Quietwork Tideline Blanket by Rohn Strong

Quietwork Tideline Blanket

Crochet
May 2026
Fingering (14 wpi) ?
3.5 mm (E)
36-inch square
US
English
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The Quietwork Tideline Blanket is a single 36-inch square worked outward from the center in 42 rounds of alternating solid and mesh — an easy, rhythmic project designed to settle into as much as to finish.

The structure is intentionally simple. Rounds 1 through 4 establish the square. From Round 5 onward, solid rounds and mesh rounds alternate: solid rounds work double crochet into every stitch; mesh rounds work a (dc, ch 1, skip) repeat across each side. The work tells you which one is next — if the last round was open, this one is closed. Your hands learn the rhythm faster than your brain does.
Each round is fastened off at completion and rejoined fresh at any corner. This is deliberate. The pause between rounds is where the somatic practice lives — four breaths, a stretch, a moment to choose to continue. The blanket will take as long as it takes.

Materials
Lion Brand Mandala String in Tune (100% acrylic, fingering weight / CYC #1; 350 yd / 320 m per 100 g ball) — 4 balls total, approx. 1,400 yards.
3.5 mm (US E/4) hook, or size needed to obtain gauge.
Tapestry needle, rustproof blocking pins, steam iron or spray bottle.

Gauge
7 rounds = 3 in (7.5 cm) measured after Round 6, blocked.

Finished size
Approx. 36 in (91 cm) square after blocking.

Skill level
Easy / Advanced Beginner.

Suitable as a meditative or somatic project. No shaping, no seaming, no complex stitch sequences. Once the alternation is established in Round 5, only two round types repeat for the remainder of the blanket.

Techniques used
Double crochet, chain spaces, slip stitch join, round-by-round fasten off and rejoin. All rounds worked on the right side. No turning.

A note on the colorway
Mandala String shifts gradually through its color sequence across each ball. The alternating solid and mesh structure lets each color read differently depending on round type — solid rounds show the color densely; mesh rounds let it breathe. The finished blanket looks like a tide moving in.

Pattern notes
Written in US crochet terms. Stitch counts given at the end of every round for easy verification. Blocking is essential — the finished blanket will cup slightly at the edges before blocking and settle into a true square after steaming. Care: machine wash cold, gentle cycle; tumble dry low or lay flat. Avoid high heat.