Tuesday 11 December 2018

Scattering Rainbows

Hello, thank you for popping in here, I'm very pleased to see you.  It's stupid o'clock in the morning and I can't sleep so I'm here.  I blame the new duvet: it's so bloomin' warm that I'm overheating - in December!

The other day I received the notification that Heather at Little Tin Bird had taken down her blog.  This made me feel sad because Heather was one of the bloggers who inspired me to learn to crochet, and her tutorials were crucial to my actually learning how to do it.  Last year I made a baby blanket using her rainbow scheme in Stylecraft Special DK colours of Lipstick, Spice, Saffron, Lime, Turquoise, Violet and Magenta, beginning with a chain of 101 and working ten rows of trebles in each colour.  It's very simple but I was ridiculously pleased with myself.  The Teacher was so taken with it that she asked me to make one for Tom Kitten, before we even knew that he was Tom Kitten, and it was the blanket which snuggled him up when he was a few minutes old.  Fourteen months on, it has worked very hard: he has been wrapped in it, slept beneath it, played on top of it and now it goes out with him in the car and the pushchair to keep him cosy.  It seems to charm all those who see it and The Teacher often passes on to me the compliments she receives from random strangers (usually older women!) when she is out and about with it.  Recently, somebody even asked her if I have an Instagram account which they could follow (I don't).  Get me!!


After Tom Kitten was born, The Teacher asked me to make another blanket for another friend of hers and this year I have made four more in the same size.  Although the body of each blanket is identical, I use different colours for the border, which is always the Spot On edging designed by Lucy at Attic 24, really so that when Tom Kitten is out with his friends, their blankets don't get mixed up.  One of his friends is a Bigger Girl, she's three years old, and when her mother asked The Teacher if I could give her "the recipe" for the blanket I instead asked if I could make one for her myself and she agreed - I had enough yarn left over in my stash and if I had known how to crochet when she was born I would have made one for her then.  So I made a bigger blanket for the Bigger Girl, starting with a chain of 122 and working twelve rows in each of the seven colours.  In return she made me a lovely card and her mother sent me a photo of the blanket being worn as a cape.  I was thrilled.  That one was rainbow blanket number eight.

One of Tom Kitten's friends, the owner of the first rainbow blanket, has a Big Sister who is seven years old.  At the end of last winter, she noticed that her brother has a blanket and asked why she didn't have one.  Her mother asked The Teacher if I take commissions (!) and The Teacher explained that I don't because it takes me so many hours to make things that it's not worth the money.  However, how could I allow a seven-year-old to remain blanketless?  That would be almost criminal, I think.  I checked my stash and told The Teacher that I would make a blanket but that it would take several months because I would do it between my other projects.  I said that it might not be finished before Christmas.

I decided that this blanket needed to be quite a bit bigger than the baby blankets because a seven-year-old is quite a bit bigger than a baby, and I wanted it to have some longevity as she grows, but I didn't want it to be single-bed sized because I wanted her to be able to carry it around herself, so I began with a chain of 129.  I was also a bit fed up of the original pattern and I couldn't really face making it in a bigger size, but I do love the way the colours work together, so I decided that blanket number nine would be something new for me: a ripple, a rainbow ripple.  Now, I should state at this point that I am not a big fan of the look of the ripple (I know, that may actually be crochet sacrilege) but I know that many other people love it, and I wanted to learn how to do it.  Now that it's finished, I may have been converted; I think I love it too.  


Here it is folded in half on The Teacher's spare bed.  I edged this one in Storm Blue, filling in the troughs of the ripple to make straight edges.  I think it is just about perfect.


So blanket number nine has been wrapped up and will be opened on Christmas Day.  I have scattered nine rainbows around Shropshire and Staffordshire and number ten is on order for next spring.  Perhaps I should change my name to Iris?

See you soon.
Love, Mrs Tiggywinkle x






21 comments:

  1. I see Heather has 10,000 followers in Instagram. A much larger audience than with blogging. So many people have given up their blogs when they made the switch but I have so many blog friends who aren't on IG so I continue blogging in order to interact with all of them. Heather hasn't posted since May so maybe something's going on. Or it all got too overwhelming? Sometimes that happens, too. You blankets are super colorful and lovely and obviously much loved and appreciated. I've never made a ripple. Giant granny squares are my favorite because there's no joining, except the yarn if you change colors. :)

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    1. Heather hasn't blogged for over a year. She's had two children since she started blogging so I suppose life has changed and she's moved on. I think it's a shame. I'm not on Instagram because my words are better than my photographs and I enjoy wittering! Rippling is easy but there are SO many ends to sew in and that's such a chore. x

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  2. I love to make crochet blankets, it's my absolute favourite thing to crochet. I've made quite a few over the last couple of years, just because I like to, it does come in handy to have several in stock when someone you know has a baby....ready made gift. Yours are beautiful, you should be proud. I hope you slept better last night.

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    1. Thanks Sooze. I am proud of myself, four years ago I didn't even know how to crochet and I practised for months before I made the first blanket. I hope you sleep better, too. x

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  3. What a lovely story and how nice to have a good excuse for crocheting rainbow blankets. They look really cheerful and, of course, very cosy. x

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    1. Thank you! I must admit that it's lovely to have a growing blanket nestled on my lap to crochet during cold evenings. x

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  4. Your blankets are lovely.

    Julie xxxxxx

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  5. I'm sure the little girl will be thrilled with a blanket of her very own. I've made a couple of ripple blankets and they're my favourites of the blankets I've made. It's a while now since I've done any crocheting, I'm into knitting at the moment, but I've got lots of Stylecraft DK in my stash so it's definitely something I intend to come back to.

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    1. I think Stylecraft Special DK is wonderful: it's so soft, washes well, comes in a huge range of colours and is keenly priced. I have a friend who has been rippling blankets as wedding presents and they have gone down a storm. x

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  6. They're so pretty. I like the ripple pattern and have made it numerous time.

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  7. The rainbow colours are wonderful and I'm sure all you hard work has brought smiles to everyone who received one of your lovely blankets:)

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    1. Thanks Rosie. I hadn't really thought about it but on reflection, these rainbows do seem to make people smile. x

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  8. Your blankets are so pretty, what lucky little bodies will be wrapped in bright rainbows.

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    1. Thanks Lorrie. It is lovely to be able to make nice things for other people's babies and they do seem to have been well received. x

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  9. The ripple is beautiful. I made one this year and it is a soothing project. I have been playing eye spy on the Ironbridge photo. My dad's house can't quite be seen but it was just under the smoke in the middle. I can see his garage by the fir trees. happy memories. jo x

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    1. Thanks Jo - that's high praise indeed coming from you. Your Neapolitan blanket was beautiful, I think that apart from my rainbow, it's the first ripple I've seen that I like, and I like it a lot. I'm glad I've stirred up happy memories - I've had to go and play eye spy now, too! x

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  11. I just read this Jan. 19 . Love it tremendously. The blanket has been a hit with all the children , young and old.
    May the happiness that is spreading from them keep on spreading through the world. Just think you could have started a rainbow that will encircle the world. ;)

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    1. Thank you Gemma, it's lovely to see you here! That's a wonderful thought, encircling the world in a rainbow, enfolding everyone in a great big happy hug, I love it. xx

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