Anyone can make this adorable no-sew blanket.
I've seen these sweet fleece blankets around forever and I knew I could do it if only I could find instructions. Amazingly, the places that sell fleece look at you like you're weird if you ask them how to make the cute blanket they have on display. So I went to the Internet. If you're one of the last five or six people on the face of the planet who doesn't know how to make one of these, I'm here to help. :-)
NO SEW FLEECE BLANKET
Here's all you need. Fleece. I think it's cutest if you use a patterned fleece on one side and a matching solid on the other. Scissors. And a yardstick and ruler. Oh! And some instructions. Which you're reading here.
What you don't need. THREE YARDS of each fleece. Good grief. I had no idea how much fleece you needed to make a blanket for a toddler when I bought this so I went WAY overboard. Better too much than too little I guess, but really, that's ridiculous, don't you think? What you DO need is one and a half yards of each fabric, the print and the coordinating solid.
The first thing to do is lay the fabric out on a table and cut off the rough edges, the selvages.
I cut my fabric into 54-inch squares. So cut both pieces the same size and place them together, wrong sides facing each other.
Make sure all your edges line up together and handle this fleece gently. Don't stretch and pull it. It's better to just smooth it together since fleece will give a lot and seriously stretch out of shape.
I honestly think I could have looked at a fleece blanket and figured it out. But this is the one thing I wouldn't have known and it's a biggie. You need to cut a six-inch square out of each corner. If you don't it's going to be a mess later.
Now you're going to go down each side and make one-inch cuts all along the borders. I found that laying a yardstick across the side at the six-inch mark made it easy to know how far to make each cut. And I used a ruler to mark off the one-inch points where I was going to make the cut.
Make all the cuts around all four sides before you start tying things off. You want the fabric laying perfectly flat as you make these cuts.
OK, I didn't know this part. The instructions I found on the web said to tie the strands into knots all around the edges. But I bought the frog print at Walmart. (I found the chartreuse green fabric at JoAnn's.) And the nice lady working in the fabric department told me she's made a jillion of these for her grandkids and she found that "looping" the strands together instead of just separating the top and bottom strands and tying knots worked a lot better. She said they hold better and they create a nicer border.
So I don't really know how to show you that except to say, do it like I'm doing it in the photo. Keeping the two strands together, raise them up and then bring them back through the circle, from the back to the front. Here's where you manipulate the strands to tie a firm but not tight "knot." You want it to be fluffy, not real real tight.
I have to say, I love the border this creates. It's so neat looking and the fabric lays together nicely. So thank you, thank you, Nice Lady Who Works In The Fabric Department At Walmart!
The back is cute, too! Don't you think?
So Cameron has some sweet surprises waiting for him to arrive Friday morning.
And his mommy will be pleased because I bought so much fleece, I made two blankets today! He'll have one at Nana's and one to take home.Time involved? The first one took three hours. But factor in a lunch break AND the three loads of laundry I did while I was working on it.
The second one? Two hours flat, start to finish. Because once you make one, you're immediately good at it. You realize that the blanket itself is already adorable. It's soft and warm and cute. So it doesn't have to be perfect. Nothing about it has to be perfect.
What I love about it? First, it's not expensive. It could be, if you paid full price for the fleece, but most fabric stores and departments put it on sale quite often. Second, any child is going to love a blanket like this and I've heard that fleece is easily maintained. Washes and dries well. And third, I sooo would have let Krissy and Mandy make these when they were kids. There's nothing complicated about it at all and they would have been so proud to make and give these as gifts.
I've given instructions here for what I think is a good size for a toddler. It's all easily adjusted. Make it as big or little as you want. It's truly easy! And fun. And boy, I'm really glad to have that big pile of fleece off my to-do list and off my dining room table! :-)
12 comments:
Very nice directions...and the little frogs are adorable...thanks for sharing! I'm going to try it tonight!
These are darling, and your site is just lovely. Thanks for the coconut cake recipe, just in time for Father's Day. My husband's favorite! Best -- G. Moore
I prefer a warm and smooth blanket because i love to feel comfortable in my bed, that is why is very important the quality of the blanket all the time. I always chose the better ones when by husband buy viagra and decided to pass a great time with me.
i googled these blankets and found your site eventually! thank you so much for the post, i am so excited to make one! i live in the UK (though i am american) and its so hard to find fabric stores that sell stuff other than silk and what nots to make asian dress! =) so i am researching my options so i can start making these and hopefully sell them too at craft fairs!
if i make smaller ones, would i still make the 6 inch cuts and the 6 inch squares at the corners?
thanks,
janelle
3weemonkeys.wordpress. com
I LOVE this! Thanks so much for the directions! I can't wait to have my daughter make one of these with me! She's 7 and LOVES crafts! I must be one of those last 5 or 6 people on the planet that did not know how to do this. My Aunt myade my daughter one a few years back but the corners weren't cut out and it's VERY difficult to fold and has an odd shape! I love that little tid bit of secret info! Thanks so much! And I LOVE the frogs! Super adorable!
Very nice technique, I didn't know it before. But, surprisingly, the best part for me is the sewing part, not the cutting :).
I've been looking for an instruction sheet for my students that has clear photos. This post was perfect! My 8th graders thank you!
I've made dozens of these and always used "knots". In fact, I made my newest grandson one just yesterday. I sure wish I had seen your post first. I really like the way you finished yours off and I don't think I've ever seen this method before.
Thanks!!
This is a super nice tutorial! Thank you for the step by step instructions and the pictures! Your blankets are very neatly done!
Wow! Love your show-how pictures to make the fleece blanket. The visual steps were a lot easier than to read everything by text. I am more right-brain with visual learning style. Thanks to you! I make the blankets for my cats. They keep them warm during the winter. I also have frog- design blanket in red:) I bought it because my cat likes to check on the frogs in my fishpond. Thanks again.
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