How to Knit a Cool and Breezy Button Curtain
comments (17) March 19th, 2009Getting Started
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Measuring the window will ensure that your curtain will fit to your specifications. |
Measure the width and height of your window, taking into consideration how you are going to be hanging the curtain. I am using a spring café rod that goes in the inside of the window frame, so I measured inside the window frame itself. If your curtain rod hangs above the window, measure from the rod.
Cast-on formula. Once you figure out how many stitches per inch you have, determine how many stitches you need to cast on to get to the curtain width you need. If you are hanging the curtain on a café rod and desire a curtain that just covers the window, cast on the number of stitches that will create that flat look. If you want a drapey look, cast on more stitches to give you that look. A standard drape would measure twice the width of the window. Here is the formula I used to get the basic dimension:
Window dimensions: 27 inches wide x 35 inches tall
Basic cast-on calculation: 27 x 3.5 (number of stitches per inch) = 95 (94.5)
Adjust cast-on to match stitch pattern. The stitch pattern is 6 stitches plus 2 extra (one at each end of the row). The number of cast-on stitches needs to be divisible by 6 and include the 2 extra stitches. Here’s the formula I used:
95 divided by 6 = 16 (15.83)
16 x 6 + 2 = 98 is your magic cast-on number!
Button distribution. The easiest way to place your buttons is on a random basis as it pleases you. If you want to make sure that you have enough buttons for the entire curtain without running out three-quarters of the way through the project, here is a formula to determine how to place the buttons:
Row calculation: 3 rows per inch: 3 x 35 (length desired) = 105 rows
On each row, I have 16 pattern repeats. If I add 1 button per pattern repeat, I will have 16 buttons per row.
Number of buttons (280) divided by number of buttons needed for a row (16) = 18 (17.50). This means I can have buttons on 18 rows.
105 total rows divided by 18 rows = 6 (5.83). Every sixth row will be a button row. Whew!
As I said, place the buttons randomly if you wish to skip the math drama.
After you make this project, show off your work to other members!
Post your project in the gallery












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Comments (17)
Posted: 6:39 pm on July 29th
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Posted: 3:20 pm on April 18th
Posted: 6:05 pm on April 3rd
FANTASTIC. SO MANY WONDERFUL IDEAS!
THANK YOU THANK YOU SO MUCH.
I'M YOUR PORTUGUESE FAN
Posted: 11:52 am on April 2nd
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