Modern or vintage sock monkey, plus a sock elephant that started life as an accident. All free, all hand-sewing friendly.
Shorter tail, wider arms — the version most people picture when they think "sock monkey." The best starting point if this is your first one.
Jump to pattern ↓Longer tail, narrower arms — the original silhouette, and the one to use if you want a cap cut from the same two socks.
Jump to pattern ↓Same two socks, a different cut. Fair warning: my first one looked like an aardvark. Yours might too, and that's fine.
Jump to pattern ↓You'll need: one pair of socks (Original Rockford Red Heel or any sturdy sock), stuffing (6–8oz polyester fiberfill or eco craft), red knitting yarn (optional), sewing thread, embroidery thread, 2 buttons (optional).

The original silhouette — longer tail, narrower arms than the modern cut. This is the pattern to reach for if you want a matching knit cap: the vintage cut lets you take the cap from the same second sock, where the modern pattern needs a third.
The construction order is the same as the modern pattern (body, turn, stuff, arms, mouth) — only the cutting lines for the tail and arm width change. If you're brand new, sew the modern pattern first so the shapes feel familiar, then try vintage next.
Find the right socks →Use Rockford Red Heel socks for a classic look, or elephant-print socks if you can find them. Vary the ear pattern for larger (African) or smaller (Indian) ears.
Fair warning: my very first attempt looked more like an aardvark than an elephant. I made it into a happy accident instead of starting over — yours can be too.
