Calm yourself down with a look of water. For many of us, seeing open water can give a sense of inner peace and connectivity.
Waves can be daunting for new crocheters, as how the wave grows can be confusing. In the peaks, we add more stitches and in the bottoms of the valleys, we subtract stitches. It's what keeps the edges straight.
Below is a quick tutorial on understanding waves in a pattern.
Crochet Surfer Waves Throw
The Crochet Surfer Waves Throw has a subtle lift using five double crochets in the same stitch. In person, you can see it well. Once you get started on this pattern, the row is exactly repeated throughout the entire banket. You can add a simple border to the edging if you want. I don't think it's absolutely necessary.
The repeating to make this bigger is 16 chains + 18. Abbreviated, it would be 16 chs + 18. This will allow you to change the sizing. I don't know the chain count to make it for different sizes.
This blanket is using Red Heart With Love yarn.
Tutorial
In production.
Crochet Ocean Waves Big Cakes Throw
The Crochet Ocean Waves Afghan is pretty straightforward once you get the pattern in your mind. It's repeating just two rows over and over once you get started and established.
The key thing to watch for is the extended rows. Both sides of the project are not equal to make this an easy level. In the tutorial, I show you that because, during my initial trials of this pattern, I kept screwing up until the designer set me straight. Her version was simpler but I was thinking in one direction when in fact, it's something different.
To change the size of this blanket, the multiple is 16 chains + 9. In abbreviated terms it would be 16 chs + 9.
If you can read patterns and skip my tutorial, you may want to review the synopsis of the tutorial to understand this even more.
This is using Caron Big Cakes Yarn. The striping you see is directly from the yarn ball, with no alterations of cutting strands to make it look great. So it's easy and let the yarn ball do the self-striping for you.
Joanne Owens says
The 5 dc + ch1s.... the last [5th] dc.... is there a ch1 on the last before you skip 4 onto the 3 dcS
mary anna cook says
tried to do this from the written pattern on michaels.com. th
There seemed to be a problem. Step one does not tell you how to get the shell. Step two has you crocheting into the chain one space except step one never tell you how to get the chain one space. Can someone look at the pattern on the website and see if i totally missed it or is it actually missing.
Suz says
Might be me but seems like there may be a difference between video and the written instructions in Row 2. Video seems to suggest chain ones on the second row "hills" but the written does not have that. See extract below.
"2nd row: Ch 3 (counts as dc). 1 dc in each of next 3 dc. 3 dc in next dc. 1 dc in each of next 3 dc. *Skip next 2 dc. 1 sc in next ch-1 sp. (Ch 3. 1 sc in next ch-1 sp) 3 times. Skip next 2 dc. 1 dc in each of next 3 dc. 3 dc in next dc. 1 dc in each of next 3 dc. Rep from * to last dc and turning ch. Turn."
Not sure which is correct (or if I am misunderstanding something?)