I have a dumb question, when someone makes a MR and makes a number amount of stitches inside the ring for a hat, does that represent the amount of rows you will have in the hat until you increase to 12? I ask because some patterns ask for 10 inside the MR, or 5 and it increases till the 5th round and then you don’t increase anymore and continue the hat for the length wanted? 🤔
Usually the number of stitches inside the ring corresponds to the stitches themselves and their size. For sc it's usually 6 sts, hdc 8 sts, and dc 12 sts. If you're working with a stitch pattern or a different style hat then those numbers can vary according to the design. The number of increase rounds is targeting the crown size of the head you're making a hat for. So again this varies depending on what size hat you're making, style, yarn weight and stitch. So basic hat design is increase the crown circle to head size, then crochet to length. I hope this helps!
@ I have looked for “beginner friendly” videos I have a hard time learning, I don’t think it’s too much to ask that people who teach these videos talk slower and show their work. It is like a virtual classroom after all. She is putting these videos up to teach people how to do this or that stitch. These days when people have a hard time learning they ask for help. That’s all I am doing is asking for help.
How about instead of leaving comments like this, you could look a bit harder for the video that fits your skill level OR you could click the settings button and slow the video down to slow motion if you need - you're welcome!
I understand your frustration. I'm an experienced crocheter and I, too, struggle to follow instructions sometimes. What has worked for me is to watch the full video first, sometimes I do it twice. I pause the video to complete a stitch, then rewind to make sure I did it right. It's great to have all these video tutorials for free. All these designers are incredibly talented and I'm grateful we have so many patterns to choose from.
Thank you for the tutorial! Your video helped me to crochet a beanie in the round successfully!
Great job! I'm so glad it helped!
I have a dumb question, when someone makes a MR and makes a number amount of stitches inside the ring for a hat, does that represent the amount of rows you will have in the hat until you increase to 12? I ask because some patterns ask for 10 inside the MR, or 5 and it increases till the 5th round and then you don’t increase anymore and continue the hat for the length wanted? 🤔
Usually the number of stitches inside the ring corresponds to the stitches themselves and their size. For sc it's usually 6 sts, hdc 8 sts, and dc 12 sts. If you're working with a stitch pattern or a different style hat then those numbers can vary according to the design. The number of increase rounds is targeting the crown size of the head you're making a hat for. So again this varies depending on what size hat you're making, style, yarn weight and stitch. So basic hat design is increase the crown circle to head size, then crochet to length. I hope this helps!
Your website link is missing the m at the end of the
Thank you!
Show your work and go slower. Don’t talk so darn fast. It’s hard to keep up, I am new at this 😢.
Maybe start with a more beginner friendly video 🙂 “simple patters” don’t always translate to “simple teaching”
@ I have looked for “beginner friendly” videos I have a hard time learning, I don’t think it’s too much to ask that people who teach these videos talk slower and show their work. It is like a virtual classroom after all. She is putting these videos up to teach people how to do this or that stitch. These days when people have a hard time learning they ask for help. That’s all I am doing is asking for help.
How about instead of leaving comments like this, you could look a bit harder for the video that fits your skill level OR you could click the settings button and slow the video down to slow motion if you need - you're welcome!
@@rivkah_destiny3417I don't think the issue is with your asking for help....its the WAY you're asking
I understand your frustration. I'm an experienced crocheter and I, too, struggle to follow instructions sometimes. What has worked for me is to watch the full video first, sometimes I do it twice. I pause the video to complete a stitch, then rewind to make sure I did it right. It's great to have all these video tutorials for free. All these designers are incredibly talented and I'm grateful we have so many patterns to choose from.