{"title":"10 Easy Crochet Projects for Beginners (Trendy + Pinterest-Worthy)","canonicalUrl":"https://www.craftingstepbystep.com/crafts/easy-crochet-projects-for-beginners","category":{"slug":"crafts","name":"Crafts"},"creator":{"name":"taylor whitney","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCmukgDwF2ZVmpjFSQyKjl4w","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PStHosJ5tXk"},"tldr":"10 beginner-friendly crochet projects with step-by-step links - heart garland, daisies, beanies, amigurumi, granny squares. Make something cute this weekend.","totalDurationSeconds":640,"difficulty":"easy","tools":["Size H/5mm crochet hook","Scissors","Tapestry needle","Stitch markers","Measuring tape"],"materials":["Worsted-weight yarn (acrylic or cotton)","Polyester fiberfill (for amigurumi and pillows)","Safety eyes (for stuffed animals)","Twine or jute string (for garlands)"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Heart Garland","text":"A heart garland is the perfect first project. Each heart is small, fast to crochet, and gives you a finished win in under an hour. String them on twine or a chain of crocheted stitches and hang the whole thing across a wall, headboard, or window.You only need single crochet, increases, and a magic ring to start. Once you can make one heart you can make 20. Try our how to crochet a heart tutorial for the shape, then follow our how to fasten off guide to finish each one cleanly. The magic ring is what stops the center hole from gaping."},{"number":2,"title":"Crochet Flowers (Daisies, Sunflowers, Roses)","text":"Crochet flowers are the fastest confidence boost in this whole list. A daisy takes about 20 minutes. Stick them on a hairband, sew them to a tote, fill a vase with stems, or pile them in a bowl on the coffee table.Start with our how to crochet a flower pattern. The trick is the magic-ring start - learn that one skill from our magic ring tutorial and every flower pattern opens up. For stemmed flowers like the bouquet in the photo, add a wire-wrapped chain of green yarn."},{"number":3,"title":"Beanie","text":"A beanie is the gateway wearable. It's worked flat-circle-then-tube, takes one skein of yarn, and the sizing forgives a lot of beginner mistakes. By the time winter hits you can have one for every coat.The pattern uses half-double crochet almost top to bottom, plus working in the round and a slip-stitch ribbed brim. Our how to crochet a beanie tutorial walks through both. If you want to add a graphic like the spider pattern in Taylor's video, learn how to change colors first."},{"number":4,"title":"Granny Square (the Gateway Pattern)","text":"Learn one granny square and you've unlocked half this list. Tote bag, scarf, blanket, top, headband, cardigan - all of them are just granny squares stitched together. It might be the single most useful pattern in crochet.The pattern is chains, double crochets, and corners. That's it. Our how to crochet a granny square tutorial breaks down the rhythm round-by-round. Once you're comfortable, try a singular-square tote with one big 12-inch square folded and seamed up the sides - quickest crochet bag in the world."},{"number":5,"title":"Daisy Bralette","text":"The daisy bralette is one of those projects that looks complicated and isn't. It's a triangle bra with three flower motifs sewn across the bottom. Quick, summery, and wears well over a swimsuit.Each daisy uses the same flower pattern as Step 2. The triangle cups are single crochet with decreases - learn those from how to decrease in crochet. Same toolkit as the beanie. Same beginner skill set.If wearables aren't your thing, swap this slot for fingerless gloves - same skill level, same speed, opposite season."},{"number":6,"title":"Granny Square Blanket","text":"The granny square blanket is the long-game project. Each square is small and finishable in an evening, so it never feels like climbing a mountain. You're just making little squares forever - until one day you have a blanket.Use our granny square pattern for the base, then follow how to crochet a blanket for layout and join. The trickiest part is keeping color combos balanced - lay all your squares out before you join so the eye doesn't catch a clump of one color."},{"number":7,"title":"Amigurumi Stuffed Animals","text":"Amigurumi is the rabbit hole most crocheters fall into. Tiny stuffed animals worked in a tight spiral of single crochet. Cute, addictive, and the safety eyes do most of the personality work for you.Pick your first creature based on shape: octopus for the curly tentacles, turtle for the shell pattern, whale for a beginner-friendly body shape, or dinosaur like Taylor's pink one. They all share one core technique: working in the round with a magic ring start."},{"number":8,"title":"Star Garland","text":"Star garland is the heart garland's sibling. Same chain, same hanging technique, just a different shape on each picot. Hang one over a kid's bed and it instantly looks like a magazine room.Our how to crochet a star pattern is the same shape Taylor uses. Both stars and hearts rely on the magic ring for a clean center. Make 10-12 stars in two or three colors and you'll have plenty for a 6-foot garland."},{"number":9,"title":"Coasters","text":"Coasters are the project for the in-between evening. Quick, useful, and a good way to test a new stitch pattern before committing to anything bigger. The flower-shaped coasters in Taylor's car are gorgeous - and tiny enough that one skein gets you eight.Use our how to crochet a coaster tutorial for round, square, and flower versions. Round coasters are pure in-the-round work. Granny-square coasters? You already know the pattern from Step 4. Flower coasters reuse the flower from Step 2."},{"number":10,"title":"Granny Square Scarf","text":"The scarf is the beginner-friendly cousin of the blanket. Same granny squares, but only a single column of them - maybe 12 to 16 squares total. Done in a week of evening crocheting. Light enough commitment that you'll actually finish.Use our granny square pattern, then follow how to crochet a scarf for joining and edging. Add fringe at both ends like the model in the photo - it's just lengths of yarn pulled through the corners with the hook."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-25T14:54:40.416Z","published":"2026-05-25T14:54:23.647Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}