#crochet-pattern-design — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #crochet-pattern-design, aggregated by home.social.
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How I Turn an Idea Into a Crochet Pattern
If you’ve ever looked at a finished crochet pattern and thought, I wonder how designers come up with this stuff, I have a confession.
Most of us don’t have a magical notebook filled with brilliant ideas just waiting for the perfect moment.
I wish.
If that notebook exists, somebody forgot to send me one.
My patterns usually begin much less dramatically. Sometimes it’s a stitch I accidentally worked the wrong way. Sometimes it’s a color combination that catches my eye in the yarn aisle. Occasionally it’s because someone asks, “Could you make a…” and my brain immediately starts trying to figure out whether I actually can.
Ideas are everywhere.
The trick isn’t finding them.
The trick is turning one into a pattern that other people can actually crochet.
That part is a little messier.
It Always Starts with “What If?”
Nearly every pattern I’ve designed begins with a simple question.
What if I turned this stitch sideways?
What if I combined these two motifs?
What if this shawl became a cardigan?
That little “what if” is the seed.
Sometimes it grows into something wonderful.
Sometimes it grows into a tangled ball of yarn that makes me question every life decision that brought me to that moment.
That’s just part of designing.
One thing I’ve learned over the years is not to get too attached to the first idea. The first idea is usually just an introduction. The real design often reveals itself somewhere around version number six… or twelve.
Then Comes the Experimenting
This is the part most people never see.
There is a common misconception that designers sit down, crochet a project once, write the instructions, and call it a day.
I don’t know anyone who works that way.
For me, designing starts with playing.
I grab some yarn.
A hook.
Maybe a notebook if I’m feeling organized.
Then I crochet.
I frog it.
I crochet it again.
I frog it again.
If yarn could file complaints with Human Resources, mine would have an impressive case against me.
Some days I’ll spend three hours working on a single section, only to decide it isn’t doing what I wanted. That isn’t wasted time. In fact, it’s often the most productive part of the entire process because every failed attempt teaches me something.
Maybe the stitch pattern is too dense.
Maybe the fabric doesn’t drape well.
Maybe those increases looked perfectly reasonable in my head but apparently skipped the meeting where reality was discussed.
That’s valuable information.
The Yarn Has a Vote
This may sound strange, but after designing for long enough, you start listening to the yarn.
Not literally.
If your yarn starts giving investment advice, you may want to take a break.
But different fibers behave differently.
Cotton has opinions.
Acrylic has opinions.
Wool definitely has opinions.
The same stitch pattern can look crisp and structured in cotton, then become soft and flowing in wool. Sometimes switching yarn completely changes the personality of a project.
That’s why experienced designers don’t just ask, “Does this look nice?”
We ask things like:
Will this stretch too much?
Will those stitches disappear in fuzzy yarn?
Will beginners be able to see where the next stitch goes?
Can someone wear this comfortably for hours?
The yarn is constantly answering those questions.
You just have to pay attention.
Designing Is Really Problem Solving
People often assume the creative part is the hardest part.
Honestly?
The creativity is usually the easy part.
The hard part is solving all the little problems the design throws at you.
How do I make this edge lie flat?
Why is this corner curling?
Why does the stitch count suddenly have the mathematical integrity of a conspiracy theory?
Can I make this easier without changing the finished look?
Every design becomes a series of tiny puzzles.
Solve enough of those puzzles, and eventually you have a pattern.
Then I Start Writing
This is where the project shifts from being my design to becoming your project.
That changes everything.
When I’m crocheting for myself, I know exactly what I meant.
Future Me is surprisingly good at interpreting Present Me’s questionable decisions.
Other crocheters, however, deserve actual instructions.
Good instructions.
Clear instructions.
Instructions that don’t require telepathy.
Writing a pattern isn’t just documenting what I did.
It’s translating a creative process into language that hundreds—or hopefully thousands—of different people can follow with confidence.
That’s a completely different skill.
I’ve rewritten single rounds more times than I’ve crocheted them because one sentence felt awkward or one instruction could be misunderstood.
Words matter just as much as stitches.
I Make It Again
If I only crocheted every design once, I’d miss half the mistakes.
The second sample tells the truth.
That’s when I notice things like:
“This increase is awkward.”
“There’s a simpler way to explain this.”
“Nobody needs twelve rounds of this.”
“This section looked much more exciting yesterday.”
Making the project a second time forces me to follow my own instructions exactly as written.
It’s a surprisingly humbling experience.
Testers Are Worth Their Weight in Gold
By the time a pattern reaches testers, I’ve stared at it for so many hours that my brain starts filling in missing information automatically.
Testers don’t have that advantage.
And that’s exactly why they’re so important.
If five testers get confused in the same place, that’s not five people making the same mistake.
That’s me needing to explain something better.
Good testers don’t just find typos.
They help transform a pattern from understandable… to enjoyable.
Those are two very different things.
Finally, It Gets Released
People sometimes ask if I still get nervous publishing a new pattern.
Absolutely.
Every single time.
No matter how many designs you’ve released, there’s always that little voice asking whether you forgot something.
Then someone shares a finished project.
Someone else sends a message saying they loved making it.
Another person posts photos from halfway across the world using yarn you’ve never even heard of.
That’s the moment it becomes more than your project.
It becomes our project.
And honestly, that’s my favorite part of designing.
My Biggest Piece of Advice
If you’re thinking about designing your own patterns, don’t wait until you think you know everything.
None of us ever do.
Start small.
Experiment often.
Be willing to frog without getting frustrated.
Accept that your first design won’t be perfect.
Neither was mine.
The difference between someone who dreams about designing and someone who actually becomes a designer usually isn’t talent.
It’s persistence.
Because every polished pattern you’ve ever downloaded almost certainly began the same way.
With one little question.
“What if?”
#Crochet #crochetBlog #crochetBusiness #crochetCommunity #crochetCreativity #crochetDesign #crochetDesignProcess #crochetDesigner #crochetEducation #crochetFashion #crochetForBeginners #crochetForDesigners #crochetIdeas #crochetInspiration #crochetPatternDesign #crochetPatternDesigner #crochetPatternWriting #crochetProject #crochetStitches #crochetTechniques #CrochetTips #crochetTutorial #designingCrochetPatterns #fiberArts #handmade #handmadeBusiness #HodgePodgeCrochet #howToDesignCrochetPatterns #learnCrochetDesign #yarn #yarnCrafts -
24,500 Subscribers Later… Thank You
Today my YouTube channel officially crossed 24,500 subscribers, and honestly, I’m still trying to process it.
When I first started sharing crochet videos online, I never imagined that thousands of people from around the world would one day be watching my tutorials, following my crochet journey, supporting my designs, and becoming part of this amazing creative community.
What started as simply sharing something I loved slowly grew into something much bigger than I ever expected.
Over the years, HodgePodge Crochet has become more than just a crochet channel. It has become a space filled with creativity, learning, experimentation, encouragement, late-night crochet sessions, yarn piles taking over the house, cats supervising projects 😂, and people who genuinely appreciate handmade art.
One of the things I love most about this community is how supportive and encouraging everyone has been through every stage of the process — even the messy stages.
And trust me… there have been MANY messy stages.
If you’ve followed me recently over on Patreon, then you’ve probably seen me deep in the process of designing the new Lattice Top. This pattern has gone through more revisions, frogging, measuring, grading, and restructuring than I can even count at this point. Some days I’ve completely reworked entire sections just trying to get the drape, fit, and stitch flow exactly the way I imagined it in my head.
But that’s also the beautiful part of designing.
Sometimes crochet patterns don’t appear perfectly on the first try. Sometimes they evolve slowly through testing, experimentation, mistakes, and learning. And honestly, I think sharing that process openly has become one of my favorite parts of this journey.
Seeing people excited about the Lattice Top while it’s still being developed has been incredibly motivating for me. Knowing that people genuinely care about the work behind the scenes makes all those long design sessions feel worth it.
As my YouTube channel continues growing, I have so many exciting things planned for the future:
- New crochet patterns
- More detailed tutorials
- Behind-the-scenes design content
- Crochet vlogs
- Morocco lifestyle content 🇺🇸🇲🇦
- More pattern testing opportunities
- More creative experiments and projects
I’m genuinely excited about where things are heading.
And to every single person who has supported this channel in any way — whether you subscribed, watched a video, left a comment, purchased a pattern, shared my work, or simply followed quietly from the background — thank you.
Your support means more than you probably realize.
Creative work can sometimes feel very solitary behind the scenes. There are long hours spent designing, filming, editing, writing instructions, troubleshooting mistakes, and doubting whether anyone will even care about what you’re creating.
But moments like this remind me why I started.
24,500 subscribers may just look like a number to some people, but to me it represents years of learning, growth, persistence, creativity, and community.
And honestly?
I feel like we’re just getting started.
Thank you all so much for being part of this journey with me 💛
You can follow along here: https://www.youtube.com/@HodgePodgeCrochet
– HodgePodge Crochet
#crafts #creativeJourney #Crochet #crochetAesthetic #crochetBlog #crochetBusiness #crochetCommunity #crochetCreativity #crochetCreator #crochetDesigner #crochetFashion #crochetGarments #crochetGoals #crochetInspiration #crochetJourney #crochetLife #crochetPatternDesign #CrochetPatterns #crochetStudio #crochetSweater #crochetTop #crochetTutorial #crochetUpdates #crochetVlog #crochetYouTuber #crochetPattern #DIYCrochet #fiberArts #handmade #handmadeClothing #HodgePodgeCrochet #latticeTop #makerCommunity #morocco #smallCreator #writing #yarn #yarnLover #YouTubeCrochet -
24,500 Subscribers Later… Thank You
Today my YouTube channel officially crossed 24,500 subscribers, and honestly, I’m still trying to process it.
When I first started sharing crochet videos online, I never imagined that thousands of people from around the world would one day be watching my tutorials, following my crochet journey, supporting my designs, and becoming part of this amazing creative community.
What started as simply sharing something I loved slowly grew into something much bigger than I ever expected.
Over the years, HodgePodge Crochet has become more than just a crochet channel. It has become a space filled with creativity, learning, experimentation, encouragement, late-night crochet sessions, yarn piles taking over the house, cats supervising projects 😂, and people who genuinely appreciate handmade art.
One of the things I love most about this community is how supportive and encouraging everyone has been through every stage of the process — even the messy stages.
And trust me… there have been MANY messy stages.
If you’ve followed me recently over on Patreon, then you’ve probably seen me deep in the process of designing the new Lattice Top. This pattern has gone through more revisions, frogging, measuring, grading, and restructuring than I can even count at this point. Some days I’ve completely reworked entire sections just trying to get the drape, fit, and stitch flow exactly the way I imagined it in my head.
But that’s also the beautiful part of designing.
Sometimes crochet patterns don’t appear perfectly on the first try. Sometimes they evolve slowly through testing, experimentation, mistakes, and learning. And honestly, I think sharing that process openly has become one of my favorite parts of this journey.
Seeing people excited about the Lattice Top while it’s still being developed has been incredibly motivating for me. Knowing that people genuinely care about the work behind the scenes makes all those long design sessions feel worth it.
As my YouTube channel continues growing, I have so many exciting things planned for the future:
- New crochet patterns
- More detailed tutorials
- Behind-the-scenes design content
- Crochet vlogs
- Morocco lifestyle content 🇺🇸🇲🇦
- More pattern testing opportunities
- More creative experiments and projects
I’m genuinely excited about where things are heading.
And to every single person who has supported this channel in any way — whether you subscribed, watched a video, left a comment, purchased a pattern, shared my work, or simply followed quietly from the background — thank you.
Your support means more than you probably realize.
Creative work can sometimes feel very solitary behind the scenes. There are long hours spent designing, filming, editing, writing instructions, troubleshooting mistakes, and doubting whether anyone will even care about what you’re creating.
But moments like this remind me why I started.
24,500 subscribers may just look like a number to some people, but to me it represents years of learning, growth, persistence, creativity, and community.
And honestly?
I feel like we’re just getting started.
Thank you all so much for being part of this journey with me 💛
You can follow along here: https://www.youtube.com/@HodgePodgeCrochet
– HodgePodge Crochet
#crafts #creativeJourney #Crochet #crochetAesthetic #crochetBlog #crochetBusiness #crochetCommunity #crochetCreativity #crochetCreator #crochetDesigner #crochetFashion #crochetGarments #crochetGoals #crochetInspiration #crochetJourney #crochetLife #crochetPatternDesign #CrochetPatterns #crochetStudio #crochetSweater #crochetTop #crochetTutorial #crochetUpdates #crochetVlog #crochetYouTuber #crochetPattern #DIYCrochet #fiberArts #handmade #handmadeClothing #HodgePodgeCrochet #latticeTop #makerCommunity #morocco #smallCreator #writing #yarn #yarnLover #YouTubeCrochet -
24,500 Subscribers Later… Thank You
Today my YouTube channel officially crossed 24,500 subscribers, and honestly, I’m still trying to process it.
When I first started sharing crochet videos online, I never imagined that thousands of people from around the world would one day be watching my tutorials, following my crochet journey, supporting my designs, and becoming part of this amazing creative community.
What started as simply sharing something I loved slowly grew into something much bigger than I ever expected.
Over the years, HodgePodge Crochet has become more than just a crochet channel. It has become a space filled with creativity, learning, experimentation, encouragement, late-night crochet sessions, yarn piles taking over the house, cats supervising projects 😂, and people who genuinely appreciate handmade art.
One of the things I love most about this community is how supportive and encouraging everyone has been through every stage of the process — even the messy stages.
And trust me… there have been MANY messy stages.
If you’ve followed me recently over on Patreon, then you’ve probably seen me deep in the process of designing the new Lattice Top. This pattern has gone through more revisions, frogging, measuring, grading, and restructuring than I can even count at this point. Some days I’ve completely reworked entire sections just trying to get the drape, fit, and stitch flow exactly the way I imagined it in my head.
But that’s also the beautiful part of designing.
Sometimes crochet patterns don’t appear perfectly on the first try. Sometimes they evolve slowly through testing, experimentation, mistakes, and learning. And honestly, I think sharing that process openly has become one of my favorite parts of this journey.
Seeing people excited about the Lattice Top while it’s still being developed has been incredibly motivating for me. Knowing that people genuinely care about the work behind the scenes makes all those long design sessions feel worth it.
As my YouTube channel continues growing, I have so many exciting things planned for the future:
- New crochet patterns
- More detailed tutorials
- Behind-the-scenes design content
- Crochet vlogs
- Morocco lifestyle content 🇺🇸🇲🇦
- More pattern testing opportunities
- More creative experiments and projects
I’m genuinely excited about where things are heading.
And to every single person who has supported this channel in any way — whether you subscribed, watched a video, left a comment, purchased a pattern, shared my work, or simply followed quietly from the background — thank you.
Your support means more than you probably realize.
Creative work can sometimes feel very solitary behind the scenes. There are long hours spent designing, filming, editing, writing instructions, troubleshooting mistakes, and doubting whether anyone will even care about what you’re creating.
But moments like this remind me why I started.
24,500 subscribers may just look like a number to some people, but to me it represents years of learning, growth, persistence, creativity, and community.
And honestly?
I feel like we’re just getting started.
Thank you all so much for being part of this journey with me 💛
You can follow along here: https://www.youtube.com/@HodgePodgeCrochet
– HodgePodge Crochet
#crafts #creativeJourney #Crochet #crochetAesthetic #crochetBlog #crochetBusiness #crochetCommunity #crochetCreativity #crochetCreator #crochetDesigner #crochetFashion #crochetGarments #crochetGoals #crochetInspiration #crochetJourney #crochetLife #crochetPatternDesign #CrochetPatterns #crochetStudio #crochetSweater #crochetTop #crochetTutorial #crochetUpdates #crochetVlog #crochetYouTuber #crochetPattern #DIYCrochet #fiberArts #handmade #handmadeClothing #HodgePodgeCrochet #latticeTop #makerCommunity #morocco #smallCreator #writing #yarn #yarnLover #YouTubeCrochet