Saturday, February 19, 2011

Granny hexagons

Ok Vanessa Nina I am finally getting around to posting a crochet tutorial for you! This is going to be a granny hexagon blanket pattern. It is a little tricky for a first try at crocheting, so if it proves to be too confusing for you just let me know and I can find something else for us to do :) For this tutorial I am just posting the instructions that the lady who posted this pattern posted and just clearing up some confusing spots. I hope it works out, but let me know if you want to do something else!

First off chain 4 and join to form a ring. The hole in the center of the ring will be smallish, but this is where you need to work from for the first round. Tweak it a bit with your fingers to open it out a little if need be.











Chain 3, then work 11 double crochet stitches (US) or treble crochet stitches (UK) into the ring. Join with a slip stitch to the 3rd stitch of the initial chain 3 and fasten off.











You should now have a little whirly wheel circle with 12 stitches/spokes altogether.

Join in a new colour for round 2 :: knot the two yarns together at the base of the first yarn color. Remember you can crochet the ends in as you go with the hex's too.











Pull the new colour yarn through to the front, through one of the dc/tr stitches :: you are working out of the stitches in this round, not the spaces in between the spokes.











For this round, you're going to be making what I think is known as a Bobble Stitch. It's basically where you work two incomplete dc/tr's into the same stitch, joining them at the end by pulling the yarn through all loops.











I shall describe it to you :: yarn over, insert hook through next stitch, yarn over, hook back through stitch (3 loops on hook), yarn over and pull through 2 loops (2 loops on hook). Then yarn over and insert hook through SAME STITCH, yarn over, hook back through stitch (4 loops on hook), yarn over and pull through 2 loops (3 loops on hook), yarn over and pull through all 3 loops.























I know it sounds complicated, but honestly, it's really not.

So this is the pattern for round 2::

Chain 2, then 1 US dc/UK tr in same stitch. Chain 1.

Work a bobble stitch into next stitch as described above, then chain 1 to space.

Repeat 10 more times until you get back to the beginning and have 12 "bobbles" in total. Join round with a slip stitch into the 2nd stitch of the initial chain 2.











OK, you still with me? Onto round 3 :: Nice and easy now, you're doing dc/tr clusters. You are working out of the SPACES now, the spaces between the bobble stitch clusters of your previous row.

Join a new colour, pull loop through a space between 2 bobble clusters to start.

Chain 3 (counts as 1 dc/tr), work US dc/UK tr twice into same space, then chain 1.

Work US dc/UK tr three times into next space, chain 1.











Repeat 10 more times until you get back to the beginning and have 12 "clusters" in total. Join round with a slip stitch into the 3rd stitch of the initial chain 3 and fasten off.











Round 4 :: the chain-loop round ::

Join in a new colour and pull loop through a space between the dc/tr clusters of the previous row.



Chain 3, then make a slip stitch into the next space between your dc/tr clusters :: this anchors the chain loop.











Continue making little chain-3's, slip stitching them in place in the gap between the dc/tr clusters of the previous round. Join the last chain-3 with slip stitch into the first chain stitch you made. Do not fasten off as you will use the same colour for round 5.



Round 5 is the final round that forms the hexagon shape. I'm going to tell you how to crochet this as a single hexagon before we talk about the joining-as-you-go method.

You are using the same colour as the last round, and you will be working the stitches under the chain-3 loops you created. So to begin, make a slip stitch under the nearest chain-3 loop.

Chain 3 (counts as one dc/tr), then US dc / UK tr twice. Chain 2 (this is the corner spacing), then in the SAME chain-3 loop, US dc / UK tr three times. This is your first corner, it should look like a double cluster of 6 dc/tr's with a pointy corner bit in the middle.











Into the next chain-3 loop, work US dc / UK tr three times. This is a single cluster and makes a straight side.











Into the next chain-3 loop, work US dc / UK Tr three times, chain 2, then US dc / UK Tr three times. This is your second corner.











Continue working your way round making your clusters of 3 dc's /tr's, alternating between making a double cluster corner group (with chain 2 spacing) and a straight side single cluster. You should be ending the round on a straight-side group of three dc's/Tr's. Join the round with a slip stitch and fasten off.











See?????? It's not so hard?????? You've made your first hexagon!!!



Now if you're happy to make lots of single hexagons and join them all by stitching, then that's absolutely fine. But joining them as you go is fairly easy, although a little fiddly.

You will be working counter-clockwise, starting with a corner.











To begin, you make a single cluster as before (chain 3, then dc/tr twice). Then instead of chaining 2 to make your corner spacing, chain ONE, then replace your second chain space with a slip stitch into the corner space of the ajoining hexagon.
Then working into the SAME chain-3 loop, dc/tr three times to finish your corner cluster.











Now you need to slip stitch into the next space of the ajoining hexagon to secure. Basically, you have to insert hook into the space, hook the yarn from the back and pull it through to the front :: first through the space, then through the loop on the hook. It takes a bit of practice, it can be fiddly. But persevere.











You continue to work your way around, forming the hex shape in the same way as described above, but making sure that after each cluster you slip stitch into the relevant space on the ajoining hexagon which makes the attachment. When you get to a corner where you would normally chain 2, you make 2 slip stitches instead (in picture above, one slip stitch is made into the corner of the cream hex, and the next slip stitch into the corner of the navy blue hex). This is kind of hard to explain in words...











I so hope that if you are inspired to give this a go, then you will be able to follow my blurb. I've done my very best with this, tried not to be too wordy, and its taken me a very long time to write it all out. But you are worth it, every word! I am happy, SO happy to be spreading the Hexagon Love.


















If you find you need further help, please just leave a comment and I will do my best to reply and help out.

HAPPY CROCHETING!





4 comments:

Vanessa Nina said...

AWESOME Vanessa! Thank you very much! I will definitely give it a try. I think you described everything very well and your pictures will help me compare my result to yours. I cannot start this week, as I have a final on Friday, but I will give it a go starting next weekend. Thanks again for all your hard work!
Love you!

Vanessa said...

No problem Vanessa! I'm glad that you were able to understand all of it :) I can't wait to see what you make! I love you too!

Vanessa Nina said...

Hi Vanessa, I tried it last weekend and it was a total success! I made three hexagons, the first one I didn't count my spokes correctly so it only had 11 *oops* It looks wrong of course because one side is shorter than the others, but the other two I made were just fine and looked similar to yours *lol* I say similar, because mine started to roll up somehow. Maybe it gets better once I start joining them together. I will try to figure out a way to show you a picture!
It was lots of fun trying something new (I usually knit). Thanks again for the inspiration and work you had with the blog!
Love,
Vanessa Nina

Vanessa said...

sometimes if your stitches are too tight they will roll or curl. So make sure you are not making them too tight!