Anything Knitted and Crocheted

Welcome to my blog. I hope to blog about my knitting and crocheting as well as everyday life. The patterns that I post are original and as such there is copyright on them. When they are based on another pattern there is a link to the pattern.

My husband and I adopted a beautiful dog named Leo. He is a dachshund and absolutely adorable! we adopted him on June 23, 2010 and he has become the love of our lives.

I love to share patterns that I find along the way or to talk about some of the neatest designers that are out there today, so I love to post links to the designs or the designers.

So grab a cup a and sit and enjoy the blog.


Cora

Friday, December 11, 2009

Have you ever like a pattern for an afghan or scarf and wanted to expand on it or lessen? Check this article out...

Making Sizing Changes to Scarves and Throws
By: Barbara Breiter

  You have a throw pattern with a beautiful stitch pattern, but you'd like to make it wider or narrower. Or perhaps you'd like to make it into a scarf. Maybe the converse is true…you'd like to change a scarf into a throw.

It's not as difficult as it may seem, even if you are a beginner!
There are two vital concepts that must be understood to accomplish this.
Leaves of Grass SwatchThe first is the stitch multiple, or the number of stitches needed for one repeat of the stitch pattern. A multiple of 5 stitches means you can cast on any number of stitches that is divisible by 5 such as 25, 30, etc. A multiple of 6 + 1 means you need to cast on any number of stitches that is divisible by 6 plus 1 extra stitch; examples include 25, 37, etc.
Sometimes the pattern will tell you the multiple of stitches used which makes it much easier to make adjustments. If the information is not included, you will need to determine this yourself. You do this simply by adding up how many stitches are used.

Here's a stitch pattern called Twin Rib:
Row 1: *k3, p3; rep from *
Row 2: *k1, p1; rep from *
Row 1 uses 6 stitches (3 + 3) while Row 2 uses 2 stitches (1 + 1). The pattern is a multiple of 6 because that is the larger number and you need 6 stitches for Row 1 to work correctly. Since 6 is evenly divisible by 2, the 2 stitches in Row 2 are more frequently repeated.

The second concept is gauge. You might hate working a gauge swatch, but it really is important. Work your swatch in the stitch pattern. Measure how many stitches you get over 4 inches. Now divide by 4 to determine stitches per inch.

The "magic formula" is stitches per inch x desired width=number of stitches to cast on.
Crochet CableKeep in mind that given a certain set of parameters, the exact width you wish to make your project may not be possible without making further adjustments to, for example, your gauge by switching either yarn or needle size.

Let's say your gauge is 5 stitches per inch, you are using a stitch pattern that is a multiple of 12 and you wish to make a throw 33" wide. 5 (sts per inch) x 33 (desired width)=165, so you would cast on 165 stitches. However, 165 is not evenly divisible by 12, so that won't work for your stitch multiple of 12. You’ll need to choose the number closest to 165 evenly divisible by 12, which is 168.
Armed with that bit of knowledge, you can now easily adjust any throw or scarf pattern you have, even if it's not written at the size you really wanted!

For our green "Leaves of Grass" stitch, click here. For the blue "Crochet Cable" stitch, click here.
 
Bookmark and Share

No comments:

Post a Comment

If you have any questions or concerns please direct them to craftygal1965{at}gmail.com. Any other comments please leave here. Please no external links, thank you.

Thank you

Cora Shaw (formerly Levesque)