patterns > Expression Fiber Arts
> Sunset Diamonds
Sunset Diamonds
Let’s stay connected! Sign up for email updates on the site, and receive new, free knit and crochet patterns weekly, exclusive coupons, and free goodies you won’t find anywhere else! New email subscribers also receive a coupon for 15% off of their first order! It’s our happy, positive place on the Internet! xoxo
Just add to cart and complete checkout to receive the download. For more info, click here.
We’re hosting a Summer Crochet Along (CAL) Challenge on Ravelry featuring the Sunset Diamonds pattern. The CAL will run from July 1 to September 30, 2023. Click HERE to learn more and join in on all the fun!
SIZE:
66” x 35.5” (168 cm x 90 cm), blocked - not easily adjustable
MATERIALS:
Expression Fiber Arts Alpaca Silk Lace yarn
Shown in: Epochal Hues: A) White, B) Light Cream, C) Dark Cream, D) Dusty Rose, and E) Brown.
The sample shown used 2257 yds (2064 m) total: A) 307 yds (281 m), B) 569 yds (520 m), C) 572 yds (523 m), D) 479 yds (438 m), and E) 330 yds (302 m).
If those colors aren’t available, any from this category will work.
HOOK:
US sizes: B (2.0 mm) and C (2.75 mm) or sizes needed to obtain gauge
SKILL LEVEL:
Adventurous Beginner to Intermediate: For those crocheters who are ready to learn some new skills or stitch combinations, stitches include foundation single crochet, stacked single crochet, shell stitches, cluster, lacework, and picot.
Notes From the Designer:
The idea of the Sunset Diamonds shawl glowed up in my mind while I was on the beach. I was relaxing after a long day while the sun set into the sea. Soft droplets of rain touched my face to open up my eyes. Each rain droplet was reflecting the sunlight while descending towards me all the way from the infinite sky, just before my eyes. That scene, full of sparkles, brought to my mind an abundance of diamonds sparkling one after the other to form a picture of light confined by geometrical shapes. I was determined to paint this picture with my hook and yarns.
In several rows of this pattern, I used groups of shell stitches to form a quite rhythmic sequence of rhombus shapes. I also left a couple of short breaks as transitions to allow the diamonds to have their distinctive display. This shawl always brings me back to the relaxation and beauty I felt on that rainy beach day.
- Click here to watch a video of how to make this shawl, including all the special stitches used in the pattern.
- The pattern is worked holding two strands of yarn throughout. Only one strand is changed at a time, allowing the colors to softly marl.
- It is easiest to work with two strands when your hook has a sufficiently large mouth (the area of the head that catches and holds the yarn). This will help to prevent one strand being accidentally dropped and will also allow for faster work.
- Tip: Winding center-pull balls will enable you to use the outside and center tails as the two strands. By doing this, you will not have to cut separate balls out of each skein.
- This pattern requires two hook sizes. The smaller is used only for the solid sections. If the same hook is used throughout, those sections will be too wide, and the edges will not be straight. Change hooks as stated in the instructions.
- Although a smaller hook is used for the solid sections, they will still be slightly wider. This is intended. When blocking, the lacework is opened significantly, but the solid areas should remain close to the same gauge.
- Most rows begin with a Ssc (there are no turning chains), which will count as a dc throughout the pattern. Be sure not to work these Ssc too short, or the top edge will not be able to expand when blocked. This is especially important in the lacework sections, which are stretched much more aggressively than the solid sections! You may wish to make the Ssc and second stitch in these lace rows even taller than a dc.
- A shell or V stitch will be the center stitch of most rows. Treat each dc of the shell or V as a separate stitch in the subsequent row.
- The large diamonds are made over several rows in the lace sections. Pay attention to the stitch types. You will never work into a CL, only into the stitches on either side of it.
- The lace sections contain ch-4 and ch-2 spaces. Pay attention to work into the correct one indicated. The ch-2 spaces will only be located between clusters and occasionally near the beginning/end of a row.
- Maintaining correct gauge with each hook size is very important! Some colors will use almost all of the skein. While you can begin a color shift early, it will affect the subsequent changes, as well. Check often that your unblocked gauge matches those listed, particularly on Rows 6, 23, 28, 51, 56, and 74.
- When instructions state to drop a strand, cut that strand leaving a 5-6” tail for weaving.
Designed by Wardah Mhd
Errata:
Row 21: Ssc; dc into each of the next 80 dc; V in ch-2 sp; dc into each of the next 81 dc; turn. (162 dc, 1 V)
Row 56: Ssc; dc in the same st; (dc in ch-1 sp, dc in next st) to 1 st before the ch-2 sp; dc in next dc, V in ch-2 sp dc in next dc; (dc in next st, dc in ch-1 sp) until last st; 2dc-inc in last st; turn. (386 dc, 1 V)
You’ll receive a digital file only (instantly downloadable as a PDF) and won’t be shipped anything. Please allow a few minutes for the download link to be emailed to you. If the email doesn’t arrive within a few minutes, just log into your account on our site, and you’ll see your Completed Orders. From there, you’ll find the download link.
Enjoy your crocheting!
Chandi
New? Read about our pattern download process here.
“To become mindfully aware of our surroundings is to bring our thinking back to our present moment reality and to the possibility of some semblance of serenity in the face of circumstances outside our ability to control.” – Jeff Kober
299 projects
stashed 877 times
- First published: May 2023
- Page created: May 19, 2023
- Last updated: August 13, 2023 …
- visits in the last 24 hours
- visitors right now