Mystery Project Finished!

I can’t believe it’s finally finished. I thought it would take a lot longer than it did. Here was my secret: double strands and a big hook. Everyone should try this!

A lot of you guessed (although, not in the comments! *shakes a fist*) correctly that this is a Settlers of Catan blanket. To answer the most frequently asked question about it: no, I won’t be making the cities and settlements and roads, etc. It would take forever and besides, the goal here wasn’t to make a soft, giant, usable playing board. The goal was to make a blanket!

Mission accomplished:
Settlers of Catan Blanket

For those not familiar with the game, here is a very blurry (yet glare-free!) picture of the board set up to match the layout of the blanket:
blurry picture of the Settlers of Catan board game
Just line up the red arrows in each picture to make the colours match.

Here is a closer look at the different hexes involved:
closer look at Catan Blanket

And this is clearly the best spot to build a city on the board:
Best spot on the Catan Blanket

How did I do it? Well, I had a very specific plan that involved using yarn I had in the stash already (that lasted for about 5 or 6 hexes, then I had to buy more. A lot more.) a pattern (expertly sketched out on a piece of orange construction paper):
Catan Blanket
and a cunning plan to “wing it” on the water boarder.

If any of you plan on trying this I have one word of advice: When winging the border, have a look at how the board is actually set up before you start. I discovered only after doing 2 rounds already that the points of the over-all hexagon were in a different place than I thought they were. No, of course I didn’t frog those two rounds… I just got creative!

Catan Blanket: winging it

I’ve labeled the rows in red. Basically, after doing two rounds of sc, then noticing the error, I found the middle stitch on the side where the corner was supposed to be, moved one stitch to the right, did sc, 3dc in next stitch, sc, sl st in next 5 sts, turn. The next row, I think, was something like: sc, dc in dc from previous row, 3dc in the middle st of the previous 3dc, dc in remaining sts plus one dc in each sc from round 2, sl st to the stitch before the end of that side. Turn, sc in first stitch, dc in each stitch across with 3dc in the middle stitch of the previous 3dc, then dc in each stitch until only two are left, then one sc, and one sl st.

This gave me a good base for building the right angle using the next several rounds. I just kept adjusting with dc and hdc until it looked right.

I don’t recommend this if you value your sanity in any way. ^_^

The specs: Bernat Satin, double-stranded throughout. Colours used: Wood (make 4): “Evergreen” and “Sage”, Sheep (make 4): “Spring” and “Snow”, Brick (make 3): “Maitai” and “Bordeaux”, Ore (make 3): “Sterling” and “Grey Mist Heather”, Grain (make 4): “Sunrise” and “Banana”, Desert (make 1): “Banana” and “Silk”. All borders done in “Silk”, Water border: “Sapphire” and “Skipper”. Two balls (one of each colour) made approximately 2 hexes. The border took about 6 balls of the sapphire and 8 balls of skipper (even though the ball band says there’s more of it than the other, the was clearly a LOT less. Regardless, if I had more of this yarn I’d have gone a few more rows anyway).

Finished dimensions: approximately 93 inches from point to point. (That’s 7′9″! Holy cow… no wonder the border seemed to take forever!)

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4 Responses to “Mystery Project Finished!”

  1. Johnny Canuck says:

    Wilco Tango Foxtrot are the settlers of catan?

  2. Mark B says:

    Wow. I found this while doing a Catan search to show my girlfriend, amazing!
    Have you got fluffy dice and velcro towns to play on this? :)

  3. mio says:

    I had thought of it. It would be easy enough to do, but incredibly time consuming. One day, maybe!

  4. Faith says:

    I’m thinking about enlisting my woodworker husband to make the proper size games pieces after mine is done :)

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