Blanket Club 2025 by Carol Feller

Blanket Club 2025

Knitting
May 2025
DK (11 wpi) ?
18 stitches and 36 rows = 4 inches
in Garter Stitch with smaller needle
US 6 - 4.0 mm
US 7 - 4.5 mm
1692 - 5385 yards (1547 - 4924 m)
Lap (Throw, Bedspread)
English
This pattern is available from stolenstitches.com for €55.00.

Join Carol Feller for a unique blanket that will blend Log Cabin Style with Gansey Stitches.

In this club, you’ll join Carol in step-by-step videos as she works through the Log Cabin blanket construction style. Each square will be constructed from a central garter block, building outwards in strips, with a mix of garter stitch and gansey stitch patterns.

There will be 3 square types with 4 different gansey strip styles in each. Different sized blankets have different numbers of squares.

What’s Included:

Digital pattern for blanket delivered mid-May
Extensive video workshop
Exclusive Knithub Forum
Zoom Launch and wrap-up party

Digital Club is available here.

SIZES
Lap (Throw, Bedspread)

FINISHED MEASUREMENTS
Width:
33.25 (49, 64.5)”/ 84.5 (124.5, 164) cm
Depth: 49 (64.5, 80)”/ 124.5 (164, 203) cm
Sample shown in Throw Size.

YARN
Wooldreamers ‘Mota’ (100% Wool; 252 yds/ 230 m per 3.6 oz/ 100g);
Colour 1: Orange (150G); 3 (6, 9) skeins
Colour 2: Eggshell Blue (719); 1 (2, 3) skeins
Colour 3: Light Blue (526G); 1 (2, 3) skeins
Colour 4: Bright Turquoise (834G); 1 (2, 4) skeins
Colour 5: Teal (1526G); 2 (3, 4) skeins

Approx yardage:
Colour 1:
732 (1364, 2185) yds / 668 (1245, 1994) m
Colour 2: 175 (350, 583) yds / 160 (319, 532) m
Colour 3: 225 (450, 749) yds / 205 (410, 684) m
Colour 4: 252 (504, 860) yds / 230 (460, 784) m
Colour 5: 308 (616, 1008) yds / 281 (562, 920) m

GAUGE
18 sts and 36 rows = 4”/ 10 cm in Garter Stitch with smaller needle
18 sts and 28 rows = 4”/ 10 cm in Gansey Stitches with larger needle

NEEDLES AND NOTIONS
US size 6 / 4 mm any type for working flat for Garter Stitch
US size 7 / 4.5 mm any type for working flat for Gansey Stitch (you will also need dpns or circular needle if working I-Cord edging)
Always use a needle size that gives you the gauge listed, as every knitter’s gauge is unique.
Tapestry needle, lockable stitch markers or safety pins to marker outer edges.