Showing posts with label scarf. Show all posts
Showing posts with label scarf. Show all posts

21 April 2013

Elemental Scarf

Way back in September, a friend suggested making a scarf to represent the four elements: earth, air, fire, water. I instantly fell in love with the idea and came up with a pattern to go along with the representative colors. Spirit was included as the fifth element tying everything together. After some writing, experimenting, testing, blocking, and photographing, I'm finally ready to share my typed up pattern for the Elemental Scarf!



The pattern is written in sections which are approxiamately the same length and width. Dimensions will vary somewhat with your crochet style and blocking/stretching technique. You can arrange the sections however you please or repeat a section as you would like. Colors are my personal representations of the elements, so change them to whatever fits well with you. As always, feel free to ask questions and leave comments.

Abbreviations
ch - chain
sc - single crochet
hdc - half double crochet
dc - doule crochet
fpdc - front post double crochet
bpdc - back post double crochet
tch - turning chain
cluster - group of stitches closed at all once together
shell - group of stitches worked into same space or stitch

Materials:
Hook, I/9 5.5mm (or hook recommended for yarn)
Approximately 100 yards each color of worsted weight yarn
Yarn needle recommended for sewing in ends
 

Earth:
green, solid stitches
1: ch 16, sc in 2nd ch from hook, sc across (15 sc)
2: turn, ch 1, 15 hdc
3: turn, ch 1, 15 dc
4: turn, ch 1, 15 sc
5-36: Repeat rows 2-4, ending with row 3
36 rows = 12 sets



Air:
white, clusters & shells
1: ch 3, dc across (15 dc)
2: ch 5, cluster in first 3 dc, *ch 2, cluster next 3 dc.* Repeat * to * to end; ch 2, dc in last sc (5 clusters + 2 dc ends)
3: ch 3, *3dc shell in top of cluster, repeat from * across. dc in 3rd ch of previous tch.
4-23: Repeat rows 2&3
Final row: ch 3, dc across
24 rows = 11 pairs + dc rows



Fire:
red, post stitches
1-3: ch 3, dc across (15 dc)
4: ch 3, 3 bpdc, 7 fpdc, 3 bpdc, dc in tch
5: ch 3, 4 fpdc, 5 bpdc, 4 fpdc,  dc in tch
6: 5 bpdc, 3 fpdc, 5 bpdc, dc in tch
7: 6 fpdc, 1 bpdc, 6 fpdc, dc in tch
8-21: repeat rows 1-7.
22-24: ch 3, dc across (15 dc)
24 rows = 3 sets + final 3 rows





Water:
blue, ribbed & wavy
1: 15 sc
2: hdc, hdc, sc, sc, hdc, dc, dc, hdc, sc, sc, hdc, dc, dc, hdc, hdc - all front loop only
3-35: repeat row 2
36: 15 sc
36 rows = 12 sets + sc rows



Spirit:
purple border
Single crochet around evenly. Following this general guidline for help placing stitches into the sides of rows: 1 sc into sc row, 3 sc in 2 hdc rows, 2 sc in dc row

27 December 2011

Binary 'I Love You' Scarf

My boyfriend, Erik, programs mainframe computers. These are the ones that handle banking and credit card transactions, and they are huge. Programmers don't actually program in binary anymore; they have many many programming languages which the computer translates into binary. Still, I knew that binary would be relatively easy to convert into a pattern. I used this binary translator, but any binary translator you find on the internet should work, too.

There is lots of color changing going on in this scarf. Here is a video on How to Crochet Color Change Without Knots. I found it very helpful and useful. Alternatively, you can slipstitch up the side of the fabric. This means there are not tons of ends to weave in, but you do have some odd looking stitching going up the side. Adding an edging up both sides or all around will cover it up.


Here is "I Love You" in binary:
01101001-
00100000-
01101100-
01101111-
01110110-
01100101-
00100000-
01111001-
01101111-
01110101
Each 8 digits represents 1 letter/character. In this pattern, the space is coded for, partially because I liked the fact that it made for 10 lines of code. You'll have 160 rows when your done, and it's about 6 feet long if your double crochets are about 1/2" tall.

Abbreviations:
dc = double crochet
ch = chain

Color A = 0 (black in example)
Color B = 1 (red in example)
1 row = 3 ch + 40  dc
Turn work after each row.

In A, ch 40
*in A, dc 1 row
in B, dc 2 rows
in A, dc 1 row
in B, dc 1 row

in A, dc 2 rows
in B, dc 1 row
in A, dc 2 rows
in B, dc 1 row

in A, dc 6 rows
in B, dc 2 rows
in A, dc 1 row
in B, dc 2 rows

in A, dc 3 rows
in B, dc 2 rows
in A, dc 1 row
in B, dc 4 rows

in A, dc 1 row
in B, dc 3 rows
in A, dc 1 row
in B, dc 2 rows

in A, dc 2 rows
in B, dc 2 row
in A, dc 1 row
in B, dc 1 row

in A, dc 1 row
in B, dc 2 rows
in A, dc 1 row
in B, dc 6 rows

in A, dc 4 rows
in B, dc 2 rows
in A, dc 1 row
in B, dc 1 row

in A, dc 2 rows
in B, dc 1 row
in A, dc 4 rows
in B, dc 1 row

in A, dc 3 rows
in B, dc 1 row
in A, dc 1 row
in B, dc 1 row
in A, dc 1 row

Repeat from *star to make it long enough.
Fasten off final tail.

It will say "I Love You" twice.




16 lines: 10% Finished
"I L"


32 lines: 20% Finished
"I Lov"


80 lines: 50% Finished
"I Love You"

Finished. Showing half. Came out to 7 feet by 1 foot.


Finished, folded upto see better contrast.



If you have any questions, leave me a comment.

Creative Commons License
Binary 'I Love You' Scarf by Jessica A Prescott is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.