During my recovery from a badly broken ankle, a plan slowly evolved out of the fog of pain and sheer boredom. One particularly bad day, my son caught me weeping and asked if I was in pain. My response was "Yes, but not from the injury. I'm just so very sad." He disappeared but returned with a steaming cup of tea and some sage advice! "What you need mom, is a project! Something to keep your mind busy!" From this thoughtful comment, and some good strong Yerba Mate, the plan began.
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Let us be kind and compassionate to remove
the sadness of the world |
For years, I had been wanting to crochet a blanket for
Mystic. I made one for our sailboat Keewatin years ago; a beautiful Indian pattern in many shades of blue. It looked like ocean water; with blending colors all shimmering together. It was stolen from the laundromat just a couple years after I made it. We have only two photos to remember it. They are taken from far enough away that you can't see the mistakes I made. I had only just begun crocheting back then. Perfection was not on my radar yet.
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Beth aboard Keewatin, blanket on bunk |
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Dave at Beach House, Little Gasparillo Island
Afghan on the back of the couch |
This time I wanted to make something even better; an heirloom perhaps. First, I had to pick a pattern. There were so many to choose from. I went on YouTube and followed videos to learn the different stitches which appealed to me. I must have learned a dozen; crocheting cloth size swatches that I showed to everyone to see what their favorite was. It took a long time to decide. Both Dave and David, liked the Basket Weave because its tightly woven without "holes" in the pattern. This would make it warm and dense. I liked it too. After weeks of exploring, I finally had my pattern.
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That's a whole lotta yarn! |
I worked on it every day, first with a long skinny pile of stitches bunched on my lap, eventually using the finished side to keep me warm as I added to the length. The pattern is very easy, 4 front post double crochet, 4 back post double crochet. I can't tell you how many times I fell asleep mid stitch, the pain meds overpowering me, sliding me into a sweet slumber. I'd wake up, find my place and begin again. The basket weave pattern shows on both sides so it was easy to see when I made mistakes. I pulled out a lot of stitches in the beginning. As I unraveled the tapestry I thought about how nice it would be if we could do this in life. Have a redo of sorts and take a step back to a point where life was perfect, without mistakes, then make it right.
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At about 10 rows |
1 comment:
It is a BEAUTIFUL blanket, Beth. Well worth your time, effort, and skein after skein after skein of yarn... ;-) Mystic will be graced with its addition to creature comforts. Don't leave it unguarded in the laundromat, though. Hugs —
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