Wattle stitch
The wattle stitch is a popular, beginner-friendly crochet technique made by repeating a single row of clusters containing a single crochet, chain 1, and double crochet. It creates a dense, reversible, woven-looking texture that is perfect for cozy blankets, scarves, and dishcloths. [1, 2, 3, 4]
How to Crochet the Wattle Stitch
The wattle stitch pattern is based on a chain multiple of 3. [1]
Abbreviations (US terms):
Step 1: Foundation Chain
Chain in a multiple of 3 until you reach your desired width. [1]
Step 2: Row 1 (Foundation Row)
- In the 3rd chain from your hook, work a cluster of (sc, ch 1, dc).
- Sk the next 2 chains.
- In the next chain, work (sc, ch 1, dc).
- Repeat steps 2-3 across until you have 1 or 2 chains left.
- Sk the next chain, and make 1sc in the very last chain. Turn your work. [1, 5, 7, 8]
Step 3: Row 2 and Beyond (The Pattern Repeat)
- Chain 1 (this does not count as a stitch).
- Make 1sc into the first stitch.
- Find the ch-1 space from the wattle cluster directly below you from the previous row.
- Work a (sc, ch 1, dc) directly into that ch-1 space.
- Repeat Step 4 in every ch-1 space all the way across.
- When you reach the end, make 1sc in the very last stitch (the top of the sc from the row below).
- Turn your work and repeat this row until your project reaches the desired length. [1, 2, 5, 9, 10]

Comments
Post a Comment