Crochet question again!
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Crochet question again!
If I want to crochet a scarf with a an angle more than 90 degrees, and began at the bottom tip. Where am I to increase to get this shape? Side, middle or both?
Most pattern are for a angle more vlose to 90 degrees.
I don't know the correct English geometry words to describe the attached photo.

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Crochet question again!
If I want to crochet a scarf with a an angle more than 90 degrees, and began at the bottom tip. Where am I to increase to get this shape? Side, middle or both?
Most pattern are for a angle more vlose to 90 degrees.
I don't know the correct English geometry words to describe the attached photo.

That is an isosceles triangle.
Beyond that, I'm no help with the details of how to crochet. -
Crochet question again!
If I want to crochet a scarf with a an angle more than 90 degrees, and began at the bottom tip. Where am I to increase to get this shape? Side, middle or both?
Most pattern are for a angle more vlose to 90 degrees.
I don't know the correct English geometry words to describe the attached photo.

@nuhn I'd increase at both edges, maybe every second or every third row.
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Crochet question again!
If I want to crochet a scarf with a an angle more than 90 degrees, and began at the bottom tip. Where am I to increase to get this shape? Side, middle or both?
Most pattern are for a angle more vlose to 90 degrees.
I don't know the correct English geometry words to describe the attached photo.

@nuhn I can't help with the crochet question, but in case knowing the geometric English term for it helps with searching for the crochet method -- it's an "obtuse isosceles triangle". "Obtuse" is for triangles wider than 90 degrees, and "isosceles" is for triangles with two equal sides.
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@nuhn I can't help with the crochet question, but in case knowing the geometric English term for it helps with searching for the crochet method -- it's an "obtuse isosceles triangle". "Obtuse" is for triangles wider than 90 degrees, and "isosceles" is for triangles with two equal sides.
@rowyn thank you! We literally call it an "equal legged triangle" in Danish

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@rowyn thank you! We literally call it an "equal legged triangle" in Danish

@nuhn oh gosh that's so much better than isosceles
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