This is a great baby blanket pattern, its easy and quick. If your just learning to crochet you shouldn’t be daunted by this one. You can make your blanket in any colour combination that works for you, or you can use just one colour. I have included the instructions for colour changing you can ignore them if you’ve chosen to make this in one colour.
I’ve been working hard to design my own patterns and seeing how I get on with more complicated patterns. So when a lady I work with announced her pregnancy I couldn’t resist a pretty hat and blanket. I chatted with her about her nursery colours and no surprise she has decorated in grey and mustard. Grey is very fashionable in the UK for babies just now and mustard is one of my favourite colours, so bright and warm. She is a modern, fashionable young lady so I new granny squares wouldn’t suit. She has decided on a surprise so doesn’t know what she’s having, this is what I made…..
There are many,many opportunities for changing the colours to suit the person you are making this for. I do love these colours though, I think they work really well.
You can find the hat pattern here – Lacy Crochet I added a picot to the last row so it matches the blanket edging. I haven’t quite got my head around the increases for a hat yet.
V-Stitch Baby Blanket
Supplies
1 ball King Cole Pricewise Double Knit, Oyster (145), 100g, 282m – Colour A
1 ball King Cole Pricewise Double Knit, White (001) 100g, 282m – Colour B
1 ball King Cole Pricewise Double Knit, Mustard (1740), 100g 282m – Colour C
4mm hook
Yarn needle
Scissors
Special Stitches
Picot – dc,ch 2 insert hook into the first ch of the ch 2, yo, pull through all loops on hook
V-Stitch – 1 trc, ch 1 , 1 trc in the same stitch
Pattern
Foundation row – Chain 102
Row 1 – (Colour A) 1 trc, miss four stitches, counts as a trc and a ch 1 space, v-stitch in the next stitch”, repeat to the end of the row finishing with 1trc in the last stitch.
Row 2 – ch3, v-stitch in the ch 1 space of the first v-stitch in row 1, repeat to the end of the row, 1trc in the last st.
Row 3-5 – repeat row 2. Change colour in the last st of the row, yo, insert the hook, yo pul through 2 loops, take colour B yo and pull through the final loop.
Row 6 – (Colour B) ch3, v-stitch in the ch 1 space of the first v-stitch in the previous row, repeat to the end of the row, 1trc in the last st. Change colour in the last st of the row.
Row 7 – (Colour C) ch3, v-stitch in the ch 1 space of the first v-stitch in the previous row, repeat to the end of the row, 1trc in the last st.
Row 8 – repeat Row 7
Row 9 – repeat Row 6, change colour to colour A in the last st of the row.
Repeat Row 1 to 9, 7 times – 72 rows in total
Row 73 – 77 Repeat rows 1 – 5
Border
Row 1 – (continue in colour A) *dc in each st to the corner, dc, ch 2, dc*, repeat * to * to the end, sl st to join ch 1.
Row 2 – htc in each* st to the corner, htc, ch1, htc*, repeat * to * to the end, sl st to join ch 1.
Row 3 – htc in each* st to the corner, htc, ch1, htc*, repeat * to * to the end, sl st to join ch 1.
Row 4 – (Colour B) htc in each* st to the corner, htc, ch1, htc*, repeat * to * to the end, sl st to join ch 1.
Row 5 – (Colour C) htc in each* st to the corner, htc, ch1, htc*, repeat * to * to the end, sl st to join ch 1.
Row 6 – repeat Row 4.
Rows 7 & 8 (Colour A) htc in each* st to the corner, htc, ch1, htc*, repeat * to * to the end, sl st to join ch 1.
Row 9 (Colour B) picot in the first stitch, , *miss one st, picot* repeat * to * to the first corner, picot twice in the ch 2 of the last row, picot in the next st, * picot, miss one st, picot*, repeat * to * to the end using the first corner pattern for the next three corners. sl st to join cast off.
Finish by weaving in the ends and steam blocking after washing and drying.
Stitch Diagram Part A Blanket
* see note below
Stitch Diagram Part B Border
*See note below
*Note – due to the software used for the stitch diagrams the legends are in American Terms see Crochet Terms UK to US conversion for translation to English Terms
Lovely! Thanks for including the diagram – I like them better than written patterns. 😀
You are so welcome I’ve spent hours learning how to use the software because I too prefer the diagrams they are so much easier to read and follow 🙂