It's finally done. Finally. Well, it's been done for a month now, but it's done and I have time to write about it.
Baby W's Circle Blanket.
overview of the entire blanket |
These were all taken after I had washed it and blocked it out slightly (stretching it out on the living room floor counts right?) Total measurement is 36 inches across, 113 inches around, 1017.9 square inches.
Close up of center |
Total yarn use: Most of 1 skein each of Caron Simply Soft's blueberry, limelight, and grape. I finished the blueberry skein making the matching booties. There's probably enough of the limelight and grape to make another pair of booties, but I don't think I'm going to do so.
cat provided for scale. If that's not particularly helpful, 36 inches |
Overall, this pattern wasn't awful, except for the start. The start, as I may have said before, was just infuriating. 3 hours to cast on is kind of ridiculous. Accurately placing the stitch markers is really important for this one, as are tip protectors for when you have to put it down. The biggest issue I ended up having was getting needles that the blanket would fit on as it grew. I already had a 40 inch needle, but the 60 inch took over a month to arrive (and, apparently, the shop I purchased it from lost the notification that I had come to pick it up, as they called me last week to let me know it was in) which really slowed the whole process down.
The final edging I kinda just fudged. It would have worked better if I had actually done the math and realized that 550 isn't divisible by 3 and 3x3 ribbing wasn't going to work very well. But the end result ended up looking kinda cool and who's really going actually look at the ribbing when there's a pretty baby wrapped up in it? Making it divisible by 3 would have involved another 6 rows and I was already in tears because I just wanted to be DONE with it. (Knitting at 2 am because you promised yourself you'd finish it tonight? Might not be the best idea ever)
When I make another one of these, I think I'm going to stick with 1 color and do different stitch patterns for each section. Also, I will know better than to set arbitrary deadlines for it.
The final edging I kinda just fudged. It would have worked better if I had actually done the math and realized that 550 isn't divisible by 3 and 3x3 ribbing wasn't going to work very well. But the end result ended up looking kinda cool and who's really going actually look at the ribbing when there's a pretty baby wrapped up in it? Making it divisible by 3 would have involved another 6 rows and I was already in tears because I just wanted to be DONE with it. (Knitting at 2 am because you promised yourself you'd finish it tonight? Might not be the best idea ever)
When I make another one of these, I think I'm going to stick with 1 color and do different stitch patterns for each section. Also, I will know better than to set arbitrary deadlines for it.
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