I just started crocheting 2 weeks ago and have made 3 animal dolls already! But it was now time to turn to written patterns so this video is perfect ❤😅
Jfc FINALLy! Tysm for explaining this, im so new to crocheting and ive been wondering why my magic circles have been going on forever endlessly. This makes so much more sense lol
I was halfway on giving up on making anything other than scarves or granny squares. Your explanation is so clear and easy to follow that I recovered the courage to try a pattern for the first time. Thank you so much ❤
I have a question so after finishing a row we don't have to slip stitch? For example the first row was 6 sc in MR and second row is 1sc inc....... so we just directly start by a sc in the first sc of row 1 idk if that makes sense
@@killertoxicity8604 it means to place 1 half double crochet (hdc) in each stitch around, leaving you with 4 half double crochets in each round. In the parenthesis she is telling you that R3-R7 is actually 5 rounds, not 4 because sometimes people miscount that so she’s clarifying to make it easier. For R8 she’s saying you increase in the first stitch with 2 half double crochets, and then in the next 3 stitches you place one hdc. In parenthesis you see the final stitch count of 5 that should be in the round. Hope this helps!
@@UndertheSimfluence hello! It’s letting you know that you’ll be doing a total of 3 rounds because it says 8-10 and sometimes people think that is 2 rounds but 8-10 is actually 3 rounds, with it being 8, 9, and 10
I hope that after a month you may have figured it out. But what that means is you make 10 single crochets, 1 increase stitch(two single crochets in the same stitch), then 11 more single crochets
Thank you. Good video. Very clear. But it didn’t cover my confusion with the pattern I’m trying to read (to make a half hexagon shape). In R 2 it says : Dc inc 2, ([dc 1, tr 1, dc1] in next st, dc inc 1) twice, dc inc 1 in last st. (14 dc, 1 tr). Help!
It means you put one single crochet in the next stitch, one single crochet in the next stitch, and then increase with two single crochet in the next, and then repeat, making it 2 sc, and then inc. Same goes for 3sc, inc and 4sc, inc, and so on ☺️
I just started crocheting 2 weeks ago and have made 3 animal dolls already! But it was now time to turn to written patterns so this video is perfect ❤😅
Jfc FINALLy! Tysm for explaining this, im so new to crocheting and ive been wondering why my magic circles have been going on forever endlessly. This makes so much more sense lol
Thank you so much!! I love the way you explain it unlike other TH-camrs, you make it seem much more sense
I was halfway on giving up on making anything other than scarves or granny squares. Your explanation is so clear and easy to follow that I recovered the courage to try a pattern for the first time. Thank you so much ❤
Thank you so much-this was very helpful! I'm doing my first crochet pattern, and I was confused.
Very helpful thank you
I have a question so after finishing a row we don't have to slip stitch? For example the first row was 6 sc in MR and second row is 1sc inc....... so we just directly start by a sc in the first sc of row 1 idk if that makes sense
Thank you so much! This is very helpful
Thank you so much this helped me so much when I was learning I never knew you had to repeat the stichez thank you so much again ❤❤❤
Love this video ❤
Yay! I’m so glad it was helpful☺️
This was so helpful. Thank you so much❤❤
for the round 2 does it mean that we have to create 6 more sc or does it mean that we have to add inc in the previous 6 stitches?
I still can't get 😢
A workaround is, if it is a digital pattern, copy paste it into chatgpt and ask it to give detailed instructions.
You should learn how to crochet before this video
@@Zomoroda89I know how to crochet but I don’t understand some patterns like 2[3inc].9sc] to have (30)
I can understand what is she explaining but not the one like I commented before
@@juaniskay03 ok i don't understand that one eather 🙃 like it's 21, if the we multiply the 2 with the 3 increases it gives 12 then add 9 ==21
Just asking, where or how do you get those giant balls of yarn in your background?
Omg this helped so much
I can't explain how helpful thus was!! Thank you soo much❤❤❤....i have been struggling 😭🙏🏼
Great video
Thank you! I’m glad it was helpful!☺️
I'm so thankful to you😭
Thanks so much!
Does a * also mean multiply? I’ve seen some people use * and x
most of the time it does
No increase chain? Per round?
I appreciate this so much❤
Could i have some help understanding this? R3-R7: 4hdc around (5rnds of 4hdc)
And R8: hdc-inc, 3hdc [5]
If it helps this is the toothless pattern by Red Mills Crochet on Etsy and it says beginner but i am having trouble understanfing
@@killertoxicity8604 it means to place 1 half double crochet (hdc) in each stitch around, leaving you with 4 half double crochets in each round. In the parenthesis she is telling you that R3-R7 is actually 5 rounds, not 4 because sometimes people miscount that so she’s clarifying to make it easier. For R8 she’s saying you increase in the first stitch with 2 half double crochets, and then in the next 3 stitches you place one hdc. In parenthesis you see the final stitch count of 5 that should be in the round. Hope this helps!
right but i dont have the x6 or whatever number, it just says ch1,2(dc increase, 4dc, dc increase, dc) like does that 2 mean x2?
Most likely it does!
Hi! Can you help me? What if it says like
8-10) change to light blue 11sc, change to blue 25sc (3 row)
@@UndertheSimfluence hello! It’s letting you know that you’ll be doing a total of 3 rounds because it says 8-10 and sometimes people think that is 2 rounds but 8-10 is actually 3 rounds, with it being 8, 9, and 10
OMG FINALLY THIS MAKES SO MUCH SENSE NOW
When I'm reading a pattern for some reason I end up with more stitches than I need can you help me please?
Please make videos practically so we can understand who are weak in english
Ok🥵🤯😠😝🤓😳
That would be difficult, I assume she only knows English and maybe a bit of a language she had to take in middle and high school.
TY U SM
Aw absolutely! So glad you found it helpful☺️
thank you very much!
Thank you
My patterns tells me 2 sc, (1sc…
What does that mean
Lifesaver!
I have a pattern where it says "10sc, inc, 11sc (23)" in the second step. Can someone please help me, I don't know what to do😅
I hope that after a month you may have figured it out. But what that means is you make 10 single crochets, 1 increase stitch(two single crochets in the same stitch), then 11 more single crochets
Thank u so much i dont know how to thank u
Thank you. Good video. Very clear. But it didn’t cover my confusion with the pattern I’m trying to read (to make a half hexagon shape). In R 2 it says :
Dc inc 2, ([dc 1, tr 1, dc1] in next st, dc inc 1) twice, dc inc 1 in last st. (14 dc, 1 tr). Help!
Ke more videos for reading pattern
Why did you stop explaining when you arrived at the most complicated part? What does it mean when it says "2 sc, inc"?
It means you put one single crochet in the next stitch, one single crochet in the next stitch, and then increase with two single crochet in the next, and then repeat, making it 2 sc, and then inc. Same goes for 3sc, inc and 4sc, inc, and so on ☺️
I have come across two abbreviations I don't know
What were they?
❤❤❤
Still makes no sense
Thank you! ❤