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  2. List of crochet stitches - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_crochet_stitches

    Photograph Schematic U.S. term U.K. term Turning chain slip stitch slip stitch / single crochet N/A chain stitch chain stitch N/A single crochet

  3. Crochet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crochet

    Crochet is traditionally worked from a written pattern using standard abbreviations or from a diagram, thus enabling non-English speakers to use English-based patterns. [32] To help counter confusion when reading patterns, a diagramming system using a standard international notation has come into use (illustration, left).

  4. 50 DIY Projects That Look Like Witchcraft But Are Actually ...

    www.aol.com/80-times-something-people-made...

    Image credits: KarolynHuum Just like the people on this list, every once in a while, I, too, get this urge to make something – usually something crochet that rarely ever materializes into ...

  5. Filet crochet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Filet_crochet

    Filet crochet. Filet crochet is a type of crocheted fabric that imitates filet lace. This type of crocheted lace is gridlike because it uses only two crochet stitches: the chain stitch and the double crochet stitch (U.S. terminology; known in some other countries as chain stitch and treble). Old filet patterns used a treble or triple stitch ...

  6. Arne & Carlos - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arne_&_Carlos

    Julekuler, their book of patterns for knitting woolen Christmas balls, sold more than 50,000 copies in Norway, and has been translated into several languages including English, where it is called 55 Christmas Balls to Knit. [1] Arne & Carlos have written or contributed to eight books that focus on knitting.

  7. Rug hooking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rug_hooking

    However, New England was the site of the development of preprinted designs on burlap, indicating a shift in the status of rug hooking, at least for some. While preprinted embroidery patterns had long existed, it was Philena Moxley of Lowell, Massachusetts who first developed a business stamping embroidery and rug hooking designs about 1868-1871.

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