The first foot

As I have been working on the scrap yarn crochet ripple blanket, I have been reminded of projects past.

In just this first foot of a blanket the yarn scraps that have passed through my hands and over my hook have reminded me of many crochet adventures.

Some of them are easier to identify than others.

A particular shade of green from one of several skeins of vintage yarn I acquired from my youngest son’s trumpet teacher is was one of the greens used in a Hilbert Curve inspired afghan I made for the 2010 North Carolina State Fair:

a hilbert curve crochet blanket made with multicolor crochet circles and crochet squares
A Hilbert Curve in crochet

Some of the red, orange, yellow, green, blue, and purple no doubt hail from this Tetrisghan I finished in May of 2013:

a tetris inspired crochet blanket made from crochet squares
The completed Tetrisghan

And some of the more muted and moodier colors were probably from my 2012 North Carolina State Fair effort, a piece that was inspired by a photo of an Amish quilt I saw in a book I perused at one of my youngest son’s trumpet lessons:

A textured crochet blanket inspired by an Amish quilt and worked in crochet squares, crochet rectangles and crochet triangles
An overview of my 2012 state fair crochet project

So today, when I was getting ready to pack up my scrap yarn crochet ripple project, I got out the tape measure to see how far I had gotten:

The first foot of a ripple crochet blanket made with yarn scraps
The first foot of a scrap yarn crochet ripple afghan
a detail of the ripple crochet blanket made with yarn scraps tied end to end
Detail of measure the scrap yarn crochet ripple afghan

It turns out that I had managed to hit the one-foot mark which means that I still have quite a way to go before I can put this blanket to use, but here is how it looked when I took a moment to step back and look at it in full before the sunset:

An overview of the ripple crochet blanket made with yarn scraps
An overview of the scrap yarn crochet ripple afghan

Each crochet project is a journey all its own. This project, however, will not only be its own adventure it will have the memories of projects past worked into each stitch.

Related posts:
Day 3: In which I finish my 2010 North Carolina State Fair Project
A newly completed Tetrisghan
In which I complete my 2012 North Carolina State Fair project with 30 minutes to spare