Tuesday, 5 April 2016

Frida's Flowers - Block One

So today is the day (at last!) when you can download the first pattern for the Frida's Flowers Blanket pattern for free by following this link.

I am delighted that Stylecraft asked me to design another Crochet Along project for them following the success of the LilyPond Blanket last year. The inspiration for the design has been sitting at the back of my mind for a while and I knew that the Stylecraft Classique cotton would be a perfect choice for this project. The shades are bright and crisp and the yarn has fantastic stitch definition making it perfect for the 3D aspect of some of the flower designs. 


The image above is from the Love Knitting web site - they always take such lovely pics!

My design process is pretty slow and I estimate that this project took me approximately 4 months to design from start to finish. I design almost all my pieces from scratch and on the whole I do not use existing pattern motifs as the basis for my design, so for every motif that became part of the blanket there are many other trial pieces and test scraps that didn’t make it into the final design.

I will admit that the prospect of following Lily Pond with a new design was pretty daunting. I have tried my best to look at the positives and the negatives of the last design and think about how best this new project can work as a Crochet Along project. Like the Lily Pond Blanket, this project starts with the simpler pieces and the motifs get progressively harder, but this time the motifs are made solely in the round which should hopefully cut down on some of the tension issues some crocheters had when working through the Lily Pond. I have written a long piece about tension and why it is so important so please read this before you embark on the project.


I was introduced to the art of Frida Kahlo when I was in my late teens and was taken to an exhibition of the work of her husband Diego Rivera. I adore his work and was awed by his massive murals depicting the struggles of the Mexican people and the revolution. Rivera and Frida were incredibly famous as a pair of artists fighting for the rights of their people, but they had quite different painting styles; whilst Rivera painted on a huge scale with a watery, almost romantic style, his wife’s paintings were often brutal and maybe a little crude. Kahlo used bright colours and chose very personal subject matter for her paintings, many of which feature herself as the main character.

Whilst I have always admired Frida’s art, it is the woman herself that I am fascinated by. She was a tough person, who, despite her tiny frame and poor health, battled her way though her life. She is a symbol of feminine force and many people now recognize her as a huge figure within the women’s rights movement.




Frida was a very colourful person and so I have chosen to base the design for this new crochet along on her costumes and the floral aspect of her paintings. Frida wore bright traditional style Mexican clothes at a time when this was very much against convention. She wore her hair long with flowers and ribbons interlaced and she was a lover of embroidery and hand made items, often layering her clothes to create some really stunning combinations of colour and style.





The Frida’s Flowers blanket takes it’s main inspiration from traditional Mexican embroidery work with the bright shades sitting against the dark back ground. I have used Black within a blanket design for the very first time and hope that you will all forgive me for this when you’re finding it a little harder to see your stitches!

I am really proud of this new design and hope that you will enjoy working through the new crochet along.

Janie x


Block One - White Cosmos

Frida Kahlo loved her home and garden. The ‘Blue House’ where she was born and that she later shared with Diego Rivera is now preserved as the Frida Kahlo museum. The image below shows Frida in her beloved gardens where she spent a lot of time and surrounded herself with native Mexican plants and flowers.



Photo by Sally Wilson

The first motif is pretty straightforward with a small cosmos flower sitting at the centre of a pretty plain treble crochet motif. We have cosmos in our garden in the summer, but they are a native flower of Mexico and are bound to have grown in Frida’s garden at Casa Azul (the blue house) in Mexico City which is now the Frida Kahlo Museum.

Use this motif as the template for all your others and try your best to make sure the width measurement is as close to 20cm (4in) as possible. You will need to make sure you check your stitch count at the end of each round and keep an eye on the consistency of your treble crochet stitches. If you find your piece is coming up too big or too small take a minute to read the notes about how you work a treble stitch as well as the notes on tension.

Below I have posted all the step by step images so that you can see them in a larger format.


Image above shows the flower after Round 2 once 6 flower petals have been made


To make the next round you need to work behind the petals of the flower you have just made. Fold the petal forward and insert your hook into the skipped stitch and make one chain to join your yarn.




The image above shows the motif after Round 4. Make sure you have 30sts (including the 3ch at the beginning of the round) at the end of this round. you should also have 6 chain spaces.



Image above shows motif at end of Round 5


Image above shows motif at end of Round 6


Image above shows motif at end of Round 7


Image above shows motif at end of Round 8 - make sure you count your stitches at the end of each round.


On Round 9 you need to work 3 stitches into the chain space.


Make sure you change your hook at the end of the last round. Colour coded hooks help when you're changing hook sizes. If you don't have hooks with colour coded handles you could dab some different shades of nail polish onto the handle of each hook.


Make sure you measure your motif once it is complete. It should measure 19.5cm at the widest point. if you are .5 of a cm out (either bigger or smaller) this shouldn't present you with too much of an issue so long as each of your remaining pieces measure similarly. 

If your piece is 1cm or more bigger or smaller you are advised to try using a different sized hook to achieve a closer tension to mine.

You need to make 4 main motifs and 4 of the following half motifs:


The flower for the half motif is made in the same way as the main motif.


This motif is worked in rows not rounds, so you need to turn at the end of each row



The image above shows the motif after Row 5



Make sure you change your hook size after Row 7


As with the main motif, make sure you measure across the widest point.
You need to make 4 half motifs.

I always sew my ends in as I work so that each piece is completely finished before I start crocheting a new piece. I know that a lot of people hate sewing in as they go, but it really does make the finishing process so much easier.

I hope you enjoy working through your first set of Frida's Flowers patterns.
The next set of patterns will be ready for you to download from the Stylecraft web site in 2 weeks time on the 19th April.

Have Fun!
Jane x