GAL 9: X-Men by Megan-Anne Llama

GAL 9: X-Men

Knitting
March 2014
Worsted (9 wpi) ?
10 stitches and 13 rows = 2 inches
US 6 - 4.0 mm
50 - 75 yards (46 - 69 m)
English
This pattern is available for free.

Pattern is HERE

FAQ is HERE

Welcome to week nine of the 2014 Geek-A-Long, a mystery blanket knit-along (or crochet-along for you rebels out there)! If you’re new to the GAL craziness, check out the Geek-A-Long FAQ page for more details and information. Then, meet us back here when you’re ready. For the seasoned pros, let’s talk about the X-Men.

Jac and I put a lot of thought into which superheroes would grace the nerd-scape of our blanket. I mentioned before that I could easily fill all 48 squares with heroes. We also could have easily done two blankets: one for Marvel and one for DC. Ultimately though, we felt like we wanted this project to at least touch on all of the “classic” fandoms. That meant imagery from TV, film, literature, video games, table top games, and comic books all needed to find a place. That’s a tall order, especially when you consider that some licenses can only be done justice with multiple squares like Harry Potter and Avatar the Last Airbender. So with all of those niches to fill, only a handful of the heroes I love made it onto the blanket.

To rate a square, the hero (or team of heroes) had to be:

Extremely Prolific
Personally Significant to Jac or I
Really Cool

X-men fulfills all of those categories without even trying. I spent the majority of my childhood wrapped up in one form of escapism or another. When I wasn’t sitting in my closet waiting to arrive in Narnia, I was pretending that I attended Xavier’s School for Gifted Youngsters. Then I grew up and they cast Patrick Stewart as Professor X, and I moved on from fantasizing that I went to school there to fantasizing that I taught there. It’s no accident that my Mr. Llama has a very Patrick Stewart vibe.

I had a love hate relationship with the square itself when I was making it. I was worried that the classic “X” symbol would be too plain next to some of the other squares. Luckily, I was totally wrong about that. I love the way it looks in the blanket. Having a few squares more on the minimalist side kept it from looking too “busy”.