PDF download Download Article PDF download Download Article

So you've been crocheting for a while now, and you'd like to get yourself off the printed page and into making up your own designs. You want to create rather than just read.

It's easy enough to make up your own designs. The crochet you invent can be free-form, or very mathematical, or somewhere in between, depending on your style and your goal.

  1. Try scrumbling or free-form crochet. Scrumbling is the process of making and combining smaller, free-form pieces into a larger piece. It can be used for a small, decorative element, as shown, or combined into a larger piece of fabric something like a patchwork quilt. Besides being a good way to use up odds and ends of yarn, scrumbling is good practice improvising and innovating with a crochet hook and making different shapes.
  2. These crocheted hand warmers are meant to be crocheted to your size, no matter what yarn and hook you are using.
    Advertisement
  3. Stitches take up a certain width, depending on your yarn, your hook, and your technique. In this example, seven stitches make up two inches (5cm) of width. There are various ways you can use gauge.
    • You can guess and check how many stitches to make. Make some number of stitches, try on or measure the piece, and adjust as necessary to achieve the size you need.
    • You can adjust the number of stitches in an existing pattern that states a gauge so that your result comes out at the intended size.
    • You can calculate the number of stitches you will need to achieve a given measurement or size. It's a simple proportion. Multiply stitches per inch by inches to get the number of stitches you'll need. (This works equally well with centimeters, as long as you're consistent about which unit to use.)
    • If you want, you can do the same thing to figure the number of rows you'll need for the desired height of the piece. Simply measure the height of several rows in your sample piece, and calculate it the same way.
  4. 4
    Decide what you would like to make. A crocheted piece can be utilitarian, decorative, or both. You can make a flat afghan in square rows, a free-form sculpture, or anything in between. Perhaps a particular type or combination of yarn will inspire something. Perhaps a particular need (like keeping somebody warm) will inspire something.
    • Don't be afraid to sketch what you have in mind or make a small sample piece to test a concept. You may discover that you can make a piece, or you may discover what you'd like to do a bit differently.
  5. Make up your own scarf, bottle cozy, or arm warmers. Then try designing a vest or shawl before you attempt an entire sweater.
  6. Crochet does not take a lot of time to do, and chances are you have some leftover yarn around that you can use to make mistakes with confidence .
    • Look in craft store bargain bins for unwanted yarn at crazy prices. This makes excellent yarn for experimenting with.
    • Try garage sales and thrift shops, too. You can often pick up the leftovers from somebody else's project for pennies.
  7. If you want to be able to share the pattern you create with friends, post it online, or simply get a second sock or mitten to match the first, you'll need to take notes. They can be as simple or as detailed as you prefer, provided that you can make sense of them when you're done and, if need be, translate between your own shorthand and something another crocheter can read.
  8. Crochet allows you to make a fabric in a certain shape (which need not be flat). Having a sense of what the panels in stitched clothing should look like will give you an idea of what shape to make pieces of something like a sweater.
  9. 9
    Make a chart or diagram of what you want to crochet. If you can visualize this stuff in your head, fine. Otherwise, sketch out what you want to make. You can simply sketch the basic shape. You can add measurements and gauge information if you have it. You can even calculate numbers of stitches, if you choose.
  10. You don't need to know every crochet stitch, but you should know how to tie a slip knot and make a starting chain . You should also know how to single crochet, double crochet, slip stitch , and how to increase and decrease with single and double crochet. It's true there are lots of other stitches and combinations, but there is much you can do with just these basics. If you do learn other stitches you like, you can incorporate them in much the same ways as the standard stitches.
  11. Follow a variety of written patterns , but don't just read them off the page and do them; instead, notice as you do them how the stitches fit together and how the mechanics work. These are all elements you can reuse in your own designs.
  12. It will help you figure out what you are doing as you go, and allow you to take notes and reproduce your designs later.
    • Remember that you can put a crochet stitch just about anywhere you can put a crochet hook. You can crochet into a row of holes on a hem (or a piece of paper), the side of a piece of knitting, or another piece of crochet. In fact, adding a decorative border to something, even a t-shirt sleeve or greeting card, is a good practice at improvising.
    • You can also go in a new direction at just about any point in a project by adding a chain and using it as you would a starting chain. You can also use chains as an element by themselves.
  13. Advertisement

Community Q&A

Search
Add New Question
  • Question
    How do I make a pattern with words using the popcorn stitch? I made a graph, but when I start to crochet the blanket, the words are backwards.
    Michele
    Top Answerer
    With the right side of the project facing you, you need to create your popcorns according to the chart from right to left, not left to right. Example: If the word is Bride, start the popcorns from the bottom right of the graph, working to the left. If you're doing reverse popcorns, work from the wrong side of the fabric, then work left to right but always starting on the bottom.
  • Question
    Is there software to help create crochet notation? I can't do it by hand.
    Michele
    Top Answerer
    I assume you want to make a stitch chart for your crochet pattern. There are a few sites out there that can do this free for a filet crochet pattern, such as Stitch Fiddle. This can be used for cross stitch, intarsia knit or fair isle knitting. However, there are a limited number of apps and programs that can create real crochet charts. CrochetCharts is a free program from Stitchworks Software for Windows and Linux.
  • Question
    I have an afghan that was my mother-in-law's that I would like to try to replicate. I am unfamiliar with some of the stitches. Any suggestions on how to find the pattern?
    Community Answer
    Do a search by image of either crochet blankets or crochet stitches.
See more answers
Ask a Question
      Advertisement

      Tips

      • Stitch markers are helpful in figuring out how many stitches you've done, especially on larger pieces or round pieces. They can also help you mark where features on the piece will go.
      • Computer programs exist to help figure how many stitches are needed for certain things. If you have something special you want to crochet and can't find or create a pattern, you could try one of these programs.
      • Try making up your own filet crochet, which is simply a pattern of stitches and holes that make a design in a flat grid. If you are artistic, you can begin with a basic pattern and chart your own design.
      Submit a Tip
      All tip submissions are carefully reviewed before being published
      Name
      Please provide your name and last initial
      Thanks for submitting a tip for review!
      Advertisement

      Things You'll Need

      • Crochet hooks
      • Crochet yarn
      • Patterns for initial inspiration, or images of crocheted goodies (look on Flickr, etc.)
      • Embellishments, etc. (OPTIONAL)
      • Needle and thread if joining anything without crochet stitches

      Expert Interview

      Thanks for reading our article! If you’d like to learn more about crochet techniques, check out our in-depth interview with Lindsey Campbell .

      About This Article

      Thanks to all authors for creating a page that has been read 588,968 times.

      Reader Success Stories

      • Trish Bricesting

        Nov 28, 2016

        "#11 helped - Learn how sewing patterns fit together. If we're crocheting in the round, we can increase each ..." more
      Share your story

      Did this article help you?

      Advertisement