Moogly CAL Blanket 2016
Jan. 9th, 2017 07:47 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I've been following the Moogly Crochet Blog for a while and found myself increasingly taken with the fortnightly squares that were being posted as part of their "crochet-a-long" so, once I had finished B's vast crochet thing, I set about making the 2016 sqaures (this was in August, there was a lot of frantic catch-up crocheting). In theory I was using leftover bits of wool, but I ran out of these about halfway through and had to buy more - this became increasingly stressful since the original supply of wool I had acquired on the cheap because it wasn't being produced any more.
Anyway, the final result is this blanket:

I have already started on the first of the 2017 squares and have bought all the wool except for one colour I am as yet undecided about.
Anyway, the final result is this blanket:

I have already started on the first of the 2017 squares and have bought all the wool except for one colour I am as yet undecided about.
(no subject)
Date: 2017-01-09 10:17 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2017-01-09 11:47 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2017-01-15 10:20 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2017-01-09 09:29 pm (UTC)And timely, as I was meaning to ask if you've got any recommendations for a good dummies guide to starting crocheting? My dad bought me a crochet kit for Christmas and the instructions may as well be written in Chinese for all the sense they're making.
(no subject)
Date: 2017-01-09 10:11 pm (UTC)It doesn't help that British and American crochet terms are different - what the British call a double crochet (abbreviated as dc), the Americans call a single crochet (abbreviated as sc) and what the British call a treble crochet (abbreviated as tr) the Americans call a double crochet (abbreviated as dc) - I'm sure you can imagine all the potential confusion.
That said, Moogly blog is pretty good if you don't mind video tutorials. I'd start by trying a couple of small squares consisting of a starting chain and then rows of single and/or double crochet (American usage).
If your crochet kit is for amigurumi then you'll need to know how to do a magic circle, and increase and decrease single crochet (American terms). I would expect the patterns to start something like
Make a magic circle (look this up on the internet).
Round 1: 1 ch, 4 sc, sl st into first stitch in round (this means chain 1 (look up chains) then do four single crochet and then slip stitch into the top of the chain - you should be able to find video tutorials for all these.
Round 2: 1 ch, 1 sc in same stitch, 2 sc in each sc of previous round, sl st into first stitch in round (this means chain 1 (to start the new round) and single crochet into the same stitch (this is to fake a single crochet increase but with a chain as the first stitch), do two single crochet in each single crochet of the previous round (this is a standard increase, the one you were trying to fake with the 1 ch, 1 sc - look it up), and then slip stitch into the the top of the chain you first made.
... and so on.
Hope this helps.
(no subject)
Date: 2017-01-12 12:26 am (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2017-01-09 09:51 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2017-01-09 10:13 pm (UTC)It's just as well I waited until the end because the squares were all over the place size-wise and so there was quite a lot of adding extra stitches to bring them all to the same size.