5:09 Look at screen at this timestamp - after making the white st changing over to green, *see the little bit of green showing* (it’s the right edge of the top loop of the green st from previous row) - What she does next hides that bit of green, by placing the working yarn in front of the hook vs behind which creates an extra loop, then yarns over like in typical crochet (not under) then pulls the yarn through and switches to green. That extra loop (the fact that she put the white yarn in front of the hook before yarning over), hides the right edge of the top of the green loop from row below. Excellent! This is why understanding stitch anatomy is so important, to help you identify problems and understand how to fix them.
Très intéressant mais dommage que l'on ne puisse avoir la traduction en français car je suis débutante et pour moi c'est compliqué 😒😕 merci quand même 😉
That’s a great tip. One thing I’ve noticed however is that you describe “yarn over” in audio but in the video demo you appear to be showing “yarn under”.
this is def yarn under, but I think as a foreign english speaker, just like me, she might think thats just the way you describe the action of pull through the new loop🤷🤗 I thought so several years until I realize that are two different effects😅
This typical look has always bugged me when color changing and I would go back and “embroider” stitches over these areas to make it look better. But this is a game changer! Thank you so much for sharing!!
No, it’s like everything else, after you do it several times, you won’t need to plan - it’s exactly like the difference between discipline & habit: To change the way you do things takes discipline, but after you get accustomed to doing it, it becomes habit. 💕
@@SydMountaineer This is what I was basically going to say as well!! It can take daily practice for up to about 3 weeks, at least make something a habit, but, everyone is different and this habit may take a longer or even a little shorter time frame.
Thank you so much for this tutorial! Would you be willing to do some other tutorials on this subject? It would be so helpful to see how you started this white shape at the bottom point. It would also be very helpful to see how you would be able to keep these clean color changes if you were going to be decreasing the number of white stitches, either turning this white shape into a diamond, or on a completely separate example, making a triangle that started with a wide bottom and got smaller each row to end in a point. Thank you for considering, and also many thanks for all of your work!
This was super helpful! The only thing im confused on is how I'll go about decreasing the amount of white, and increasing the green further on in the pattern. But the foundation knowledge on the top vs bottom half of the stitch will help me figure it out :3
The demonstration of the left side diagonal also applies to when you would decrease the white, just imagine the same technique with the colours reversed. You would make a stitch starting with 3 green loops (instead of white like in her example, because you'd be approaching the colour change from the green area) and then switch to white before closing the stitch.
Thank you good idea 🥰 I hope I will remember of this for my futur projects. And I hope I will not make a mistake for counting stitches in both colors 🙄
My cousin and I both crochet; she send me this yesterday after showing me so I could watch it Very good tutorial! Clear, to the point, we can clearly see the loops and yarn, the mini hook to "point" at what you're talking about is a really neat trick, and it's not super hard to do either! I've been thinking about doing plushies, too, so this really comes in handy!
This is a brilliant tip!! Tysm for sharing it with other crocheters. This has always bothered me, & I'm sure many others. U made it so easy to understand what to do & why. I actually understand exactly how &;why this works so beautifully. This is the best crochet tip I've seen in a long time. Just subbed!! 🧶⚘️
Excellent tutorial ! You have explained my problem because you included the only way on both right and left… now I have learned my new way especially the left side. Thank you. I just subscribed…. I saved this clip and will search for mor I forgot my brain
WONDERFUL, THANK YOU. You have a new subscriber after I get done with typing. You are just as clear in your teaching as your method is at having clean sides. Thank you again. I'm saving this for I can't add it to my project now. Wow, this old dog learning yet another new trick.
Thank you so much for the video omg- I just made a project that had a big problem with the jagged edges and now I know how not to repeat that mistake!!! Such a relief I found an easy vid to explain it, I struggled so much before to understand similar techniques:")
Very Interesting! I think I might get confused thinking about how to get the right side correct, but I might still give this a try in some of my designs. Thanks for sharing!
Thanks for the tutorial !!! Do you have a method for decreasing ? In the video you are increasing the white part, but it is the same method to decrease the white part ?
I would inmagine you would treat it like an increase/decrease of the other color. So you would use the top loop alternate color in the green color over the top of the white on the far left end.
This looks really fantastic and easy to follow... wrote down the instructions for later. I'll have to check your channel to see if you have any info on vertical lines.
So I want to make sure I understand this correctly. She is adding an extra top "white" loop on the right side (starting the color change 2 stitches ahead instead of just one) and adding an extra loop in the same stitch where you want the color change to occur on the left side? I'm just running into some difficult when I count my stitches with the increases and decreases in the mix.
@@stringswithoutguilt-swg726 right. It's so frustrating 😫. I'm gonna test it after I get done with my current wips. (None color changing sadly lol) I'll check back in when I do if I remember haha.
This is a game changer. I am working on a fox pumpkin, which is flat to start. I am going to try this method. Seems to be the best one I have seen, even in the round. Thank you for the video!
This is a very interesting technique. It seems like it would only work in the round, carrying the white loosely across the back of the work. Is there a way of fastening the floats down so little fingers can't get snagged in them? For projects in the round however, it looks great, and I can't wait to try this. Thanks for sharing!
I'm one of those people who understand better when they know the detail. When they know how and why it works. Thank you for this clear concise video.
5:09 Look at screen at this timestamp - after making the white st changing over to green, *see the little bit of green showing* (it’s the right edge of the top loop of the green st from previous row) - What she does next hides that bit of green, by placing the working yarn in front of the hook vs behind which creates an extra loop, then yarns over like in typical crochet (not under) then pulls the yarn through and switches to green. That extra loop (the fact that she put the white yarn in front of the hook before yarning over), hides the right edge of the top of the green loop from row below.
Excellent! This is why understanding stitch anatomy is so important, to help you identify problems and understand how to fix them.
Très intéressant mais dommage que l'on ne puisse avoir la traduction en français car je suis débutante et pour moi c'est compliqué 😒😕 merci quand même 😉
basically just HDC half double crochet (US) where you yarn over before going thru all three (instead of 2 then 2 more)
Crocheting for 50 years and this is the first time I heard of this. Thank you!
I've been crocheting for 30 years and did not know this!!!! My mind is blown!!!!
That’s a great tip. One thing I’ve noticed however is that you describe “yarn over” in audio but in the video demo you appear to be showing “yarn under”.
It is yarn over, it’s just the way she turns her hook when catching the wool. We each have our own way of doing it 😅
@@m0ther0neshe definitely does yarn under
I thought the same - I call that yarn under as well
Beautiful stitch tutorial tho great tip
@@m0ther0nethe final effects are different in each way
this is def yarn under, but I think as a foreign english speaker, just like me, she might think thats just the way you describe the action of pull through the new loop🤷🤗 I thought so several years until I realize that are two different effects😅
You are an amazing teacher, and your explanations and demonstrations are fantastic. Please keep sharing more of your tips and techniques!
"Nobel Price "for this method, Thank you very much!😀
This typical look has always bugged me when color changing and I would go back and “embroider” stitches over these areas to make it look better. But this is a game changer! Thank you so much for sharing!!
This definitely looks better but takes SO MUCH planning ahead 😅 I usually end up frustrated and give up 😂
No, it’s like everything else, after you do it several times, you won’t need to plan - it’s exactly like the difference between discipline & habit: To change the way you do things takes discipline, but after you get accustomed to doing it, it becomes habit. 💕
@@SydMountaineer
This is what I was basically going to say as well!!
It can take daily practice for up to about 3 weeks, at least make something a habit, but, everyone is different and this habit may take a longer or even a little shorter time frame.
Wow! This is game changing for me! Such an easy to follow tutorial for what has been bugging me about color changes! Thank You! :)
This is a tricky thing to explain, but you explained it *extremely well!* 👏👏👏 You have a great understanding of the anatomy of stitches.
Thank you so much for this tutorial! Would you be willing to do some other tutorials on this subject? It would be so helpful to see how you started this white shape at the bottom point. It would also be very helpful to see how you would be able to keep these clean color changes if you were going to be decreasing the number of white stitches, either turning this white shape into a diamond, or on a completely separate example, making a triangle that started with a wide bottom and got smaller each row to end in a point. Thank you for considering, and also many thanks for all of your work!
hi. did you mange to make diamond shape?
I would also love to know how to decrease it with straight and not jagged color changes 🤗
Omg where was this video the last few months I needed this. Thank you
Thank you so much . Im so glad i found you. Best color change ever,and ive been crocheting for more than 50 yrs 🎉
This tip is so so game changing. Tysm!!
Thank you so much. That was what I looking for. Great tip that will help me a lot.
This is so amazing, thank you so much!🤩😍🥰
this is so useful i absolutely love this
Beautiful! I'm grateful you have shown us this 'clean' way to change colors on a slant
This will finally let me make the diamond pattern I want on my snakes, thank you!❤
That was an excellent tutorial! I’ve always been bothered by the way my transitions look. Thanks!
This was super helpful! The only thing im confused on is how I'll go about decreasing the amount of white, and increasing the green further on in the pattern. But the foundation knowledge on the top vs bottom half of the stitch will help me figure it out :3
This is so helpful - thank you!! For my future reference 3:00
this is C2 level of crochet 🎉 thank you 🌸
this is awesome. i had a project like this but it looked so bad that i just abandoned it 😭
now i can redo it. Thank you so much
Thanks. This video demonstrates a great upgrade th the smooth color transition. You did a really nice job
This is so cool! Exactly what I need!
Thanks for sharing! You are a very good instructor!
Great technique thank you! I just wonder how this affects the row when you start decreasing the colour?
Same here... i was also thinking how do you decrease
The demonstration of the left side diagonal also applies to when you would decrease the white, just imagine the same technique with the colours reversed. You would make a stitch starting with 3 green loops (instead of white like in her example, because you'd be approaching the colour change from the green area) and then switch to white before closing the stitch.
@@sethjm Thank you so much!
Sinubukan ko na at napakaganda po ng kinalabasan.
Maraming salamat po Maam 😊..
From Philippines po..
Thank you.
Thank you so much, I really needed this, as I recently abandoned a project because it looked messy. I’ll try again with your method.
It looks so good! People who make miniatures are always so creative, I’m always impressed by what they use.
Great tip, thank you. Very well explained.
What a wonderful technique!!!
Thanks for a very detailed tutorial. 👏
THIS IS GROUNDBREAKING... THANK YOU SO MUCH !!!!
Thank you good idea 🥰
I hope I will remember of this for my futur projects.
And I hope I will not make a mistake for counting stitches in both colors 🙄
My cousin and I both crochet;
she send me this yesterday after showing me so I could watch it
Very good tutorial! Clear, to the point, we can clearly see the loops and yarn, the mini hook to "point" at what you're talking about is a really neat trick, and it's not super hard to do either!
I've been thinking about doing plushies, too, so this really comes in handy!
This has changed my life thank you
Really interesting technique, I'm going to give it a try for sure!
Thanks for the super clear and useful instructions. Gonna use this for my penguin plushies❤
This is really helpful! I'm planning to make a corgi but don't know how to do the pattern! I can use this! Thank you!
Dry tempted to redo the Xmas stocking I am half way through with this technique. Thanks for sharing.
I finally needed this for something! It came out perfect! At first it was hard to get the hang of it, but it worked beautifully! Thank you again!
Amazing tip!!! Thank you so much! This is the game changer we need.
This is a brilliant tip!! Tysm for sharing it with other crocheters. This has always bothered me, & I'm sure many others. U made it so easy to understand what to do & why. I actually understand exactly how &;why this works so beautifully. This is the best crochet tip I've seen in a long time. Just subbed!! 🧶⚘️
Great, beautiful and useful technique . Thank you for showing it. Your directions are very clear and easy to follow. Wish you more success.
THAT'S BRILLIANT! Definitely keeping this one in my arsenal! Thank you so much!
Excellent tutorial
!
You have explained my problem because you included the only way on both right and left… now I have learned my new way especially the left side. Thank you. I just subscribed…. I saved this clip and will search for mor I forgot my brain
WONDERFUL, THANK YOU. You have a new subscriber after I get done with typing. You are just as clear in your teaching as your method is at having clean sides. Thank you again. I'm saving this for I can't add it to my project now. Wow, this old dog learning yet another new trick.
I'm definitely going to try this! Thank you for sharing this!
Cool. Perfect solution. Thanks a lot for this tip.
Thank you! This will make my color work look soooo much better!
Love the way you say crocheting ❤
Thank you very much to showing us this tip!
It helps me understand what i did wrong 😃
Thank you so much for the video omg-
I just made a project that had a big problem with the jagged edges and now I know how not to repeat that mistake!!! Such a relief I found an easy vid to explain it, I struggled so much before to understand similar techniques:")
Wonderful and very helpful. Thank you!
That was just brilliant! Thank you very much!
Thank you for this amazing knowledge! It's really useful!
Very Interesting! I think I might get confused thinking about how to get the right side correct, but I might still give this a try in some of my designs. Thanks for sharing!
Thank you so much❤ the explanation was so clear and on point. Thanks
This is genius!!!
C'est très clair, j'ai même compris en anglais, je garde la technique. Merci 🤩
Thank you so much. I'm struggling with this problem recently and you nail right into the answer for me ❤❤
Do you have written instructions for your color change method? It's ingenious! Thanks for sharing.
Brilliant tip. WOW! Thank you for sharing this amazing tip.
Thank you so very much this way is awesome. Your tutorial very clear and perfect.
THANK YOU FOR YOUR TECHNIQUE. IT'S VERY USEFUL
todo este tiempo estuve tejiendo mal!!!!
Muchas gracias por tu explicación.
Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge with us. Definitely going to try this method 👍
Going to try this along side with your video❤❤
That's a tip I really wanted to know.
Thank you so much!
Oh this is interesting! Thank you so much for this video, I will definitely try this!
Thanks for the tutorial !!! Do you have a method for decreasing ? In the video you are increasing the white part, but it is the same method to decrease the white part ?
Same question for me!
Yes! I hope they would release a guide for that too
I would inmagine you would treat it like an increase/decrease of the other color. So you would use the top loop alternate color in the green color over the top of the white on the far left end.
@@laurafletcher1653ооо, спасибо!
as simple as that! thank you so much!!
This looks really fantastic and easy to follow... wrote down the instructions for later. I'll have to check your channel to see if you have any info on vertical lines.
So I want to make sure I understand this correctly. She is adding an extra top "white" loop on the right side (starting the color change 2 stitches ahead instead of just one) and adding an extra loop in the same stitch where you want the color change to occur on the left side? I'm just running into some difficult when I count my stitches with the increases and decreases in the mix.
Thank you so much. Greetings from México
The jaggedness always bothered me, with this technique I can finally fix it! Thank you so much for this!
Very interesting ❤❤❤
thank you for sharing, very clever method and very well explained. i will definitely try. 👍👍
No lo sabía, muchas gracias por compartir los videos, saludos desde Santiago de Chile, bendiciones 🙏😘🤗🇨🇱
This is such a good video!! Thank you for the tip
Great job on this video and thanks for sharing! Very helpful stuff.
This is amazing! Thank you!!!!!
This is genius. Thank you!
Thank you for your video.. this is amazing. I can use this to my amigurumi project.. ❤❤❤
Wondering if this work in flat crochet as well as in the round
I was trying to figure this out too. My return rows make a jagged edge too.
@@stringswithoutguilt-swg726 right. It's so frustrating 😫. I'm gonna test it after I get done with my current wips. (None color changing sadly lol) I'll check back in when I do if I remember haha.
This is a game changer. I am working on a fox pumpkin, which is flat to start. I am going to try this method. Seems to be the best one I have seen, even in the round. Thank you for the video!
This is so helpful 😍✨ Thank you so much!! ❤
Genius! ❤Thank you for sharing!
This is very useful tips 👍🏼 How do u do it with HDC and DC?
How do you do this when decreasing with the white?
This is a very interesting technique. It seems like it would only work in the round, carrying the white loosely across the back of the work. Is there a way of fastening the floats down so little fingers can't get snagged in them? For projects in the round however, it looks great, and I can't wait to try this. Thanks for sharing!
Brilliant tips, thanks for sharing.😄🌼
Does this work on flat work that gets turned?
Thanks for this amazing tips!!!❤❤❤
I used worst weight acrylic yarn and a 4mm crochet hook the last row I did a reverse sc.
game changer thank you so much excellent tip
Wow! Awesome tip! Thank you so very much! ❤
👏👏👏👏 super technic! Thank you!
absolutely loving this!
Clever! Thank you for sharing
🌸THANK YOU!!!🌸 the look of the jagged color changes has always driven me crazy! This is beautiful!!!💗