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#crochetcreativity — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #crochetcreativity, aggregated by home.social.

  1. HodgePodge Crochet @hodgepodgecrochetcom.wordpress.com@hodgepodgecrochetcom.wordpress.com ·

    The Crochet Market Bag I Actually Use

    There’s a funny thing that happens when you design crochet patterns for years.

    You make beautiful things.
    You photograph them.
    You admire them.
    You fold them carefully.

    …and sometimes they quietly disappear into a closet.

    But every once in a while, a project becomes part of your actual life.

    This market bag became one of those projects for me.

    It started simply enough — cotton yarn, a crochet hook, and an idea I couldn’t quite let go of. I wanted something lightweight but sturdy. Something soft, stretchy, practical, and beautiful at the same time. A bag that could hold fresh fruit from the market one day and yarn the next.

    Living in Morocco has changed the way I think about handmade things.

    There are colors everywhere here. Crates of oranges stacked in the sun. Worn terracotta walls. Olive trees. Market baskets. Fabric textures. Blue tiles. Dusty pink flower pots. Life feels layered and handmade in a way that’s hard to explain until you experience it.

    I think this bag quietly absorbed some of that feeling.

    The mesh stretches naturally when you use it, and instead of fighting that characteristic, I decided to design around it. I wanted the bag to drape beautifully when empty but expand when filled. I wanted it to feel lived-in instead of stiff and over-engineered.

    And honestly?
    It became the bag I kept reaching for.

    Not because it was perfect.
    Not because it photographed well.
    But because it worked.

    It followed me into grocery stores, outdoor markets, quick errands, and quiet afternoons. At one point, it even became the temporary storage location for yarn, oranges, receipts, and a crochet hook all at the same time — which feels like the most realistic crochet bag review possible.

    And of course, no crochet project in this house is ever completed without cat involvement.

    At some point during filming, a cat fell asleep directly on top of the yarn skein I was using. Production immediately stopped because apparently the yarn no longer belonged to me.

    Honestly, that moment perfectly captured the spirit of this project:
    slow afternoons,
    sunlight,
    soft cotton yarn,
    and making something useful with your own hands.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HXHOoyHqpHw

    That’s what I love most about crochet.

    Not perfection.
    Not trends.
    Not constantly chasing the next project.

    Just creating things that quietly become part of everyday life.

    So if you decide to make this market bag too, I hope it becomes one of those projects for you — the kind that gets tossed over your shoulder on the way out the door, stretched with groceries, filled with yarn, carried to the beach, or used far more than you ever expected.

    And if it ends up full of oranges at least once…
    I feel like you’re using it correctly.

    #artisanCrochet #beginnerCrochet #cottagecoreCrochet #cottonCrochetBag #cottonYarnCrochet #cozyCrochet #crafts #Crochet #crochetAccessories #crochetAesthetics #crochetAndCats #crochetBagPattern #crochetBlog #crochetBlogger #crochetCommunity #crochetCreativity #crochetDesigner #crochetForEverydayUse #crochetFromMorocco #crochetGiftIdeas #crochetIdeas #crochetInspiration #crochetLifestyle #crochetLovers #crochetMakers #crochetMarketBag #crochetPhotography #crochetProject #crochetStitches #crochetStory #crochetTexture #crochetToteBag #crochetTutorial #crochetWithCottonYarn #crochetPattern #easyCrochetPattern #farmhouseCrochetStyle #fiberArts #freeCrochetPattern #handmadeBag #handmadeCrochet #handmadeLifestyle #HodgePodgeCrochet #knitting #marketToteCrochet #meshMarketBag #modernCrochet #MoroccanInspiration #practicalCrochetProjects #reusableGroceryBag #slowLiving #summerCrochetProject #sustainableLiving #yarn #yarnLover
  2. HodgePodge Crochet @hodgepodgecrochetcom.wordpress.com@hodgepodgecrochetcom.wordpress.com ·

    Why Crochet Bags Stretch — And How I Finally Fixed Mine

    If you have ever finished a crochet bag, held it proudly in your hands, and thought:

    “This looks amazing.”

    …only to use it for one day and suddenly realize it now hangs halfway to your knees…

    trust me, you are not alone.

    For years, crochet bag stretching frustrated me more than almost anything else in crochet.

    I would spend hours designing a beautiful tote or market bag. It would look perfect laying flat. The stitches looked neat. The shape looked structured. The straps looked sturdy.

    Then reality happened.

    I would actually use the bag.

    And suddenly:

    • the straps stretched
    • the body sagged
    • the bottom drooped
    • the sides warped outward
    • the entire shape changed

    Sometimes dramatically.

    At first, I honestly thought I was just doing something wrong.

    But after years of crocheting bags, testing yarns, experimenting with stitch patterns, and learning through a lot of trial and error, I finally realized something important:

    Most crochet bags stretch because crochet itself naturally stretches.

    Especially open stitch patterns.

    Especially cotton.

    Especially market bags.

    And honestly? A lot of patterns never really explain that part clearly.

    Why Crochet Bags Stretch So Much

    Crochet fabric is flexible by nature.

    Unlike woven fabric, crochet stitches are made from loops pulling against loops. That flexibility is part of what makes crochet soft, comfortable, and beautiful.

    But in bags, flexibility can quickly turn into sagging.

    The moment you add:

    • water bottles
    • yarn
    • books
    • groceries
    • wallets
    • phones
    • everyday weight

    …the stitches begin pulling downward.

    And over time, they keep stretching farther.

    Open mesh and lattice stitches stretch even more because they have larger spaces between stitches with less structural support.

    That is why a crochet bag that looks small and compact while empty can suddenly become huge once you put items inside.

    The Biggest Mistake I Used to Make

    For the longest time, I designed bags based only on how they looked empty.

    That was my mistake.

    I did not think enough about:

    • gravity
    • weight distribution
    • fiber behavior
    • long-term stretching

    I would finish a bag, photograph it beautifully, and think the job was done.

    Then after actual use, I would realize the straps had grown several inches longer and the entire bag had changed shape.

    That is when I started studying what was really happening structurally.

    Cotton Is Amazing… But Also Sneaky

    One thing many crocheters discover the hard way is that cotton yarn behaves very differently from acrylic.

    Cotton is:

    • durable
    • washable
    • crisp
    • beautiful for bags

    But cotton also has weight.

    And once cotton stretches, it tends to stay stretched.

    This becomes even more noticeable in larger bags or mesh bags because the weight of the yarn itself contributes to the pulling.

    That does not mean cotton is bad for bags.

    Honestly, I still love cotton for bags.

    But now I design with its behavior instead of fighting against it.

    What Finally Fixed My Crochet Bags

    After a lot of experimenting, I found that fixing stretching is not about one magical trick.

    It is about combining several smart design choices together.

    1. Smaller Hooks Changed Everything

    This was one of the biggest improvements I ever made.

    For years, I crocheted bags using the hook size recommended on the yarn label.

    Big mistake.

    Now, I almost always size down my hook for bags.

    A tighter fabric:

    • stretches less
    • holds shape better
    • creates more structure
    • feels sturdier

    The difference is honestly shocking.

    2. Dense Stitches Matter More Than You Think

    Some stitches naturally stretch more than others.

    Very open lace and mesh patterns can be beautiful, but they often need support from surrounding structure.

    That is why I started balancing open designs with:

    • solid sections
    • reinforced bands
    • tighter borders
    • structured bottoms

    That combination made my bags hold their shape dramatically better.

    3. The Straps Need Special Attention

    Bag straps are usually the first thing to stretch.

    I learned this the hard way.

    Now when I design straps, I think about:

    • stitch direction
    • density
    • width
    • reinforcement

    Sometimes I intentionally make straps shorter than I want them to end up because I already know they will relax with use.

    And honestly? That one adjustment alone helped tremendously.

    4. Gauge Actually Matters for Bags

    I know.

    Nobody wants to hear that.

    But for bags, gauge affects more than size.

    It affects structure.

    Loose tension creates softer, stretchier fabric.

    Tighter tension creates stronger fabric.

    When testers tell me a bag turned out much larger than expected, tension is often a huge part of the reason why.

    5. Real-Life Testing Changed My Designing Process

    This may sound obvious, but I used to evaluate bags mostly by appearance.

    Now I test them like actual bags.

    I load them with:

    • yarn
    • groceries
    • notebooks
    • random household items

    Then I let them hang.

    That tells me far more than flat photos ever could.

    Some bags look beautiful but fail completely under real-world use.

    Others become softer and more beautiful over time while still holding their structure.

    Testing taught me the difference.

    The Truth About Stretching

    Here is something important I wish more crocheters knew:

    Some stretching is completely normal.

    Especially in market bags.

    Especially in cotton.

    Especially in mesh designs.

    A crochet bag is not supposed to behave exactly like stiff commercial fabric bags.

    The goal is not eliminating all stretch.

    The goal is controlled stretch.

    There is a huge difference between:

    • a bag relaxing naturally
      and
    • a bag losing its entire shape

    Once I understood that difference, my entire approach to designing bags changed.

    Crochet Taught Me Patience

    Honestly, fixing my crochet bags taught me something bigger than just construction techniques.

    It taught me patience.

    Crochet is often about experimenting, failing, adjusting, and learning over time.

    Sometimes the projects that frustrate us most are the ones that teach us the most in the end.

    And after years of stretched straps, sagging totes, and floppy market bags…

    I can finally say:

    I think I figured it out.

    — Tanya
    HodgePodge Crochet 🧶

    #cottonCrochetBag #crafts #Crochet #crochetAdvice #crochetArticle #crochetBagPatterns #crochetBagProblems #crochetBagStretching #crochetBagSupport #crochetBagSupportTips #crochetBagTutorial #crochetBags #crochetBlogPost #crochetBlogger #crochetBusiness #crochetCommunity #crochetConstruction #crochetCottonYarn #crochetCraftsmanship #crochetCreativity #crochetDesign #crochetEducation #crochetFixes #crochetForBeginners #crochetGauge #crochetHacks #crochetInspiration #crochetLearning #crochetLifestyle #crochetMaker #crochetMarketBag #crochetMistakes #crochetPatternDesigner #crochetProjects #crochetShaping #crochetSkills #crochetStitchTips #crochetStraps #crochetStructure #crochetTechniques #crochetTension #crochetTexture #CrochetTips #crochetToteBag #crochetTutorialBlog #crochetPattern #crochetingBags #diyCrochetBag #fiberArts #handmadeBags #HodgePodgeCrochet #pattern #whyCrochetBagsStretch #yarn #yarnLover
  3. HodgePodge Crochet @hodgepodgecrochetcom.wordpress.com@hodgepodgecrochetcom.wordpress.com ·

    I Moved from America to Morocco and This Changed My Crochet Business

    There are moments in life when everything changes so suddenly that you almost do not recognize your own life anymore.

    For me, moving from America to Morocco was one of those moments.

    When I first packed up my crochet hooks, yarn, cameras, computers, and the life I had spent decades building in the United States, I honestly did not know what would happen to my crochet business. I did not know if people would still follow my work. I did not know if I would still feel inspired to design. I did not know if I would even be able to find yarn I liked using.

    What I did know was this:

    I needed a change.

    After spending most of my life in America, everything had started to feel rushed, loud, exhausting, and emotionally draining. Day after day felt like survival mode. Even creativity, the thing that once brought me peace, started feeling buried underneath stress, responsibilities, and constant pressure.

    Crochet had always been more than yarn and stitches to me.

    It was comfort.

    It was therapy.

    It was memory.

    It was the one thing that stayed with me through every stage of life, going all the way back to childhood when I first learned how to crochet and make little outfits for Barbie dolls. Back then, I had no idea those tiny stitches would eventually become a business, a creative outlet, and a connection to thousands of people around the world.

    Then came Morocco.

    And somehow, slowly, quietly, everything began to change.

    Slowing Down Changed My Creativity

    One of the first things I noticed after arriving in Morocco was that life moved differently.

    People sit longer.

    Talk longer.

    Drink coffee slower.

    Families gather more.

    Stores close in the afternoon.

    The nights feel alive.

    There is a rhythm here that is difficult to explain unless you experience it yourself.

    For the first time in years, I felt my mind slowing down.

    And strangely enough, that changed the way I designed crochet patterns.

    In America, I often felt pressure to constantly produce:

    • more patterns
    • more content
    • more videos
    • more posts
    • more engagement

    Everything felt tied to algorithms, numbers, deadlines, and burnout.

    But in Morocco, I started reconnecting with why I loved crochet in the first place.

    I started paying attention to textures again.

    Colors again.

    Details again.

    I began designing more intentionally instead of just trying to “keep up.”

    And honestly, I think people noticed the difference.

    Morocco Reignited My Inspiration

    Morocco is full of texture, color, geometry, and artistry.

    You see it everywhere:

    • in the tile work
    • in the architecture
    • in the markets
    • in the fabrics
    • in the desert landscapes
    • in the old doors
    • in the handmade goods

    Even ordinary things here often feel artistic.

    As someone who designs crochet patterns, being surrounded by that kind of visual inspiration changes you creatively.

    Some of my recent crochet ideas, color choices, and textures absolutely came from simply living here and observing everyday life around me.

    Even the natural light feels different when I photograph my work now.

    Warmer.

    Softer.

    More alive.

    The Challenges Nobody Sees

    Of course, moving overseas also came with challenges.

    A lot of them.

    Finding crochet supplies was not always easy at first. Yarn brands I used for years in America suddenly were not available anymore. Simple things became complicated. Shipping costs were shocking. Learning where to buy materials in a completely different country took time.

    There were language barriers.

    Cultural adjustments.

    Moments of homesickness.

    Moments where I questioned whether I had made the right decision at all.

    Building a creative business while adjusting to life in another country is not glamorous the way social media sometimes makes it look.

    There were days I felt completely overwhelmed.

    But there was also something beautiful happening underneath all of that uncertainty.

    I was rebuilding creatively from the ground up.

    Crochet Became Personal Again

    Somewhere along the way, crochet stopped feeling like a race again.

    It became personal.

    Peaceful.

    Meaningful.

    I started creating things because I genuinely loved them, not because I thought they would perform well online.

    Ironically, I think that authenticity actually helped my business grow stronger.

    People can feel when something is real.

    They can feel when creativity comes from passion instead of pressure.

    And I think moving to Morocco helped me rediscover that part of myself.

    The Internet Made the World Feel Smaller

    One of the most unexpected parts of this journey has been realizing how connected creativity really is.

    Even while living thousands of miles away from America, I still wake up every day connected to crocheters from all over the world through:

    • YouTube
    • Instagram
    • Facebook
    • my blog
    • pattern sales
    • messages and comments

    It reminds me that creativity has no borders.

    A crochet pattern designed in Morocco can end up being stitched together in Texas, Canada, Australia, Germany, or South Africa by someone I may never meet.

    That still amazes me.

    This Move Changed More Than My Business

    At the end of the day, moving from America to Morocco changed far more than just my crochet business.

    It changed my pace.

    My perspective.

    My priorities.

    My creativity.

    And maybe most importantly, it reminded me that sometimes we need to step completely outside of our old environment to rediscover who we are.

    Crochet followed me across an ocean.

    And somehow, through all the uncertainty and change, it became home again.

    #AmericanExpat #AmericanInMorocco #crafts #creativeBusiness #creativeLife #Crochet #crochetAndTravel #crochetArtist #crochetBlog #crochetBlogging #crochetBusiness #crochetCommunity #crochetContentCreator #crochetCreativity #crochetCreator #crochetDesignProcess #crochetDesigner #crochetEntrepreneur #crochetInspiration #crochetInspirationBlog #crochetInspirationMorocco #crochetJourney #crochetLife #crochetLifestyle #crochetLove #crochetMaker #crochetPassion #crochetPatternDesigner #CrochetPatterns #crochetPhotography #crochetProjects #crochetSmallBusiness #crochetStorytelling #crochetStudio #CrochetTips #crochetWorld #crochetYouTuber #crochetPattern #expatCreator #expatLifeMorocco #fiberArts #freePattern #handmadeBusiness #handmadeLifestyle #HodgePodgeCrochet #lifeInMorocco #MoroccanCulture #MoroccanInspiration #MoroccoLifestyle #movingToMorocco #slowLiving #womenWhoCrochet #yarn #yarnLover #yarnShoppingMorocco
  4. HodgePodge Crochet @hodgepodgecrochetcom.wordpress.com@hodgepodgecrochetcom.wordpress.com ·

    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
  5. HodgePodge Crochet @hodgepodgecrochetcom.wordpress.com@hodgepodgecrochetcom.wordpress.com ·

    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
  6. HodgePodge Crochet @hodgepodgecrochetcom.wordpress.com@hodgepodgecrochetcom.wordpress.com ·

    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
  7. Descubre el amigurumi de Mamá Imelda inspirado en la película Coco, hecho a mano con detalle y encanto. Una pieza exclusiva de colección que combina ternura, creatividad y tradición mexicana. Ideal para regalar o decorar con un toque mágico.

    #amigurumicoco,#Crochetmamaimelda,#Fantasymamaimelda,
    #mamaimeldaAmigurumi,#CrochetCreativity,