The adventure in vanilla continues

If I chose all of my projects, I probably not be working on my current project; it would seem that sometimes a project chooses us. Such is the case for me with the off-white textured afghan that I think of as my “adventure in vanilla.

I started work on it yesterday, although to say that I started on it yesterday is not entirely accurate.

My first foray into this project was many years ago when I was unable to completely decipher the directions or the design, but coming to the project a decade later, I have now developed the skills to read the directions and understand the underlying principles of the project’s design.

Built on this central motif:

small textured crochet square
The foundation motif of Maggy Ramsay’s Textured Crochet Squares Afghan

Maggy Ramsay’s design is essentially four small squares joined and then edged to create a medium square.

Here is my first medium square which I completed this morning, next to four additional small squares I made for what will form the core of what will be the second medium square:

crochetbug, textured crochet squares, textured crochet afghan, textured crochet throw, textured crochet blanket

Here I have joined the four small squares into two strips:

crochetbug, textured crochet squares, textured crochet afghan, textured crochet throw, textured crochet blanket
One newly minted medium square next to four small squares joined into two strips

and here, I have joined the two strips into one square which is now ready to be edged and made into yet another medium square:

One newly minted medium square next to four small squares joined into a square that will be edged to make another medium square for this adventure in vanilla
One newly minted medium square next to four small squares joined into a square that will be edged to make another medium square for this adventure in vanilla

Once I complete four medium squares, those square will then be joined and edged to form a large square.

I will keep making small squares to form medium squares to form large squares until I have four large squares.

Finally, the four large squares will be assembled and then edged to form the completed afghan.

There are still quiet a few stitches between now and the end of this project, but I am looking forward to all that I will learn along the way.

Video Tutorial: How to make the crochet textured square/magic motif

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