Why I usually do short repeats when my amount of yarn is limited, but I didn’t this time–I like that tree motif, I wasn’t ready to quit doing it. Besides, it’s a pun: red woods.
So I thought I’d run the math by him.
Me: See, I’ve used 33 g of the current 100 g and done 15 rows for it so that means I get 45 rows per skein. Maybe 46. It’s 38 rows per motif repeat. I have a full skein after this plus 33 g, left over from Ryan’s baby’s blanket, I started those 15 rows at four rows into leaf set #5, and I want seven sets of leaves. And I bought the yarn–how old is Margo now? Two and a half?–so matching that shade of Ravelry Red would be hard. Do I have enough to do that full last motif?
The resident computer scientist: Your what hurts? No seriously, you’re breaking my brain here. What?
Well, hey, I thought that was all pretty straightforward, but then knitting requires being good at math.
Actually, I think that means I’d come up 5 g short plus the cast-off. Alright, let’s see how it blocks out to after the sixth set. Which I’m about to start. (And yes, the eye prefers odd numbers visually. Maybe shorter trees on top for the seventh?)
—
Edit: I just finished the fifth repeat plus a purl row and weighed the yarn: 175 g total left. If 100g=45 rows, then 175g=78.75 rows, two motifs are 38×2=76 rows, plus the castoff. And preferably a purl row beforehand. So: maybe?
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Playing yarn chicken, are we? I hope it works out. And, yes, visually we like odd numbers.
Comment by Anne 11.10.24 @ 12:27 amBy my calculations with your edited info, you should have about 4 grams or enough for about 1.8 rows left, so not too scary of a yarn chicken race. I hope!
Comment by DebbieR 11.10.24 @ 9:44 pmLeave a comment
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