Yarn & Fabric Calculators
Plan your temperature blanket project — calculate total yarn, per-color skeins, and project timeline based on your local climate and blanket size.
🌡 Project Settings
Your Temperature Blanket
Weekly · Worsted · 7 colors
Temperature distribution is estimated based on your climate preset — actual yarn use per color will vary with local weather. Always buy one extra skein per color. Dye lots matter.
🌈 Temperature Color Scale
Most knitters/crocheters use 7–12 colors with cool tones (purple, blue, teal) for cold temperatures and warm tones (yellow, orange, red) for hot. You pick the exact colors — they’re yours to choose.
Temperature Blanket Planning Guide
What Is a Temperature Blanket?
A temperature blanket is a year-long knitting or crochet project where you work one row (or square) per day or week in a color that represents the day’s temperature. By December 31st you have a wearable record of your year’s weather — no two blankets are alike. Started as a viral trend around 2016, it’s become one of the most popular long-term craft projects.
Daily vs. Weekly Temperature Blankets
A daily blanket (365 rows) creates a densely detailed record but requires strict commitment — missing days means catching up later. A weekly blanket (52 rows) uses the week’s average or highest temperature and is far more manageable. Weekly blankets also tend to look more uniform since extreme outliers get averaged out.
How Many Colors Do I Need?
Most popular temperature blankets use 7–10 colors. Fewer colors (5) create bold graphic stripes; more colors (12+) give a painterly gradient effect. The key is to set temperature thresholds that match your local climate so all colors appear somewhat equally — a desert knitter in Phoenix should set hot-color thresholds much wider than someone in Minnesota.
How Much Yarn Does a Temperature Blanket Use?
A weekly worsted-weight throw uses approximately 500–800 yards total; a daily version uses 3,500–5,000 yards. Each color will use roughly equal yardage IF temperatures distribute evenly, but in practice hot or cold colors often dominate depending on your climate. Always buy 1–2 extra skeins of each color at the start so dye lots match.
Choosing Your Yarn Weight
Worsted weight is the most popular choice for temperature blankets because it works up fast (critical for daily projects), is forgiving for beginners, and shows color changes clearly. DK works beautifully for a lighter blanket. Avoid super bulky — with so many color changes, bulky yarn creates thick, unwieldy seam ridges.
