Icelandic Shawl Halfskak
Here she is. Her body is composed of Spider stitch, which is very useful for shawls that drape nicely. A triangle results from 4 increases every 2 rows. Spider stitch lets you increase 4 sts in two rows, and 8 in the next two rows. The extra increases spread the shawl out more rapidly, essentially, which produces more of a crescent shape at the front edge. Here the shawl is blocking on my rug, and you can easily see the more-than-triangle shape. A close up of the spider stitch, as well as the border. The border increases quite rapidly. In twenty rows it almost doubles, twice, going from 300 stitches to nearly 1000. This produces a bit of a ruffle-- which produces a blocking challenge! Normally, each loop of crochet chain gets stretched straight out at the bottom of the shawl. You can't do that on this one-- there is not enough room laterally, due to the sheer number of stitches, and the scallop. Here's a picture I took while I was pinning it out. Each of those little points