Crocheting in Plain English: The Only Book any Crocheter Will Ever Need

Crocheting in Plain English: The Only Book any Crocheter Will Ever Need

by Maggie Righetti
Crocheting in Plain English: The Only Book any Crocheter Will Ever Need

Crocheting in Plain English: The Only Book any Crocheter Will Ever Need

by Maggie Righetti

eBookSecond Edition, Revised (Second Edition, Revised)

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Overview

The definitive classic on crocheting for years, the first edition of Crocheting in Plain English equipped readers with easy-to-follow, friendly advice on creating their dream crochets. A lifelong crocheting teacher and designer, Maggie Righetti offered both basic principles and step-by-step instructions to get crocheters started and to perfect their techniques.

In this latest edition, completely updated and revised for today's crocheter, Righetti dispenses more of her invaluable wisdom, covering virtually everything you need to know about crochet, including:

* Selecting threads and yarns
* Determining gauge
* Working with the right tools
* How to interpret patterns and instructions
* Increasing and decreasing stitches
* How to fix mistakes
* Basic stitches (chain, double, treble, slip)
* Sixteen different fabric pattern stitches
* Assembling the finished product
* How to block, clean, and care for crocheted articles
* And much, much more!

Each technique is illustrated with clear drawings, charts, or photos. Complete with a new introduction and a detailed glossary of crochet terms, Crocheting in Plain English is one sourcebook no crocheter should do without.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781466869929
Publisher: St. Martin's Publishing Group
Publication date: 04/29/2014
Series: Knit & Crochet
Sold by: Macmillan
Format: eBook
Pages: 288
File size: 15 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

About the Author

Maggie Righetti, a certified knitting and crochet instructor, is the author of Knitting in Plain English and Sweater Design in Plain English. She lives in Southern California.


Maggie Righetti, a certified knitting and crochet instructor, is the author of Crocheting in Plain English, Sweater Design in Plain English and Universal Yarn Finder. She lived in Atlanta, Georgia, where she ran her own knitting design company.

Read an Excerpt

Crocheting in plain English


By Maggie Righetti

St. Martin's Press

Copyright © 2008 Maggie Righetti
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-4668-6992-9



CHAPTER 1

A Living History


I can still remember the first piece of crocheting I ever saw. It was a small yellow doily, surrounded by lavender pansies, in the living room of the parsonage, and my seven- or eight-year-old mind thought that it was the most wonderful creation in the world. "They look just like real pansies!"

"It is only crocheting," sniffed my mother. "Come over here and sit down and be quiet."

Not too long after that, I saw a wondrous white lace table centerpiece. It sat like an angel's crown, stiffly starched into curved ruffles, in the center of a polished dining room table in a home where we had gone to sell eggs. "Look at the beautiful lace, Mama!" To a child inured to the grinding poverty of worn-out, mended, and faded artifacts of the Great Depression, it was the loveliest thing I had ever seen.

"Hush, child, and mind your manners. It is not real lace; it is only crochet," scolded my mother. "Belgian lace is the only real lace," said Mama, who also thought that "genuine oil painting" was the only real art.

"Would you like to touch it, little girl?" asked the nameless woman of the house.

"No," interrupted Mother. "She may not touch anything." Which only made me love the lace more.

And then, for my graduation from the eighth grade, my grandmother in Louisiana sent me a white drawstring bag with bands of inset white roses. "Look at the beautiful lace roses," I cried, happy to own something beautiful for myself.

"It is only crochet," sniffed my Aunt Martha. "Venetian rose point lace is the only real lace."

Undaunted, I asked, "Could I learn how to do it?"

"Poor people do crochet," sniffed my older sister. "Fine ladies do needlepoint." But I treasured that white cotton drawstring handbag embellished with roses and vowed that someday I would make lace like that.

For the second daughter of a struggling middle class couple, born in the midst of the Great Depression, that day came sooner than anyone could have imagined. When I was fourteen, I went to work after school and on weekends at the Woolworth's 5 and 10 cent on California Street in Huntington Park, California. I worked in a dark corner of the store in the Art Needlework Department (at fifty cents an hour) under the tutelage of a stern and proper woman named Margaret Mines. At the end of the first day she said, "Well, if you're going to work here, you're going to have to learn to crochet and to knit. Here —" She handed me a ball of royal blue Coats and Clark Knit-Cro-Sheen, an instruction book, and a ten-cent steel Boye crochet hook.

I learned — because I needed the job. I went home and I struggled, as a young high school student does, with freshman Spanish and first-year algebra and the steel hook and the dark blue thread. It took me a long time to figure out that you have to rotate the throat of the hook down to face the ground in order for the loop to slip off. It seemed that the Spanish alphabet and basic equations (A+B=10) were easier to understand than "sc in 2nd ch sk 2, dc in next st ..."

I did make a purse of double crochet shells out of the dark blue Coats and Clark Knit-Cro-Sheen, then graduated to delicate lace edgings on the many cloth handkerchiefs we used in the days before Kleenex. By the time that was accomplished, my fondest dreams were on other things than roses and starched lace — a scholarship to college and dates with boys to relieve the tedium. I had all I could do to go to school, help out at home, and work besides. There was no time or energy to indulge myself in lavender pansies or elegant white thread roses. It would be years — decades — before I ventured into crochet again.

When my sons began to go off to college, I went to work as "The Knitting Lady" at Buffum's Department Store in Pomona, California, where advice and problem solving were offered to patrons who purchased crocheting, knitting, and needlepoint supplies there.

On the first day, the first customer brought in a badly clobbered attempt to make a cloverleaf pattern edging along with the badly written printed directions. The photo in the brochure and the written directions did not match. I had to figure out what was wrong and then write out the corrected directions. The second customer brought in a half-made vest and the instructions to finish it. "I don't know what 'dec 2 dc in nxt dc' means or how to do it." I didn't either. Together we looked at the photo, reread the instructions, and figured it out.

At that time I weighed 113 pounds and measured 34-24-36 and could wear all styles of wonderful clothes — and I did. I made myself a gorgeous "Irish rose" blouse. (Now my granddaughters Gia and Pilar play "ancient days" dress-up in the attic with it.)

After I wrote Knitting in Plain English (and it was a success), my editor, Barbara Anderson, suggested I write the same kind of book for crocheting. So I did, and this is it. I hope you enjoy!


A Short, Incomplete, and Possibly Inaccurate History of Crocheting

Strangely, there is very little recorded history about crocheting. There are few ancient pieces in museums, no old woodcuts showing men and women sitting around a fire crocheting, and few references to it in the diaries and histories of the time. This lack of references seems strange, because of all the textile arts, crocheting is the easiest, the most versatile, and perhaps the most beautiful.

The first time that researchers have found any mention at all of crochet is in the 1840s, about the time of the Irish potato famine. Oh, there were rudiments of it, learned and lost, in a Southwest Native American culture as an inner structure to coiled and slab pottery, but no real crocheting to make fabric. There is some suggestion that it may have developed in Scotland to make "ruggies," but why so late in the history of women and men when clothing the body has always been a fearsome challenge, and decorating it such a delight?

Why, when all that is required to crochet is a ball of twine and a hooked index finger, was the art so late in appearing in daily life? Surely some ancient shepherd, trying to make the dragging hours pass as he tended his flock, must have taken a broken branch to use as a hook and made loops in a strand of vine.

Surely sailors, idling away the hours on the becalmed sea, must have pulled loop through loop of lanyard to make a simple chain stitch. Perhaps they did, perhaps they did not; we have no record of it.

Some say that the origins of crochet must certainly be French, because "crochet" is a Gallic word, but there are no old crocheted pieces from that country. Others say that surely it has a Scandinavian background, because the name is similar to a word for "crook." The first we know of the skill comes out of Irish convents, where the cloistered nuns made yards and yards of lace to sell to fine English ladies for the benefit of the victims of the potato blight. A church bazaar to raise money for the poor was the birthplace of crochet! I smile when I think of it; how far we have come, what little distance we have traveled. There is a saying, "The more things change, the more they stay the same."

Still, crocheting burst upon the world at a time when the seams of the old world were themselves bursting, and at a time when there was an explosion in the mind of mankind. Books and periodicals were in print and available to almost all who could read. Travel was common, bringing with it an interchange of ideas across borders and continents. Both books and travel fed the expanding minds, and inventions were being devised everywhere for every purpose. Suddenly the long-dormant human mind began to ask, "What if ...?" "Suppose we try ...?" "I wonder what happens when ...?" And think not that this explosion of curiosity and inventiveness took place only in the mind of man. It occurred in the mind of woman as well. While her husband devised new ways of plowing fields, pumping water, and harnessing energy, women explored new possibilities of preparing and preserving food, protecting the bodies of their families from the cold, and of making lace in the air with a simple hook and thread.

Nameless women in the British Isles and Europe and the Americas took this simple idea of pulling loop through loop, expanded upon it, and made it into a fine art. Unbound by tradition and unfettered by restrictive social structure, it was the pioneering women of the United States who did the most with the new textile craft. They cunningly devised spaces and places and made filet cloth with which to drape their windows. They made spirals and pinwheels and popcorn blocks; they put the blocks together and draped their beds in elegance. They worked their stitches loosely and lacily and draped their bodies with wondrous shawls and capelets. They worked their stitches firmly and evenly and clothed their families with caps and hats and slippers and hoods, weskits and waistcoats, scarves and soakers.

Crocheting made sense. It was so much better and faster than weaving and cutting up the cloth. And they made lace: lace to lighten the drudgery of the day, lace for the yokes of shifts and nighties, lace for corset covers and blouses, lace to cover the raw edges of washcloths and towels, lace for the edgings of pillows and sheets, lace for the hope chest of a frontier bride, and lace for the clothing of the new baby. All that was necessary was a spool of thread or a hank of yarn, a hook of wood or ivory, imagination, and inventiveness. The skill was portable; the results rapid.

These nameless women sent drawings and instructions of their creations to New Idea Woman's Magazine, Godey's Lady's Book, and The Ladies' World, where other women read about this newfangled art form, then adapted and improved upon it.

I wish I knew who these nameless pioneer women of crochet were, and where and how they lived. But most of all I wish I knew how they got their ideas and how they devised and planned their marvelous new creations. Unfortunately, no one will ever know who they were and how they came to create such a fine textile craft. We can revere and honor them only by carrying on their tradition of creativity and courage.

How, then, did crocheting get the negative connotation that I heard when I was a child? "It is not real lace; it is only crochet!" Whence came the put-down? Just as a prophet in his own land is without honor, so crochet in its homeland was without appreciation. Perhaps the disparagement began when the Flapper Girls of the 1920s bobbed their hair and kicked off all traces of the old with their high-button shoes. (Anybody could crochet; not everybody could do the Charleston.) Maybe the poverty of the 1930s Depression made women wish for fine imported things. (Crocheting was cheap; you didn't need a lot of money to do it.) And then World War II burst upon the scene and everything changed. Men went off to war; women went to work outside the home; and nobody had time for making lace in the air. The art of crocheting almost died. Then, in the late 1960s, vests crocheted with yarn began to appear. A little later the granny square blossomed into all sorts of sizes and shapes, and crocheting was reborn to a new generation of handworkers. But these handworkers came from a land of plenty, from a world of strictly following instructions, from a discipline of going by the book and never making do. Though today we have a new appreciation of crochet as an art form, it is hard to let loose our creativity.

This is what this book is about: carrying on a fine tradition of creativity; keeping alive and well the spirit of experimentation; understanding the basics and building upon them.

CHAPTER 2

Dreams Are the Stuff That Reality Is Made of


Bloody Mary sang it out loud and clear standing on a coral island in South Pacific, "You got to have a dream! If you don't have a dream, how you gonna have a dream come true?" And before you begin to crochet a new project you must have a dream of what the finished thing will be like. Without it, you will not have the vision and stick-to-itiveness to complete the article.

But there is a difference between honest dreams and sheer fantasy. Fantasy can lead you astray, as it did me long ago when I saw a friend's grandmother crocheting a square for a wonderful bedspread. It was shortly after I began to work at Woolworth's; I knew the basic stitches, but I had never made anything more than the edging on a linen handkerchief and a small shell-stitch handbag. The grandmother's fingers flew adeptly and a square materialized before my dazzled eyes. I thought surely I could do that, too.

My fantasy failed to take into account that there would be hundreds of squares to make, and I didn't have time left from school, housecleaning, and work to make even two. Certainly in those days I did not have the money to buy all of the thread at once to ensure having the same dye lot. But most of all, my desire for an embellished bedspread to enliven my Spartan bedroom failed to acknowledge that I was a person who was easily bored and that I would tire of making the identical square over and over. Thank goodness I didn't have the money to purchase the thread. It would still be sitting in its box these forty years later. I'm not the type to make a bedspread. I need constant change and challenge.

But a thing too challenging may be a turnoff, too. I want some repetition along the way. Having to follow every line on a graph or keep track of each and every row also drives me up the wall. My neighbor, Elizabeth, loves it. She is not happy without a pencil and pad at her side, marking every row.

The difference, then, between honest dreams and fantasy is honesty with ourselves and an understanding of the project. As you continue through this book, you will gain that knowledge of crocheted projects. Honesty with oneself is something that takes a lifetime of self-scrutiny to acquire. Begin now to look at the inner workings of you. Are you, like me, easily bored with making the same pattern over and over? Or are you reassured by repetition, finding relaxation and comfort in letting your fingers do their own thing while your mind peacefully floats? There is no right or wrong answer; there is only honest acknowledgment of what we are.

More than this, we change. And that is okay, for without change there can be no progress. If you decide, halfway through those hundreds of bedspread squares, that you no longer enjoy the repetition and you can't stand to make another square, stop making them! It is far more honest to know that you are no longer the same person you were when you started than to force yourself to remain in an old mold and deny growth. Call the thing a baby crib cover or donate the unfinished project to a retirement home or girls' club and go on to something else.

There is another facet of fantasy that can lead us astray, and that is being fooled by photographs. The gorgeous-looking sweater on the magazine cover, slathered with popcorn stitches and stand-out ridges, may be too heavy to wear. There is a saying among handworkers that when they are beginning and in the midst of making a sweater, they wish it were crochet because it is faster, easier, and more fun. But when the thing is finished, they wish it were knit because it would be lighter in weight, more flexible, and easier to wear.

Crocheting uses one-third more yarn than knitting, and anything crocheted will weigh much more than the same article knitted.


This is no reason not to crochet sweaters. They can be wonderful! But do be aware that they can be heavy. If they are made of chunky-weight yarn in a firm stitch, they may be unwearable.

Photographs can deceive in other ways, too. I remember a set of heavy cotton yarn table mats. The table setting looked lovely in the picture in the magazine and raised ridges of crochet gave a wonderful texture. I wondered why I had never thought of that idea before. When I finished one mat, I knew. The raised ridges caused tumblers of water to topple over if they were not set down exactly in between them. This project was makeable and not too heavy for the purpose, but it was unusable. Again, these are the kinds of things you will learn in this book.

The lovely afghan, fluffy and soft in subtle shades of mohair, may seem like just the thing to make your sister-in-law for a birthday present. But it may cost so much for the yarn that the gift may overwhelm the receiver and cause her to dislike you for having done it. Price should color our dreams with reality.

And how long will it take? Is it an easy evening's or week's worth of time? We all know about the newborn's layette that was completed as the baby took its first steps and the tablecloth that was finished long after the family had moved and sold the dining room table. It doesn't mean that these projects were not worthwhile and worth doing. It does mean that we were fantasizing and not dreaming realistically.

One must dream. You must see the finished project in your head before a single stitch is made, else no stitch will ever be taken. Dreams are the stuff reality is made of, but dream wisely.

In choosing a project you must first know yourself, your temperament, and your available time. Regardless of how much or how little money you have, price is always a factor. You must also know enough about crocheting to know whether or not the project will be practical and usable, or just look-at-able. As you honestly dream, these things will come to you. Dream about it, and then "there's nothing to it but to do it."


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Crocheting in plain English by Maggie Righetti. Copyright © 2008 Maggie Righetti. Excerpted by permission of St. Martin's Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Introduction: A Crochet Teacher Tells All

Part One: Before You Begin to Crochet

1. A Living History

A Short, Incomplete, and Possibly Inaccurate History of Crocheting

2. Dreams Are the Stuff That Reality Is Made of

3. Of Spiderwebs and Halyard Lines

The Threads and Yarns We Use

Sizing Systems for Threads

Sizing Systems for Yarns

Quality

Yarn Finishes

Color and Dye Lot

4. Hooks Can Harpoon You

Other Things About Hooks

Hook Sizing Systems

The Right Hook for the Project

Today's Hooks for Today's Crocheter

5. Don't Be Gouged by Gauge

Things That Affect Gauge

How to Make and Measure a Gauge Swatch

6. Patterns and Instructions

Why Patterns Are Abbreviated

Patterns Do Make Sense

Have Someone Else Read the Pattern Aloud

Make Yourself a Pattern Booklet

Errors Creep In

Leaping Over Problems

7. Supply and Demand

Choosing a Container

Supplies to Carry in Your Bag

Part Two: Details, Details, Details

8. Making Music with Your Hands

Supplies for Beginners

A Reminder

The Slip Loop

How to Hold the Left Hand

How to Hold the Right Hand

9. The Chain Stitch

10. The First Real Stitch

The Single Crochet Stitch

Turning Chains

Row Two

A Definition

When You Want to Stop

Some Special Words About Charts

Buttonholes

11. Making It Softer and Longer

The Half-Double Crochet Stitch

12. And Longer

The Double Crochet Stitch

Things Don't Always Stack Up Straight

The Edges of Double Crochet

13. And Longer Still

The Treble Crochet and Other Long Stitches

14. The Slip Stitch

Uses of the Slip Stitch

15. Adding New Yarn

When to Add New Yarn

Joining Yarn in the Middle of a Piece

Joining Yarn at the End of a Row

Plan Ahead

Hiding In the Ends Securely

16. Your Cup Runneth Over

Increasing

To Increase Is to Make More

Two Ways to Increase

Making More than One Stitch in an Old One

Adding Single Stitches at the Ends of Rows

Adding Many Stitches at the Ends of Rows

17. Gathering in the Flock

Decreasing

Single Crochet Decreases

Double Crochet Decreases

The Puff Stitch

Treble Crochet Decreases

Double Treble Crochet Decreases

18. Fishing with Your Hook in Other Waters

You Don't Have to Work Through Both Loops

You Don't Have to Put Your Hook in the Next Stitch

You Can Put Your Hook into a Space Instead of a Place

You Can Put Your Hook in Another Row

You Can Work Around Stitches Instead of into Them

You Can Make a Circle

You Can Go Backwards from Left to Right

Picots

You Can Remove the Hook and Insert It Somewhere Else

Popcorn Stitch

Another Way to Make a Picot

19. Improvise and Invent

Making It Work

If It Isn't Right, Change It!

20. Oops!

Leave Mistakes In

Make a Pattern of Your Mistakes

Make a Compensating Increase for an Omitted Stitch

Make a Corresponding Decrease for an Extra Stitch

Open It Up

Rip Back and Start Over

Try to Avoid Errors

21. Fancy That!

A Small Collection of Plain and Fancy Pattern Stitches

Some Terms Defined

Mesh Fabrics

Filet Crochet

An Open V

Two Simple Double Crochet Shells

Combining a Shell and V

Brunswick Stew

The Ripple Afghan Stitch

Fishnet

Arch Stitch

Herringbone

Diagonal Popcorns

Lovers' Knots

Spiderweb

Up-and-Down Stitch

My Lady's Fan

Queen Anne's Lace

22. Making Medallions and Motifs

Black-eyed Susans

Granny Squares

Spiral Pinwheel Hexagon

Irish Rose Square with Picots

Pineapple in the Square

A Medallion of Many Uses

23. Lavishing Laces on Linens

Picoted Double Crochet Shells

Morning Sunrise

Simple and Sweet

Insert or Apply with Love

Festive Fans

Plenty of Pineapples

Violets

24. Precious Little Jewels to Add

Cabbage Rose

Pretty Pansies

Sweet Double Daisy

Splendid Chrysanthemum

Star with Five Points

Lucky Four-Leafed Clover

Butterfly

25. Multicolor Jacquard Crochet

A Bunch of Balloons

Never-Ending Triangles

Plaids

Two-Color Plaid

Three-Color Plaid



Part Three: After the Last Stitch Is Finished

26. Putting It All Together

Things to Think About in Joining

Prepare Yourself for the Job with the Right Tools

Use the Yarn the Item Was Made with to Make the Seams

Yarn Wears Out as You Make Seams with It

Some of the Most Common Ways of Joining

Getting Rid of the Tail Ends

Working Edgings on Crochet

27. Finishing Touches

Fringe

Tassels

Pom-poms

Twisted Monk's Cord

Crocheted Cords

Yarn Buttons

28. The Care and Feeding of Crocheted Articles

Cleaning

Dry Cleaning

Washing

Hand Washing

Drying Flat

Machine Washing

Machine Drying

Blocking

Never Hang Crocheted Articles

Part Four: Learning Lessons

29. Sampler Scarf

30. The Easiest Sweater

31. Additional Projects

Table/Tray Mat

Treble Crochet Striped Afghan

Raglan Baby Sweater

Bonnet

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