OK, so since we’re at about a month from blast-off, I’ll go ahead and unveil my Summer Baby Gift in the making.
Not that it’s some huge impressive project, or even that big of a surprise to at least one person reading this, but since it’s for a baby that’s not born yet, it seems worth putting a little drumroll to it, a nice sense of occasion.
Usually I wait until the kid makes an appearance, but ehhh. Spill the beans.
So Sissy B is having another one; this’ll make three. She’s already got plenty on her hands with my two little nieces, and this will spice up all 24 of her waking hours come June. Not sure if this one’s a boy or girl as they’ve elected to wait to find out.
At least that’s what they’ve told me. It’s possible they are sneaking around giggling behind everyone’s backs, secretly knowing.
Maizy calls her little brother- or sister-to-be “Cellpho” (as in, yeah, get ready to dial), and she does this with some confidence, as if this common name has already won the contest for her sibling’s playground moniker. Hence the blog name of this child is born, ahead of the physical debut.
Regardless of whether Cellpho is a girl or a boy, this kid is going to get a lot of girly influence, what with the two older sisters and all. (It seems weird to call E-dot - pictured here: awwwwww - an older sister, since so far she’s been the little guy. Girl. You know.)
So is it weird that I always make blankets when it comes to baby gifts?
I know it takes much longer than booties or a layette set, but I always think to myself: if you’re going to knit something, then really knit something. Something that the little bundle of joy won’t grow out of in five minutes.
Sweaters for toddlers make more sense to me: you might get a good year out of that before it’s handed down. But for a baby, a blanket seems like something they can really use (to the extent they can use anything, other than a breast). They can lay around on it, drool on it, burp up on it (ah, the joy of machine-washable cotton), all for a good little while.
Then, once they can walk, that blanket can be really used.
Beat up. Dragged around for a long time. Colored on.
Loved.
But. Am I boring? Should I branch out? Put a little more thought into it? If you had a kid, what would you want to receive?
Too late now on this one - but your opinions would either pacify my concerns that I’m in a rut with baby creativity or spur me on to make interesting-er tiny things in the future.
On the color, as I believe I announced when I started this thing, we have Blue Sky Alpacas Skinny Dyed in Pear (yes, that’s another name for green, and I think this may have been the start of what Clumsy Knitter kindly called Greenmersion, rather than a Green Problem). But this hue seemed a good bet for a maybeboymabyegirl baby.
Here’s a little preview. The repeats bunch up a bit unless they’re nice and stretched: blocking will help this. (Yes, that is my new red bedspread behind it. Oh, glorious red.)
Now that I look at it (a lot, often), the lace pattern on my Summer Blanket (otherwise known as “24-25-48 Lace Baby Blanket“, which is the catchy name the Japanese designer gave it) does look a bit more feminine than not feminine. I was shooting for neutral in the beginning. But hey - even boy babies are all soft and pretty. I think a daisy-like pattern will probably fly if indeed a penis makes an appearance.
And there is the aforementioned girly factor that will surround this child.
Right, OK, stop worrying about the lace pattern. Good thing, since I’m probably about 2/3 through on the length.
I think what sold me on this pattern is the cool crochet border. Not everyone who made this (and reported back to Ravelry) followed through with the border, but for me the blanket is a bit lukewarm without it. I’m not usually a crocheter, but I can hold my own, and this border is going to be spectacular. I hope.
Feefers is chugging along in the few minutes I can find here and there to work on it.
More time lately on Summer Blanket, which tends to get done on planes, when for some reason the monotony doesn’t bother me as much. And I don’t like hassling with patterns when other people’s elbows are already touching mine in a fight for the armrest.
So this is the state of affairs that leads me into the weekend. At this point I’m craving quiet: sweet, still, quiet laziness.
And some fries with that.





