Showing posts with label edging. Show all posts
Showing posts with label edging. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Mom's Crocheted Shell Edging














The edging above was my Mom's old standby. She used it to put an edging on pillowcases or a handkerchief, even a shawl. I use a variation of it to edge baby blankets made from the Grandma's Dishcloth pattern posted elsewhere on this blog.

If the edging will be on fabric, such as a pillowcase, you will need to lay a foundation row of single crochet around the edge of the fabric. If your crochet hook is too dull to punch through the fabric, use a darning needle to start the opening. Space the stitches evenly. You will want a total number divisible by 5.

Definitions of abbreviations:
sl -- slip stitch
sc -- single crochet
dc -- double crochet
ch -- chain stitch

Openwork foundation:

1st row: * Ch 5. Skip four stitches. Sc in next stitch.* Repeat between ** to end. Adjust stitches at the end to accommodate the pattern. End with sc where first Ch 5 began.
2nd row: Sl 2 *ch5, sc in center of 5-st. chain. ch5* Repeat between ** to end. End with sc at base of first ch5.

Repeat row 2 three to five times, then finish with one of the Shell Rows. The sample used 3 repeats of row 2 and the Ruffled Shell row.

Ruffled shell row: ch3, dc 4 in first sc, ch 1, sc in center of 5-st. chain, *ch1, dc5 in sc, ch1, sc in center of 5-st.chain* Repeat to end.

OR

Flat shell row: ch3, dc 4 in first sc, ch 1, sc in center of 5-st. chain, *ch1, dc5 in center of next 5-st. chain, ch1, sc in center of 5-st.chain* Repeat to end.


If you want a picot in the center of your shell, use this pattern for the shell part:

Picot shell: ch1, dc3, ch 3, sl last chain to loop of last dc (picot is formed), dc3, ch1