I just started knitting on Sunday night and for the past few days I have been practicing how to cast on, regular knitting, purl knitting and binding off. I’m 26 weeks pregnant and I want to make a baby blanket for my baby girl. Right now I have 10" needles and two 7oz worsted medium yarn, I also have two little balls of yarn to practice with. Want to find a website or somebody to tell me how to make a very easy blanket.
you don’t need a pattern. FYI, "regular knitting" as you call it is just referred to as knitting, and "purl knitting" as you call it is just referred to as purling.
The easiest possible blanket you can make is to cast on maybe 60 stitches, then just knit 5 rows. Once you’ve knit the 5 rows, choose whether you want to do stockinette stitch (knit one row, purl one row) or garter stitch (knit all rows). If you are a beginner which it sounds like and you have not knit any project before, I would just regular knit all rows.
If you are comfortable with both knitting and purling, then go for the stockinette stitch on your blanket. If you do stockinette stitch, start with a purl row (after the 5 knitted rows) then do a knit row, then purl row again, then knit row again, and so on until you have used all of the yarn on your first ball of yarn. Once you start to run out of the first ball of yarn, try to finish on the edge of the blanket (the end of the row), and then tie on the new ball to the first ball. Once your blanket is as long as you want it, then knit 5 rows and bind off. Sew in the loose ends. That’s it!
You may want to look into getting a pair of circular needles, those are easier for beginners. Have someone who knits tell you if you are using the right size needle for the yarn (bring in the yarn and the needles you have).
Go on YouTube to find videos of knitting, purling, casting on and binding off. There are also great "knitting for baby" books. I think this is a great way to learn to knit – baby projects are always small and they are not judgmental about what they wear!
have fun

you don’t need a pattern. FYI, "regular knitting" as you call it is just referred to as knitting, and "purl knitting" as you call it is just referred to as purling.
The easiest possible blanket you can make is to cast on maybe 60 stitches, then just knit 5 rows. Once you’ve knit the 5 rows, choose whether you want to do stockinette stitch (knit one row, purl one row) or garter stitch (knit all rows). If you are a beginner which it sounds like and you have not knit any project before, I would just regular knit all rows.
If you are comfortable with both knitting and purling, then go for the stockinette stitch on your blanket. If you do stockinette stitch, start with a purl row (after the 5 knitted rows) then do a knit row, then purl row again, then knit row again, and so on until you have used all of the yarn on your first ball of yarn. Once you start to run out of the first ball of yarn, try to finish on the edge of the blanket (the end of the row), and then tie on the new ball to the first ball. Once your blanket is as long as you want it, then knit 5 rows and bind off. Sew in the loose ends. That’s it!
You may want to look into getting a pair of circular needles, those are easier for beginners. Have someone who knits tell you if you are using the right size needle for the yarn (bring in the yarn and the needles you have).
Go on YouTube to find videos of knitting, purling, casting on and binding off. There are also great "knitting for baby" books. I think this is a great way to learn to knit – baby projects are always small and they are not judgmental about what they wear!
have fun
References :
Beckers answer sounded good. A little tip though. You will have noticed on your practice pieces that knitting curls inwards. Obviously you don’t want a blanket to do that.
If you slip the first stitch and knit the last stitch on every row it stops the curl.
References :