Category Archives: Crochet

It Is Not Worth It To Pre-shrink Size 4, 85% Cotton Yarn

DSC07404 The yarn on left  is an entire skein of the same Premier Home 85% cotton, 15% polyester, size 4 yarn, except, I boiled it, and dried it in the clothes dryer on hot, in order to preshrink it.  The entire skein on the right is in its original, unshrunk condition.

DSC07402 I boiled this yarn in the pot for 15 minutes, and let it sit in the hot water for another 30 minutes, after which I squeezed it out, and placed it in the clothes dryer on a hot setting.  (Its confining thread came off, resulting in the jumbled yarn that you can see above.  I dried it about three more times on hot confining the yarn in a sock, and after this placed it in the sun for two more hours.

It took me an hour in front of the TV to untangle it, and make it into a ball of yarn.  I wondered if rolling it into a ball would undo any shrinkage, because of a very slight residual dampness in the yarn.

I wanted to test at least two things:

  1. Did boiling the  yarn make any difference in the crocheted outcome as seen in these coasters?
  2. How much difference did the crochet hook size have on the coaster size?

To test the shrunk yarn against the pre-shrunk yarn, I made six simple double crochet coasters, three with the preshrunk yarn, and three with the pre-shrunk yarn.  For each treatment of yarn I crocheted one coaster, in order of increasing hook size, a G hook, an H hook, and an I hook.  Two yarns times three hooks, gives the six coasters.

I measured and weighed the coasters, after which I washed them in hot water, and dried them several times on hot, until they were dry.  The coasters ended up looking like this.

DSC07418 The top row of coasters is made with the pre-shrunk yarn, and the bottom row is made with the unshrunk yarn. The first column is made with the G (red) hook, the second column is made with the H (orange) hook, and the third column is made with the I (yellow) hook.  It is clear that the hook size made more of a difference in diameter than did preshrinking.  (Other observations and figures bore this out.)

 

 

 

 

 

Much Loved Fluffy Gets a New Orange Coat With a Blue Button

Fluffy came  to visit, and her little four year old mommy asked me to make her a coat.

DSC06669 Little mommy said she needed an orange coat, because Fluffy loved carrots. And so we set out to crochet one.

Fluffy and her mommy had to go home when her coat was about half finished.   We went to visit Fluffy and her mommy.  Little Mommy asked that the pretty blue button, which she handed to me, be attached to hold her coat closed.

DSC06683 Fluffy and her mommy love her new coat!

And this orange coat with a blue button looks so good on Fluffy!

 

Chenille Yarn Scarf

Being interested in trying out different yarns, I ordered a package of seller’s choice yarns in a bundle.  I was going to make a baby blanket, but I ran out of yarn, and when I tried to get more, I found I had discarded the label, and did not know what it was.  Anyway, after crocheting up about  three fourths of it, and continuing a week later,  it turned out that I did not have the same feel for it that I had before.  The result was that it is ruffled on one edge.  In spite of the apparent color differences these are all the same piece, photographed under different conditions.

DSC06641This could be used as a ruffly scarf.  I did like working with this hard to see yarn.  DSC06643 DSC06642 The total weight of the yarn was 3.9 oz.  So a baby blanket would require a bout 12 ounces.   This yarn was 90% cotton, and 10% nylon, wherein the fluffy part is the cotton, and the string holding it is the nylon.

What did I learn doing this?

  1. The yarn is nice.
  2. One cannot see what one is doing while working on it.
  3. Do not wait ver long between starting and finishing such a project.
  4. One needs to use quite big stitches.