Choose which one you want to have as the base, the ripple or the straight. The easiest way is to attach to the ripple and work and increase through the low point of the ripple until you have the same amount of stitches as in the first row of the straight or the width is the same. Then just whipstitch together, if this isn't enough info then contact my message board and I'll help however I can.
The same Crochet techniques will be known by different names. The chevron and Ripple are the same in crochet. Some will call this technique the Zig-Zag. Now there are variations of how deep and how curved the chevron and ripple are with each technique. If you go to YouTube and search for Chevron, Ripple, and Zig-Zag crochet, you will find the variations that go by Chevron, Ripple, and Zig-Zag , yet the technique is the same.
The distance in a straight line from one place on a ripple to the same place on the next ripple is called the wave length.
There are numerous crochet patterns available for a Ripple (or wave, or chevron), shawl. I attached one from Lionbrand. I wasn't sure if you wanted just a pattern or also instructions, so I attached a few YouTube videos, also a written tutorial with wonderful photographs if that might be easier for you to follow.
Search for "granny ripple afghan". There is one at Project Linus and another at Purple Kitty to start.
A chevron stitch in crochet is a wavy line. This is formed in multiple of from 6 to 12 stitches. The top is formed by increasing, the bottom is formed by decreasing. Another word for chevron might be ripple stitch. There are hundreds of different ways to make a ripple. To decide how many stitches you need, you need to decide what pattern you are going to make. The top of the ripple is called the hill and the bottom is the valley. The hill is generally formed by increasing as noted above. The valley can be formed by decreasing or it can be formed by skipping stitches. The number of stitches used to form the valley can vary as can the number of stitches skipped. Before figuring your foundation chain, you need to decide how many stitches you want between hill and valley. I discuss figuring out the foundation chain for a ripple at Crochet Cabana, using the skip stitch method, but the same general idea could be used for another method. Generally, once you know what you want, it is fairly straight forward to figure out how many stitches you need to begin with. Don't forget to account for turning chains.
The slip stitch abbreviation in crochet is used to join pieces together, create a smooth edge, or move the yarn to a different location without adding height to the project.
Yes, hair with a curl holds better than straight.
That's a difficult question to answer without more information - like the pattern you are hoping to make. Since you note a 7 count peak I think you may be asking about a ripple afghan. If that is the case and you want 7 stitches on either side of your hill and valley, the foundation chain would be a multiple of 17 + 16. I would suggest possibly 152 for a twin size. Crochet Cabana has a pattern called Donovan's Ripple Afghan which may suit your purposes. If you are not talking about a ripple afghan as noted, then this would not be the appropriate number of chains.
ripple can understand as rise in sine wave.thus ripple-less means a straight line parallel to x-axis i.e. bump-less line.capacitor is a component which store charge.it charge through a.c. and behave as battery on full charge.and we all know battery gives a d.c. i.e. ripple less graph.
The abbreviation for the triple crochet stitch in crochet is "tr."
Here you go: 1) Slip Stitch 2) Single Crochet 3) Half Double Crochet 4) Double Crochet 5) Treble Crochet 6) Single crochet increase 7) Single Crochet decrease 8) Double Crochet increase 9) Double crochet decrease 10) Treble Crochet increase
The abbreviation for the treble crochet stitch in crochet patterns is "tr."