In the last year or so, my crochet capacity has exploded! I can do all sorts of crazy things, and with the help of the internet, I can make my crocheted items look neater and last longer :) For today's blog post, here is a roundup of my 5 top Crochet Techniques and Tricks (in no particular order) that have made all the difference to my work over the last year!
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TOP 5 CROCHET TECHNIQUES AND TRICKS
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#1
Standing Stitches for Starting New Colours
Hate that "Join new colour, 3ch (counts as first dc)" instruction? Me too. Discovering the Standing Stitch technique has made my work so much neater and with fewer knots, and it can be adapted to ANY stitch! Need to start with a triple treble crochet? No problem!
Here's an excellent tutorial from Moogly on how to do a standing dc stitch:
#2
Invisible Join for Crochet in the Round
To me, the obvious "slip stitch into first dc, cut yarn and pull through" joining in work just looks so ugly now that I've learned how to do an invisible join. I still do that where a piece might come under strain (and when I'm too lazy to finish off ends properly and securely), but for anything on display? This is the way to go!
Dedri at Look What I Made has an excellent tutorial:
#3
Invisible Decrease
I'm sensing a theme here... but the invisible decrease is just so wonderful for anything amigurumi (including the little giraffe ears and horns for my Heidi Bears animals)! No more weird stretchy holes for me!
For a fantastic tutorial (pictures, words, videos, right handed and left handed), head over to Planet June:
#4
Zipped Ladder Stitch Join
If you're looking for a way to join squares for an afghan (or anything else really) where you want to almost pretend that they are joined by magic, this is the join to use! I use this for my Chunky Fitted Wristwarmers pattern, as it makes the join look so neat, and it's reversible!
Linda Davie has an excellent free tutorial available on Ravelry, and it even covers how to cope with corners!
#5
Chainless Foundation Stitches
I know this is my tutorial, but this way of starting a project was just such a revelation and improvement on trying to work in tiny chains, and managing tension, and blah blah blah. You can do any stitch using the same method, and even irregular starting rows such as for a ripple afghan!
I have a tutorial for half double crochet, but as I said above, the same technique can be used for any starting row stitch!
Do you have any crochet techniques that you just couldn't live without? Let us know in the comments!