Just like practicing martial arts, children's shoes with good basic skills can quickly practice peerless martial arts! The same is true for crocheting. Only when you master the basic knitting techniques can you understand more tutorials and make your favorite crocheting works. The small bench is well done, and we begin to learn and practice our internal skills.
Braid needle
Knot a small button, let's call it "head loop".
Thread the crochet into the "head loop" of the previous step, and then wind a loop of thread on the crochet and tighten it.
Take the newly wound thread, with the crochet head facing down, and pull the crochet head from left to right through the "head loop" on the crochet. Pay attention to the whole threading process in the following figure.
The first stitch was sewn, and now the "headband" has gone to the braid. What is on the needle is not the "head circle", but the second circle.
Repeat 2-3 steps, and constantly squeeze the "second circle" into the braid, and the "third circle" into the braid. Slowly, more and more circles will be on the braid, and the braid will become hooked.
Drawing needle
After knitting the braid, tie the crochet into the first loop.
Wind the thread on the crochet and tighten it.
The crochet takes the thread that has just been wound, and the crochet head is downward, passing through all the loops on the crochet from left to right. Once hooked, there was only one circle left on the crochet, and the long braid became a circle.
Short needle
At the beginning, there was a loop on the crochet. At the same time, the first braid ring has just been sewn. We need to hook the short needle onto the braid ring.
Pass the crochet through any braid loop on the braid loop. At this time, there are two loops on the crochet.
Wind the thread on the crochet, tighten it, and make the crochet head face down.
Pull the crochet from left to right through the first leftmost loop on the crochet. At this time, there are two loops on the crochet. In fact, it is equivalent to pulling the thread just wound on the crochet from the left to the right.
Wind the thread on the crochet, tighten it, and make the crochet head face down.
The crochet with the winding thread goes through all the loops on the crochet from left to right, which is equivalent to merging two loops. After hooking the short needle, there is only one loop left on the hook.
Long needle
There is a circle on the crochet in the initial state. Let's wind the crochet again.
The crochet head is threaded through any stitch on the braid ring.
Wind the thread on the crochet again and tighten it, with the crochet head facing down.
The crochet goes through the leftmost two loops of the crochet from left to right, only the leftmost two! When hooked, there are two loops left on the crochet.
The crochet shall be wound up for one circle, tensioned, and the crochet head shall be downward.
The crochet goes through the leftmost two loops of the crochet from left to right. In fact, step 4 and step 6 are the same, both of which merge the two stitches on the left. After the long needle is hooked, there is a loop on the hook.
Long needle
In fact, the rule of long needle is similar to that of long needle. The difference is only in this step. Wind the crochet twice! It's two laps! It is not a "circle" of long needles! All right, that's all. The rest is the same as the long needle.
Continue to do 2-6 steps for long stitches. Continue to merge two stitches until there is only one stitch left on the crochet. Long needle is actually a long needle, only the first step is different.