I made 2 stars using 2.5 mm hook and 1.0 mm hook with appropriate thread sizes and can affirm the 1 mm hook shows much nicer just like you have said. Thank you for a nice video❤
Very good instruction, very clear, not too fast, don’t leave anything out like how to end it, and so forth. Thanks very much, I finished my first one and can’t wait to block it.
I MADE IT!!! My very first time crocheting with string … I tried first with yarn and I just didn’t like it … so I grabbed string and 1.25 needle and gave it a whirl … oh my it’s a challenge to do… you make it look so easy 😅… but I DID IT … I love it!!! YOU ARE A WONDERFUL TEACHER !!! Thank you for sharing!! I wish I could post a picture for you to see.. ( still needs to be blocked but I’m going to do a few more to get the hang of it..with You of course) BE BLESSED
A very good video for beginners, nice and slow and easy for newbies to understand, good job, I love doing snowflakes with glitter cotton, going to do this one, thank you ❤️ and a Merry Christmas 🎄
I love the snowflake and you did a wonderful job in the video! My snowflake won’t lay flat. Is that a tension issue in my part and do you know how to fix it?
@@jolynkling481 actually, the shape of a snowflake is dictated by the very structure of the water molecule and the way it crystallizes. Within this mandatory commonality, even despite it if you wish, an astounding amount of differences can and do appear, hence the uniqueness of any individual snowflake. To be precise, depending on the temperature, humidity and other parameters in the environment, some other interesting shapes are indeed possible. Most still obey the sixfold symmetry rule, such as the hexagonal plates, hexagonal prisms and hollow columns, or double crystals with twelve spikes, while the needle shape is remarkably different - no longer a flake, though, and not recognizable as snow for decorating purposes