Skip to main content

Testing Patterns

After finishing the Halloween quilt last week I really needed to switch to crochet to work out some stiffness in my hands. I had printed out four free patterns that I liked, but I couldn't decide on which to make as my next crochet project. So I decided to test all four by making a twenty-stitch swatch (working the pattern but using only 20 chain stitches in the foundation row.)

This rectangle granny square blanket pattern is one I've tried before, and I had the same problem with it this time: I can't figure out the pattern the way it's written (and that's on me, not the pattern maker.) I improvised to finish the swatch, but I really need to watch someone make this one to see what I'm doing wrong. Since I want my next project strictly for hand therapy, my inability to interpret the pattern made me decide against it.

I found this moss stitch mood blanket pattern while looking for one-row patterns, and swatched it out of curiosity to see if it was like the temperature blanket pattern I used for my calendar mood blanket last year. It is, and the minute I began swatching it I knew I didn't want to make it. Although moss stitch is pretty, and so are the blankets made with it, when you spend a year crocheting it every single day you kind of get over it.

This chunky swatch came from a Lion Brand pattern that uses three skeins of yarn held together while being worked into a V-stitch. I love V-stitch for scarves and wraps, and I've done three-yarn patterns that with the baskets I've made. Unfortunately my hands didn't love it, and the bulkiness of the pattern would be difficult to manage right now.

This V-stitch baby throw pattern, which has a one-row repeat and can be made with worsted weight yarn, ended up being the easiest, prettiest and most appealing swatch to me. My hands didn't object to the stitching pattern, and I don't have to count stitches or deal with a bunch of complicated instructions. Clearly the winner.

I am saving the other patterns with the swatches clipped to them for posterity, as I never know when I might try them again.

I got about half of the first row on the throw done last night, and my fingers feel better this morning, so it was a good choice. I think I'll make it in rows of light-colored and white yarn in ocean colors. We'll see how it works out.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Old Loves & Such

My guy kindly bought me my favorite Chinese take out the other night, and my fortune cookie offered up an interesting story starter: This sounds sweet, right? Only the first thing I thought of was an old love coming back from the dead . . . . must be October. In other lovely news, my favorite hand-dyed thread artist, Lorraine from Colour Complements , is moving her business from Etsy to her own web site. Many of my favorite sellers on Etsy are leaving due to the whole "free shipping" coercion debacle, which has also soured me on the site. To show support I did a little shopping at Lorraine's web site and got in these: I love her threads and trims; you simply can't buy anything like them anywhere. Her work makes my specialty thread box look like a treasure chest: At night I'm spending just as hour working on quilting the scrap project runner, and I'm making slow progress: I'll keep quilting the runner while I try to decide on a design for t...

Wild Ride

Along with the Gods: The Two Worlds is an epic, dazzling film that hurls you into the Korean version of the afterlife while showcasing some of the most impressive special effects I've ever seen in any movie. The story begins with the death of firefighter Kim Ja-Hong (Cha Tae-hyun) who jumps out of a burning building with a child in his arms. The kid lives, but he dies at the scene. Two strangers inform him that he has passed away right on schedule, and toss him into a vortex that takes him to the world of the afterlife, where he meets his three guardians: Gang-rim (Ha Jung-woo), Haewonmak (Ju Ji-hoon) and Lee Deok-choon (Kim Hyang-gi). At the gates of the afterlife Ja-Hong learns that he is considered a paragon (an exemplary person who lived a noble and self-sacrificing life) and is eligible to be reincarnated -- but there's a catch. First he has 49 days to make it through seven hells in which he will be judged on his sins. His three guardians will help and defend...

Progress

My guy is back home safe, sound and exhausted. I think he just realized he's over seventy now. :) I didn't finish a sewing project while he was gone, but I did make some progress on the beach bag. I've tacked down all the fabric elements on top of the old backing fabric I quilted. Time to break out the embroidery thread box and have some fun.