Thank you, I now understand where I have been going wrong when following a pattern. After listening and visually seeing how you do it, I realised that I was going in between the spaces and not the sts themselves.
I like this method, I used it to make two ponchos, the front and back have a mitered square, the shoulders have a rectangle matching the row side, of contrast color or the same.
I cant see where you’re putting it in th e space. Is it the larger space or in the chain loop at the top? Take the second row, for example, after you have the four double crochets done at the first chain. When you go to do your first double crochet your finger is covering it and i cannot clearly see anything - i can do this i just want to know which hole and then im otherwise fine for the rest of the pattern. Its a beautiful technique. I will check back on the video in case there is a response. Thank you so much! @kickincrochet
@@KickinCrochet thank you so much! So it basically goes in between the chain link at the top not just directly under it or in the space below it, right? Just making sure because im Norwegian so i want to ensure i understand. Thank you so much for replying!
If you are meaning you want to make a blanket that is basically a large mitered square, you would just continue in the same manner, working 3dc in each of the two center stitches for each row until you reach your desired size.
This is absolutely by far the best and easiest tutorial I’ve seen for mitered squares. Thank you!!!
You're welcome, and thanks!
Thank you, I now understand where I have been going wrong when following a pattern. After listening and visually seeing how you do it, I realised that I was going in between the spaces and not the sts themselves.
This is exactly what I was looking for, thank you for your great clear video!
You are welcome!
Thank you so much, I was trying to figure out out to square the curve
I like this method, I used it to make two ponchos, the front and back have a mitered square, the shoulders have a rectangle matching the row side, of contrast color or the same.
Sounds cool!
Very nice thank you
Beautiful ans easy instructions!
This is so helpful!!! Thanks so much ☺️👏🏻☺️
You are welcome!
Also, I am on the 3rd round and it is looking like a fan, it is not looking like it has a corner like a square
I cant see where you’re putting it in th e space. Is it the larger space or in the chain loop at the top? Take the second row, for example, after you have the four double crochets done at the first chain.
When you go to do your first double crochet your finger is covering it and i cannot clearly see anything - i can do this i just want to know which hole and then im otherwise fine for the rest of the pattern. Its a beautiful technique. I will check back on the video in case there is a response. Thank you so much! @kickincrochet
Sorry about that! After the first row where you work into the starting chain, you're always working onto the top of the dc from the row before
@@KickinCrochet thank you so much! So it basically goes in between the chain link at the top not just directly under it or in the space below it, right? Just making sure because im Norwegian so i want to ensure i understand. Thank you so much for replying!
Right!
I had to slow the video down to see. Then mine worked out.
Love your tip and clear explanation 🤗
You're welcome! Glad I could help. :)
This is what I have been looking for. Is it possible to change colors. I want to make it look 3D
You can absolutely change colors whenever you want! I have another video about how to change colors in crochet if you're new to color changes
I cannot find instructions on how to keep going on the continuous squares to make a blanket. Please show me some more detail
If you are meaning you want to make a blanket that is basically a large mitered square, you would just continue in the same manner, working 3dc in each of the two center stitches for each row until you reach your desired size.
I don't understand how you have 8 stitches on the 2nd row. I have 7. I have the 3 double crochets in each of the 2 middle stitches plus the chain 3.