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Question:

Is covering drip pans with aluminium a bad thing?

People I know do itBut now that I work in a propertyI am being told otherwiseIs it true that I can cause a fire by doing that?

Answer:

Yes, adding fringe or tassels will help although crocheting around the edge might preserve the look of the scarf (I am not familiar with the pattern in questions so I can't say for sure)Steam blocking will help some but that is only temporaryAs soon as it is hit with any moisture, the blocking is undoneDoes the scarf look as it is supposed to look per the pattern? The general point of alternating between purl and knit stitches is to prevent curlingGood luck!
nounfortunatelynext time when you cast on in the first row k1 then p1 repeating across continue w/ your patternas you go up slip the first stitch knitwise then continue w/ your pattern ending w/ a p1turnslip the 1st stitch knit wise, continue w/ your patternending w/ a p1and so forththat should help w/ curling and give you a more attractive edgealso, knitting w/ natural materials (cotton, linen, silk, wool.) enables you to effectively block your finished workacrylics or manmade materials do not block well as they cannot take water or heatto unfurl your edgeswith a natural yarn you can mist or dampen w/ a wet cloth and pin it out to dry naturally or use a light iron on a misted peicehope this helps.
knit a million row, purl a million row is stockinette knitting and regrettably curling on the aspects is what stockinette doesyou've 2 options a millionproceed til length required or perhaps as finished paintings a border in both knit or crochet around the completed element 2unpick and initiate back operating the first 10 rows in knit in straight forward words and then on each purl row paintings the first 8sts and the fantastic 8sts in knit or perhaps as the dimensions you want knit yet another 10 rows earlier eliminatingthis can help in preventing the aspects from curling
If you were to change the aluminium like once a month it wouldn't be a problemHowever, people think that it could stay on forever or until they sell the stove, but it doesn't work like thatThe aluminium does break down over time from the heatIF grease/oil do get under the foil it could build up enough that it would eventually burn, and there is the 'problem'.

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