Oval Doormat

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I made a rectangular mat for the door to our back patio, and noticed that the edges were starting to curl, so I decided to frog it and make an oblong mat instead.

Pattern: Self-drafted. Chained 20 stitches, then on every round I sc 18 sts along each straight edge, and increased 3 sts on each end, doing an extra increase every 8th round. Made using recycled Wool and the Gang Jersey Be Good in Grey.

New skills: n/a

Lessons: I achieved a flat mat using these techniques:

  1. Crocheted into the back loop so that the stitches were looser. I actually started doing this midway through the rug because I didn’t want to frog it back, so there’s a spiral stripe running around the outside edge of the rug—I’m very happy with how it looks.

  2. Applied what I learned from this tutorial, namely: increasing 3 stitches on each rounded end (and increasing 1 extra stitch on each end every 8th round, since pi = 3.14). And as suggested, I staggered the increases so that they wouldn’t be aligned and make the ends look hexagonal.

The original mat was dusty and slightly sun-bleached. I washed it in the washing machine with like colors, then frogged it to let the yarn dry more quickly and wound it into a ball once dry. The color variation is visible on the new rug, though I don’t mind at all.

The proportion of a rug changes as more rounds are completed—the ratio of length to width will decrease with every round.

What I’d do differently: I’d like to get better at getting the increases on the first round look more symmetrical—one side has a larger hole than the other.

I want to retry a rectangular mat crocheting into the front/back loop only to see if I can get a rectangular mat to lay flat.

Care: Machine wash, lay flat to dry.

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Worn This Way Hat

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In June I joined a new team at work. July brought moving to a new apartment and adopting Gnocchi, a small brown entropy generator / cuddle sausage. While these were all awesome changes, their arrival in parallel was challenging and I dropped crafting over the summer. I started out with something simple (crochet) to get back in the groove, which was a very solid choice.

Pattern: Worn This Way hat by Wool and the Gang; knit in black Ra Ra Raffia. I made a small mod where I converted the eyelet rows into solid crochet.

Lessons: My attitude toward swatching is something like Gollum: "We should really make a swatch... BUT WE HATES SWATCHING." It would have been helpful for this pattern. Hats are chronically too small for my monster noggin, so I did an extra round of increases. But with my loose-ish tension the hat was working up too large so I had to frog back to the increases.

Crunching the raffia up made it more pliable and nicer to crochet with.

What I'd do differently: If I work with this fiber again (or really any unusual fiber) I'll grudgingly do a test swatch.

Try experimenting with wet blocking and stiffening spray to get the brim less wavy.