Prelude | Part One | Part Two | Part Three | Part Four | Part Five

Then…
… now

This blanket was a long time in the making, and no mistake. I started on 13 July and finished on 29 September. This was mostly because there were bursts of activity and then long pauses. But baby gifts come with a deadline, so I had to get my act together and push through to the end.

Throughout the knit I’ve been saying ‘it’ll block out just fine’ but I didn’t truly believe that until I saw it with my own eyes. It was a crazy transformation, which I’ve tried to document.

It came off the needles folded completely in half. As I was still knitting, G (in all sincerity) asked ‘are you making a bag?’. Here it is, freshly finished:

A bit of a shake (by which I mean vigorous shaking, flattening and pleading) did flatten it out, but there was still a very tall mountain in the middle:

It was on the wrong side, too, so it would be difficult to sell as a feature.

I have it a bath with some Soak, then spun it dry in the machine. It’s a superwash merino that says ‘do not soak’ on the label but I wanted it to loosen and grow, so I disregarded the instructions. Immediately upon coming out of the machine, it had gained a lot of chill and looked like this:

There was still a volcano in the middle, as one Ravelry maker called it, but much less. Here’s the overhead view before and after soak and spin.

Before
After

Then I fed blocking wires through each side (they were just the right length!) and pinned aggressively. Once dry, I gave it a gentle steam, to try and get a bit of length into those leaves. I felt that the blocking had made them look squat.

While we’re talking about the leaves: yes, I closed up the yarn overs by knitting them through the back loops, so they don’t have the lacy appearance that the pattern intended. This wasn’t really done on purpose, I just got into the way of knitting those back loops on the increase stitches. But it’s consistent and I always feel a bit wary of holes in baby blankets anyway.

Once again, blocking is a wonderful household magic of which I will never tire.

Also, behold the long-awaited owls!

I finished with six rows of garter before binding off, adding some stretch with a yo in every third bind-off stitch. I later un-did tit bind off and re-did with an Icelandic bind off, which I thought would give extra stretch. Honestly I’m not sure if it did! But it looked really neat and tidy.

I realised after I’d finished all the garter rows (with 524 stitches in each row, mind you) that I hadn’t increased at the corners to keep the square shape… It looked alright but Idid notice, once off the wires, that those corners curled in a little (and that the middle wanted to stand up again). That’s why I changed the bind off and I was a bit happier with it after that, though honestly it looked better on the wires than off! So often the way.

This is the Olympic Forest Baby Blanket (Ravelry link) by Verybusymonkey Designs (Designerโ€™s site). I made it in Drops Merino Extra Fine in Forest (appropriate), and used a 4mm circular needle throughout. I used up 343g of yarn, which in this instance is about 720 yards. 43g of that was used up just in the final six garter rows plus bind off.


19 responses to “Olympic Forest Baby Blanket: Part Six (It is Done!)”

  1. Anita Avatar

    Wow this turned out so gorgeous! Blocking is such a blessing, but your knitting is the real star here. I can’t get enough of this pretty blanket! ๐Ÿ’•

    Liked by 1 person

    1. CA Avatar

      It’s nice, isn’t it? I actually had a bit of a struggle with it after it came off the wires but it’s now definitely FINISHED! ๐Ÿ˜

      Liked by 1 person

  2. Magic Knitter Avatar

    absolutely gorgeous! I love the little owl detail as well!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. CA Avatar

      The owls are my absolute favourites ๐Ÿฆ‰

      Like

  3. Kat Avatar

    Wow!!! What a stunning transformation! (I will be ordering yarn later this month to make one of these!) I absolutely love it! I hope your recipient loves being snuggled in the branches with the owls! :)

    Liked by 1 person

    1. CA Avatar

      Thanks Kat! It was quite a nice make, not too complex but enough to be interesting. Can’t wait to see your interpretation ๐Ÿ˜Š

      Like

  4. Laura Kate Avatar

    A really wonderful finish.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. CA Avatar

      Thanks so much!

      Like

  5. knittingissofun Avatar

    It looks fantastic. The little owls are wonderful. Not in a million years would I have thought it could be blocked flat. Thanks for sharing your process. Amazing.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. CA Avatar

      Hahaha I was determined to give the blocking my absolute all! After these pics and this post, I did find it was starting to sit up in the middle again so it got washed and pinned once more, after a looser bind off. It looked great then and, even if it starts to sit up in future, it still stretches easily so will always look sweet wrapped round a little one.

      Like

  6. Donna Avatar
    Donna

    Beautiful job, and such an interesting process. Thanks for sharing! The owls are the cutest thing.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. CA Avatar

      Thank you! They are very sweet aren’t they? ๐Ÿฆ‰

      Like

    1. CA Avatar

      Thank you! I’ve always thought the pattern has fairy tale vibes ๐Ÿ˜Š

      Liked by 1 person

  7. Julia Avatar

    It looks FANTASTIC!! The baby better take this blanket to university and use it throughout its life, may it be long and happy. What a wonderful, beautiful blanket – tierney is right, it IS magical! Such beautiful work. โ™ฅ

    Liked by 1 person

    1. CA Avatar

      Thank you! I certainly hope it’s well loved and if it ends up traveling about with its person, all the better ๐Ÿ˜Š

      Liked by 1 person

  8. quiteayarnblog Avatar

    That is just beautiful! The owls are so cute, and it is just amazing! Miraculous transformation after blocking for sure :)

    Liked by 1 person

    1. CA Avatar

      Thank you! ๐Ÿฆ‰

      Liked by 1 person

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