Sunday, January 29, 2017

Heirloom Afghan take #482

I have lost count of how many times I started, frogged, and restarted trying to make an heirloom project with the yarn that was my grandmother's, the yarn an aunt sent me when I was 14, my mother's yarn when she could no longer knit or crochet, and the remnants of my own projects.  I tried a granny square blanket before I learned tension control, so the squares came out wildly different sizes. I tried a popcorn afghan but became quickly bored with the pattern. I tried a two strand single crochet bedspread pairing the heirloom yarns with white, and again became bored long before completing the project.  I tried several iterations of rugs, from 3 strands up to 6 strands, all of which buckled or somehow went wrong at approximately 5 feet across.


I'd lost my crojo for several years now, but I decided to try again recently.  I had all these huge balls of yarn, mostly 6 strand, waiting in a tote to be dealt with.  I tried separating the strands, but quickly became frustrated with that and wound them back up into 6 strand balls again.

I don't know what on Earth possessed me to try to make a California King bedspread with this yarn, but I did, and I was determined.

It took 1 week for me to have a panel 120" long and 40" wide... and I'd already exhausted the heirloom stash.  I had a big 13 pound strip, an inch thick, and a LONG way still to go.  I tied it off and decided to use my stash yarn to make 2 more panels for a complete 120" X 120" Heirloom Afghan that would have the true heirloom section in the middle.


I finished the second panel in less than a week. The third took about the same amount of time.
By the time the panels were done, I had exhausted almost my entire stash, and I had to buy more yarn for a border.
I whip-stitched the panels together, and stopped without doing the border for now.  It's roughly 45 pounds of yarn, and I'm not sure it needs a border.  I kind of like it right how it is.


28 years, the stashes of 4 family members and one friend, 3 weeks of intensive work, and I finally have my Heirloom Afghan completed.
A true work of love.

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