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Breaking Down Blocking Knit and Crochet Items

The other day I got a question in my inbox, and I got permission to post it in its entirety, because I thought it was such a good question!

I got some blocking mats, pins, and wires and have been
experimenting with blocking some smaller things that I made, like
scarves.  I recently finished a crochet project that I’ve been working on
for a while (Daisy Wrap) and I don’t know where to start with blocking
it….well, after I soak it in water for a while anyway.  The blocking
instructions say to pin each picot and there are a lot of them.  What would
you recommend for blocking?  Fold it in half?  I have enough blocking
mats to block it full length.  I don’t know where to start with this!
 Thanks,An Overwhelmed Student

Blocking shawls with lots of points can be a particularly daunting task – and I’ve been known to futz around with a project to get them all exactly right for the better part of an hour.  This is what I wrote back to Sue:

I’d would fold
it in half, just because it’d reduce the amount of pinning I’d have to do by
half.  There’s no two ways around it… if you want to have all those picots
standing out the way they look in the pattern, you need to pin them out. I’d probably
take a blocking wire and run it through the two or three picots that are at the
point of each of the arches, and pull those out on each side, just so I didn’t have to pin all of the picots.  I’d pull those out, and then just pin out
the picots that didn’t get picked up by the wire.

My own Freshly Blocked Firefly Shawl
That was my answer to Student, but I wanted to expand upon it here.  Blocking lace (especially shawls) can be one of the most important steps of finishing a project!  It can truly transform the results.  The Designer, Kristen TenDyke, was blocking Daisy Wrap had a particularly striking picture of the shawl half-blocked, and I love how you can see the difference between the two sides.  Another Ravelry user has a great picture of the effect blocking out each of the picots has on the final product.
Since blocking is so important in this case, it’s a question of how to block the shawl, not if.
If you have the space and the blocking matts, blocking it out as the designer did is not a bad idea.  I love the blocking mats that have a grid on them – they make it much easier to evenly space pins.  If you are squeezed for space, you could fold the shawl in half and block the same way – with just two layers of fabric instead of one.  My caution would be to make sure you are always pinning out both layers of fabric – so all the picots stand out evenly!
One of the things I love most about blocking is how reversible it is – if you block the piece out and you don’t like how it turned out; wet it and try again!  It’s a lot easier than picking back stitches.