hi! im quite confused with the outer petals. how did you fit 14 because there are only 54 stitches. one petal will take up 4 stitches so at the end (there should be 56 for all 14 to fit), there would only be 2 stitches left for the 14th petal. i hope you answer my question. thank you in advance.
That is SUCH a lovely sunflower!!! the petals are amazing!! I am so glad you didn't do the crocodile stitch for them! Your way is much better. I can't wait to make SOME of these!! they are beautiful. Thank you so much for sharing and the amazing tutorial.
Thank you crochet videos are so helpful for the beginners like me lil bit confuse about counting the stitches also your crochet workss it really gorgeous 🥰🥰🥰
@@vava111 omgg it's my pleasure you replyy at me 🥰🥰😖 that would be grateful for me hihihi Loveyouuuuuu to im alwayss watching your videos ,and be inspired to do 🤟🏼🤟🏼🤟🏼
On R2 it says you end with 18 stitches, but R3 it says you end with 24.....if you alternate sc, then inc all the way around shouldn't you end with 28 stitches total? Or am I doing something wrong?
inc: make 2sc in the same stitch 1:24 seconds → R2: inc×6 (12) 2:09 seconds → R3: (1sc,inc)×6 (18) I don't understand which part you are talking about? In what minutes and seconds?
I have a problem. On my sunflower the "seam" in minute 6:14 is not in a row. I followed the instructions but it still looks very different. Can you help me please?
First, this sunflower looks gorgeous My question is, where is your yarn from? I'm from Germany, and my yarn looks way thinner than yours. My yarn is suitable for a 3mm crochet hook
Hi dear... Love ur tutorial easy to follow and easy to understand... May i know the size of " feet silver aluminium craft wire".. that u use for the petals n leaves.... Luv from Malaysia...
thank you for the tutorial. I'm having troubles with the outer loop os petals, I only have 14 petals in total, but at 24:00 it is supposed to be 18. Could you help me fix this please? I followed the instruction and had 54 stitches at the end of R10.
Dear Hương Nguyễn, I think it's because, you hooked one more on each petal: SL. (sip stitch). You start watching from 11:35 seconds of the video, the pattern is like this: 8ch→7sc→skip1→SL.→SL. Notice! : After the last SL., start crochet directly (next petal): 8ch→7sc→skip1→SL.→SL. Each petal occupies 3 stitches, 54÷3=18 petals If one petal occupies 4 stitches when crochet, then 54÷4=13.5/14 petals, which is wrong. Don't know if it can help you. I wish you success!✌ Happy crocheting!😘
@@vava111 the pattern for the outer loop is 10 ch - 9 sc - skip 2 - sl - sl tho? I did the next petal right after, no extra slip stitch. Should I also skip 1 for the outer loop as well?
@@huong.nq8 Outer loop : 10ch→9sc→skip2→SL.→SL. Inner loop: 8ch→7sc→skip1→SL.→SL. Their difference: The outer loop is skip2 The inner loop is skip1 How to crochet, according to my reply yesterday. When the outer loop is complete, there are 14 petals. The original video was wrongly written at 23:53 seconds, it should be 14 petals !(it was written as 18 petals before the mistake😝😝) I found this error because of your comment and question. I'm working on it. Thank you very very much! 😘😘🤝 happy crocheting✌✌
@@GruntMuffin If you crochet R5 with 30 stitches: R5: (3sc,inc)×6 (30) Then, R6: (2sc, inc, 2sc)×6 (36) Should be 36 pins. Do you see that the R5 crochet is correct?
it literally took my bf who doesnt even crotchety to explain this to me bc it was driving me insane lol! but I was having the same issue and that's bc were doing (2 sc, inc, 2 sc, inc, 2 sc, inc, 2 sc, inc) repeatedly but it literally would be (2sc, in, 2sc, 2sc, inc, 2sc, 2sc, inc, 2sc) idk how else to explain it hope this helps so follow the 2 sc, inc 2sc pattern then go back and 2sc, inc, 2 sc and continue following that pattern
(2sc, inc, 2sc) as a group, (2sc, inc, 2sc)×6 : crochet 6 groups, inc: make 2sc in the same stitch so: (2sc, inc, 2sc) = 6 stitches (2sc, inc, 2sc)×6= 36stitch you try again😘😘
Crochet techniques belong to the whole world, and each country has a different native language. The best way to do this is to use the common crochet language. Handy for crochet lovers all over the world.