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Beautiful Vintage Edging
Step-by-Step Photo Instructions, Cont.

Photos by Sandi Marshall


Image © S Marshall
Step 4: Turn, chain 5, 1 shell (see instructions above for making one shell).


Image © S Marshall
Step 5: Chain 7, sc in chain-6 space of step 3. Image shows the single crochet in-progress, being worked in the chain-6 space.


Image © S Marshall
Step 6: Turn. Work 9 sc in chain-7 space. Image shows the 4th single crochet in-progress, being worked in the chain-7 space.


Image © S Marshall
Step 7: Chain 9. Sc in chain-6 space of step 5.


Image © S Marshall
Step 8: 11 sc in chain-9 space.

Step 9: Chain 11, sc in same chain-6 space of step 5, 13 sc in chain-11 space.

Step 10: Chain 13, sc in same chain-6 space, 15 sc in chain-13 space, chain 15, sc in same chain-6 space, 25 sc in chain-15 space.

Page One (Steps 1 - 3)
Page Two (Steps 4 - 10)
What's the next step? Go to the last page and see:
Last Page: See Step 11

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The images showing the edging steps and these rewritten edging instructions are copyright 2000 by Sandi Marshall, licensed to About.com, Inc. You may print out this page for your own personal (not-for-profit) use only. Do not copy further; do not post anywhere on the Internet; do not otherwise redistribute the contents of this page, even for free (this includes the images). Instead, please give the URL for this pattern so that others may come to this web site for themselves. It makes a world of difference to me, in helping to enable me to continue creating step-by-step tutorials and new patterns. Thank you.

The edging was originally published in the year 1916, in the book Novelty Crochet Pattterns Book No 7. Because this was first published in the USA before 1923, the statutory copyright has expired on the pattern as it was written in 1916, placing it in the public domain. My rewritten directions and step-by-step images for the edging are copyright by me. Note: Just FYI, a person can't rewrite another designer's pattern that's currently under copyright protection and then claim any copyright to his/her rewritten directions. Same applies to a step-by-step of someone else's pattern that's currently under copyright protection. When an antique (first published in the USA in the year 1923 or earlier) pattern has fallen into the public domain, then new copyright may be applied to variations created of those public domain patterns.
US Government Copyright Office Website: www.copyright.gov

URL of this page is http://crochet.about.com/library/weekly/aa120900b.htm

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