.

I wrote up the pattern from memory after we got home from that car ride and posted it to Ravelry for free. That was March 2011. Since then, over 5,800 people have downloaded it, and 123 of them liked it enough to make their own version and post photos. It’s shown up in a few “best cat sweater patterns” lists over the years. Not bad for something I made in the dark.

The original pattern was… let’s say impressionistic. I knew what I’d done, but explaining it to someone else was another matter. “This updated version attempts to explain what I was actually doing,” the new PDF says, which is the kindest way to put it.

Version 2.0 has actual construction diagrams. Orientation notes so you know which way is up. Fitting tips. Two options for the belly shaping — my original asymmetrical version (reconstructed from memory, worked for Coco, no guarantees on geometric elegance) and a cleaner alternative that gets you to the same stitch count with more even increases.

The note in the pattern says: Your cat won’t judge you either way.

This is true. Your cat will judge you for many other things. Sweater math is the least of your concerns.

This was Coco in her sweater, back when it was new. That expression is not displeasure — that’s just her face. She was a cat of strong opinions and she wore all of them openly.

And this was Coco in her last month. Seventeen years old, still long, still opinionated, still seeking out the warmest spots in the house.

She didn’t need the sweater anymore by then. But I still have it — pink and a little felted from washing, shaped to a cat who no longer needs it.


The pattern is free. It always has been, and it stays that way.

If you have a long cat who gets cold, or a tubular cat who doesn’t fit standard sweaters, or just a cat you love enough to crochet for in the dark on a car ride — this one’s for you.

Download the pattern: Coco’s Sweater: Mock Turtleneck Sweater for Cats (PDF)

See it on Ravelry: Pattern page with project gallery

Make one. Send me photos. Tell me about your long cats.

Coco would approve. Probably. She had opinions about everything, but handmade knitwear was never one of her complaints.


The pattern was originally published in March 2011 and updated to Version 2.0 in December 2025. All original stitch counts preserved; construction notes, diagrams, and fitting tips added.

Window Stars and the Philosophy of Necessary Light

The first week of November caught me off guard this year, though really it shouldn’t have. You’d think after several Finnish winters I’d have learned by now that the darkness doesn’t arrive so much as it simply refuses to leave once it shows up on a Friday mid-afternoon. We’ve had nothing but overcast skies for days now — that particular shade of grey which makes you wonder if the sun isn’t just a pleasant shared delusion we’ve all agreed to believe in, like Santa Claus or the idea that you’ll eventually get around to organizing that one kitchen drawer.

I started putting up the window stars yesterday.

This is not something I would have understood the point of in my previous life in Southern California, where “holiday decorating” meant my parents would haul out our slightly lopsided artificial tree sometime around December 15th if we were feeling particularly festive. Maybe some lights would go up on the eaves, but that was largely a concession to neighborhood aesthetics — the kind of thing you did because everyone else was doing it and you didn’t want to be the house that looked like it was making some kind of statement about Refusing To Participate. Christmas lights were for decoration, for competition even, but never really for anything resembling actual function.

Here, though. Here it’s different.

The thing about Nordic darkness (and I mean the real kind, the November-through-February kind, not just “oh it gets dark earlier”) is that it fundamentally changes your relationship with light. You stop thinking of illumination as ambient, as something that just sort of exists in the background of your day. Instead, light becomes intentional. Light becomes architecture. You plan for it, you cultivate it, you place it with the same care you might give to arranging furniture or companion planting rotations. (Though to be fair, the vegetable situation up here requires a similar level of strategic planning, given that we’re working with approximately four months of “maybe you can grow things” weather.)

I’d noticed, in those first couple of winters, how all the houses had these glowing stars in their windows. Paper ones, plastic ones, elaborate ones made of thin strips of wood that cast intricate shadows. At first I thought it was charming in that vaguely folkloric way that makes expats get all misty-eyed about “authentic traditions.” And sure, it is traditional — Finns have been doing this for ages. But what I didn’t grasp until I’d lived through enough pitch-black 3 PM afternoons was that these aren’t just pretty decorations. They’re wayfinding.

Picture this: it’s a quarter past four and you’ve been working at your desk (or, let’s be honest, staring at your phone wondering how it’s already dark again) and you need to navigate from one room to another. You could turn on every overhead light in your path like some kind of illumination-obsessed eccentric, wasting electricity and money and completely destroying whatever cozy hygge* situation you’ve managed to cultivate. Or — and here’s where the Finnish pragmatism really shines — you could have gentle glowing landmarks stationed in your windows, providing just enough light to see where you’re going without having to fumble for switches or stub your toe on that chair that’s been in the same place for three years but somehow still catches you by surprise.

I started collecting these stars the way I suspect a lot of people do: by haunting the post-Christmas sales aisles where everything is marked down to nearly nothing because apparently the day after Christmas is when holiday decorations become about as desirable as last week’s newspapers. This is how I’ve acquired a small but respectable collection of paper stars in varying sizes, colors ranging from classic white to a rather assertive red that I’m not entirely sure about but which was too cheap to pass up. There’s one delicate lace-patterned one that I’m particularly fond of, though it’s so lightweight I have to be careful about opening windows near it.

The irony isn’t lost on me that I’ve become the person who puts up Christmas decorations in early November. Growing up, this would have seemed unconscionably premature — the kind of thing that prompted eye-rolling and muttered comments about “rushing the season.” But when your season involves three and a half hours of twilight passing for daylight, you take your festivity where you can get it. Besides, I’ve come to appreciate the Finnish approach to holiday timing, which seems to operate on the principle that if you’re going to haul yourself through several months of darkness, you might as well make it pretty while you’re at it.

So now our little blue and white house glows from within after 4 PM, with stars, candelabras and twinkle lights stationed in strategic windows like tiny lighthouses guiding us from room to room. I’ll add more of those candelabras soon — another fixture I’ve learned to appreciate, those simple brass or wooden structures with their promise of actual flame, though the electric ones work just as well and don’t require the same level of vigilance about not burning the house down. The cat seems uncertain about these new additions to her environment. She spent the last day watching the stars with that particular intensity cats reserve for objects they’re trying to decide whether or not to destroy.

Would I have chosen to put up holiday decorations this early in my California life? Probably not. But then again, I wouldn’t have understood why anyone would need to. When your winters involve temperatures dropping to a brisk 60°F and maybe having to wear a light jacket in the evenings, the whole concept of winter survival decorating doesn’t really compute. Here, though, where the darkness arrives like an overnight houseguest who overstays their welcome by several months, these glowing paper stars stop being quaint traditional crafts and start being what they actually are: tiny acts of defiance against the void. Or possibly just really sensible interior navigation aids. Both things can be true.

Actual screenshot from timeanddate.com – RIP Utsjoki.

Either way, I can now make it from the bedroom to the kitchen without turning on a single overhead light, guided entirely by the warm glow of discount stars I bought for two euros apiece. If that’s not the definition of successful adaptation to Nordic life, I don’t know what is.

* Hygge is totallly a Danish thing, actually, and I’m sure I’d get disapproving looks if anybody I knew read this. Look up kalsarikännit if you want a more authentic Finnish perspective on comfort.

A Weekend Project

So. Much. Storage.

Root cellars. I love the idea, but in practice, it’s taken me a bit longer to get the hang of them. Like all farmhouses of a certain age, ours had one built into the basement as a matter of course. We saw it, along with a vintage loom and spinning wheel, while poking around downstairs very early on. Then I sort of let that knowledge drift to the back of my mind for the next several years. It was always either too cold, too dark, or too damp to feel like making a trip down there, it seemed. Especially when there was a perfectly serviceable pantry and freezer to store most of our food in.

Then I started getting into making juices and jams from all the fruit we would pick every autumn and before I knew it, there was no more room on the shelves in the kitchen and my jars had started taking up an alarming amount of space in the laundry cabinet. Add to that a particularly generous haul of potatoes from the garden this year, and I was in dire need of storage space. It was time to rethink the root cellar.

I cleaned up a bit before the delivery guy got there, so this isn’t even that bad anymore.

As you might imagine, the place didn’t look too hot after a few-cough-several decades of neglect. Luckily, we are talking about what is basically a hole in the ground. In this case, a quick sweeping of the walls and floor pretty much got it into serviceable shape.

Courtesy of a certain Nordic furniture and home goods superstore.

I went with a sturdy-looking outdoor shelving unit made from acacia wood, making sure it was expandable since I fully plan to line all the walls in the next few years. One day spent building, then the next was spent scurrying up and down the stairs, feeling like a very industrious hamster amalgamating my stash.

At the time of writing, I have only about half the shelves filled. There is still a harvest of carrots to bring in and some apples to wrap up, so that will be taking up more space in the weeks to come. How this will all hold up during the winter, when temps drop well below freezing, will be the real test. Not for the root cellar, perhaps, since it has been here for better part of a century, but definitely for me getting down there to grab things for daily use. Hopefully, making it a little more organized will help!

The view from the other corner, showing the double wooden doors for extra insulation.