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Boysenberry Bramble Cowl: Free Single Crochet Entrelac Pattern

June 2, 2026 By Meg Leave a Comment

This free crochet entrelac pattern teaches you single crochet entrelac… a beginner-friendly version of the โ€œscaryโ€ knit technique youโ€™ve probably heard about. The Boysenberry Bramble Cowl is a smaller, faster project worked in a CYCA #4 worsted gradient cake yarn… finished with a tidy reverse single crochet edge for a polished neckline. Designed by Marly Bird, originally published in 2018 and lovingly refreshed for 2026.

Hereโ€™s the thing nobody tells you about entrelac… single crochet entrelac is NOT the scary knit version. Itโ€™s NOT Tunisian entrelac either. Itโ€™s plain old single crochet… the very first stitch you ever learned… worked in a clever order that builds up interlocking woven blocks. If you can sc, you can do this. The Boysenberry Bramble cowl is the perfect place to start.

Marly Bird wearing the Boysenberry Bramble single crochet entrelac cowl in a purple-pink-green gradient yarn, showing the woven block texture.

Hey, bestie ๐Ÿ’› If entrelac has been on your โ€œsomeday when Iโ€™m braverโ€ list, today is your day. The Boysenberry Bramble cowl uses one stitch (single crochet), one gorgeous worsted gradient cake yarn, and one set of tier instructions that build on themselves to create a fully-shaped 28ยฝโ€ณ neckline cowl with a 46โ€ณ bottom flare. Itโ€™s the smaller, faster, more wearable cousin of my Pieces of You single crochet entrelac wrap… and a perfect first SC entrelac project before you graduate to the full wrap.

Affiliate disclosure: Some of the links in this post are affiliate links, which means if you click through and purchase, I may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. I only recommend yarns and tools Iโ€™ve used and trust with my yarn-loving heart. Thank you for supporting free patterns on the blog ๐Ÿ’›

Colorful crochet cowl in greens, yellow, and pink; visible stitch detail and texture as worn by a smiling woman.

What You Will Love About This Pattern ๐Ÿ’–

โœจ Only one stitch. Single crochet, start to finish. No Tunisian hook, no special technique youโ€™ve never tried. If you can chain, single crochet, and slip stitch… you can crochet entrelac. Promise.

๐ŸŒˆ Gradient yarn does the heavy lifting. The Boysenberry Bramble cowl is designed for cake yarn… that magical self-striping yarn that shifts colors all on its own. You get a cowl that looks like you spent hours planning a color sequence… when really, the yarn did it for you while you watched your shows.

๐ŸŽฏ Cowl-sized commitment. The full Pieces of You wrap is gorgeous but takes 35-50 hours. The Boysenberry Bramble cowl is the perfect โ€œlearn the technique without committing to a giant wrapโ€ project. Smaller stakes, same beautiful woven look.

๐Ÿ“ Repeatable rhythm. Once you finish Tier 1 (base triangles) and Tier 2 (your first squares), the rest of the cowl follows the same rhythm. It becomes meditative… the kind of project you pick up in the evening and donโ€™t put down.

๐Ÿชก Tidy, finished neckline. The cowl is shaped (46โ€ณ bottom circumference, 28ยฝโ€ณ top circumference) for a flattering fit, and finished with a single round of reverse single crochet. That little twisted-rope edge along the top is what makes it look professionally designed instead of homemade.


Quick Pattern Overview

๐Ÿงถ Skill Level: Intermediate (advanced beginner with patience can absolutely do this)

๐Ÿ“ Finished Size: Bottom circumference 46โ€ณ / 117 cm; neck circumference 28ยฝโ€ณ / 72.5 cm; length 20ยฝโ€ณ / 52 cm

๐Ÿ“ Gauge: 15 sc = 3ยผโ€ณ and 15 sc rows = 2ยพโ€ณ after blocking

๐ŸŒˆ Yarn: Originally designed for Red Heart Unforgettable (now discontinued); the recommended substitute is Loops & Threads Facets from Michaels. Both are CYCA #4 worsted-weight gradient acrylic, ~270 yd / 100g.

๐Ÿช Hook: Size G-6 (4.25 mm) or size required for gauge

๐ŸŽจ Construction: Worked flat in tiers of triangles and squares, then seamed at the end. The fabric grows on the bias, building tier by tier from a base of triangles up to a final tier of triangles for a clean straight top edge.


A woman displays a single crochet entrelac blanket in pink, yellow, and green checkerboard; yarn shelves fill the cozy background.

Is This Crochet Cowl Right for You?

This pattern is a beautiful fit if youโ€™ve crocheted a few projects beyond a granny square and youโ€™re ready to try something that looks impressive without actually being hard. You should be comfortable working single crochet, slip stitch, and reading row-by-row instructions. Each square is just sc… but the connection between squares (the sc2tog into the previous tier + slip stitch turn) takes a few rounds of practice before it clicks.

If youโ€™ve been intimidated by entrelac on knitting Instagram or by Tunisian entrelac videos… this is your gateway. SC entrelac is genuinely the most approachable version of the technique that exists. And once youโ€™ve made one cowl, youโ€™ll want to graduate up to the bigger Pieces of You wrap next.

If youโ€™re a brand-new beginner who has never finished a project? Save this for your second or third make. Youโ€™ll enjoy it so much more once basic single crochet feels automatic.

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What Is Single Crochet Entrelac?

Entrelac is a technique where small geometric shapes (usually squares) are worked one at a time and connected to the previous row of squares as you go. The result is fabric that looks woven, like a basket or a tile floor, even though itโ€™s all one continuous piece worked with one tool.

A single crochet entrelac pattern uses only single crochet stitches plus slip stitches to build those interlocking blocks. Thereโ€™s no Tunisian hook, no special equipment, and no new stitch to learn. The โ€œmagicโ€ is in the order you work the squares… you work into the edges of previous squares to anchor the next row of blocks, which is what creates the woven illusion.

Thatโ€™s literally the whole secret. Stitches worked into edges of previous squares = interlocking blocks. The fabric does the impressive part for you.

Woman models a pink and yellow crochet scarf with visible textured stitches; bookshelves and home decor in the background.

SC Entrelac vs Knit Entrelac vs Tunisian Entrelac

If youโ€™ve Googled โ€œentrelacโ€ before and ended up overwhelmed, hereโ€™s why… most of the entrelac content online is one of two intimidating versions. Let me break down all three so you can see exactly where SC entrelac fits.

Knit entrelac. Worked with two knitting needles using a combination of pick-up stitches, short rows, and constant turning. Beautiful, but a real commitment of brain power. Most โ€œentrelac is hardโ€ reputations come from knit entrelac. As somebody who literally wrote a book on How to Knit Entrelac… I promise itโ€™s doable, but itโ€™s a different beast.

Tunisian entrelac. Worked with a Tunisian (Afghan) hook… the long one with a stopper on the end. Tunisian crochet has its own learning curve before you even get to entrelac, and many crocheters never use a Tunisian hook at all.

Single crochet entrelac (this pattern). Worked with a regular crochet hook using single crochet, slip stitch, and sc2tog. The same tools you already own. The same stitches you already know. Thatโ€™s it. Thatโ€™s the whole technique. SC entrelac is the friendliest version of entrelac that exists, and it produces a fabric just as beautiful as the other two.

You are just building squares one on top of another. Very similarly to how corner-to-corner crochet is worked… if youโ€™ve made a C2C blanket, you already know the construction logic.

This is the differentiation that matters: when you see โ€œentrelacโ€ in the wild and feel a little flutter of fear… remember, the Boysenberry Bramble cowl is single crochet. Just single crochet. Youโ€™re already qualified.


Yarn & Materials

Original Yarn: Red Heart Unforgettable (Discontinued)

The Boysenberry Bramble cowl was originally designed in 2018 using Red Heart Unforgettable in the Sugarcane colorway… a 100% acrylic, worsted-weight gradient cake yarn at 270 yd / 100g.

Heads up… Red Heart Unforgettable has been discontinued and most colorways (including Sugarcane) are no longer in production. You can still find skeins at clearance pricing on Yarnspirations or in destash listings, but itโ€™s not a yarn youโ€™ll want to count on for a fresh project. The good news? Thereโ€™s a near-perfect substitute thatโ€™s actively in production.

Recommended Substitute: Loops & Threads Facets

My #1 swap for Unforgettable is Loops & Threads Facets from Michaels. Itโ€™s a worsted-weight gradient acrylic that was made to fill the Unforgettable gap… same weight (CYCA #4), same gradient cake construction, same drape. Youโ€™ll need approximately 4 balls for this cowl… check your gauge and yardage on whichever colorway you choose.

Other worsted gradient cake substitutes (backup options): Lion Brand Mandala (worsted gradient, ~590 yd cake… fewer balls needed), Caron Cakes (worsted acrylic/wool blend gradient cake), or any LYS worsted-weight gradient cake yarn at CYCA #4. Just check your total yardage… aim for ~1,000 yd of worsted gradient yarn for the full cowl.

โญ๏ธ Designer Tip… Match your second cake. When you start ball 2, begin from the same color point you started ball 1 at. This keeps the gradient flowing visually instead of jumping mid-cowl. Take 3 minutes to wind off (or pull from the center) until you reach the matching color… it's worth the small bit of waste for a cowl that looks cohesive.

Tools & Notions

  • Crochet hook: Size G-6 (4.25 mm) or size required for gauge
  • Stitch markers… youโ€™ll use these to mark the last sc of every Row 15 (the corner of each finished square). Theyโ€™re essential, not optional.
  • Bent-tip yarn needle for weaving in ends and seaming
  • Blocking mats and pins (or blocking wires)… entrelac fabric blooms beautifully when blocked.
  • Wool wash… I love Eucalan for blocking, no rinse needed.
โญ๏ธ Marly Bird Amazon Storefront โญ๏ธ

Video Support

Need to see the technique in motion? Watch my single crochet entrelac tutorial on YouTube before you cast on… it walks you through the same connecting stitch (sc2tog into the previous tier + slip stitch turn) used throughout this pattern.

Woman models the Boysenberry Bramble Cowl, showing off its textured stitch pattern in a cozy room with bookshelves and plants.

Love the Pattern but Want an Ad-Free PDF?

The full Boysenberry Bramble pattern is right here on the blog for free, forever. But if youโ€™d rather have a clean, printable, ad-free PDF you can take to your reading chair (or to your favorite yarn shop), the formatted PDF with charts is available on Ravelry:

  • Boysenberry Bramble on Ravelry

Or sign up for the newsletter below to unlock the in-page Grow version (free… just takes your email) and get future free patterns straight to your inbox.

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Boysenberry Bramble โ€” Pattern Details

Skill Level

Intermediate

Finished Measurements

Bottom Circumference 46โ€ณ / 117 cm
Neck Circumference 28ยฝโ€ณ / 72.5 cm
Length 20ยฝโ€ณ / 52 cm

Boysenberry Bramble Single Crochet Entrelac Cowl schematic by Marly Bird, showing the trapezoid shape with bottom circumference 46 inches, neck circumference 28.5 inches, and length 20.5 inches.

Gauge

15 sc = 3ยผโ€ณ and 15 sc rows = 2ยพโ€ณ after blocking. CHECK YOUR GAUGE. Use any size hook to obtain the gauge.

Materials

  • Yarn (original): RED HEARTยฎ Unforgettableโ„ข; 3.5 oz (100 g) ball, 270 yd (247 m), 100% Acrylic; 4 balls #3962 Sugarcane (discontinued… see Loops & Threads Facets above as the recommended substitute)
  • Hook: Size G-6 (4.25 mm) or size required for gauge
  • Notions: Bent-tip yarn needle, stitch markers

Abbreviations

  • ch = chain
  • hdc = half double crochet
  • ea = each
  • linked hdc = linked half double crochet (see Special Stitches)
  • rep = repeat
  • RS = right side
  • sc = single crochet
  • sk = skip
  • sl st = slip stitch
  • sp = space
  • st(s) = stitch(es)
  • WS = wrong side
  • * to * = work directions from * to * the number of times specified or to a specific stitch

Special Stitches

โญ๏ธ Sc2tog: Pull up a loop in each of 2 indicated sts, yo and draw through all 3 loops on hook.

โญ๏ธ Sc3tog: Pull up a loop in each of 3 indicated sts, yo and draw through all 4 loops on hook.

โญ๏ธ Reverse Single Crochet (Crab Stitch): Sc in last st of previous row or round, * sc in next st to the RIGHT of last st; rep from * around (reversing normal direction of round), sl st in 1st sc to connect. Fasten off. This is what gives the finished cowl its tidy, twisted-rope edging at the top.

Stitch Diagram & Layout Charts

Boysenberry Bramble Single Crochet Entrelac Cowl stitch chart key by Marly Bird, showing the symbols used for chain, single crochet, slip stitch, and direction of work.
Boysenberry Bramble Single Crochet Entrelac Cowl stitch chart by Marly Bird, showing the stitch placement for one tier of squares.
Boysenberry Bramble Single Crochet Entrelac Cowl layout chart by Marly Bird, showing the 13 tiers stacked from base triangles up to ending triangles with directional arrows.

Notes

  • Cut yarn and re-join with a sl st in indicated st after each tier of squares or triangles.
  • The working direction of each tier is the opposite of the previous tier (this is what makes the squares stack on the bias and creates the woven look).
  • If you would like an ad-free PDF that includes a chart for the stitches used, grab it on Ravelry.

โญ๏ธ Designer Tip… The “slip stitch in place of the ch-1 turn”: When you reach the end of a row that connects to the previous tier, you'll work an sc2tog (joining your new square to the previous tier) and then a slip stitch into the next stitch on the previous tier. That slip stitch takes the place of the ch-1 you'd normally do after turning. So when you turn for the next row, do NOT chain 1… the slip stitch already counts as your turning chain. Read this twice. Then read it a third time as you work Square 1 of Tier 2. By Square 2 it will be muscle memory.

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A pink and yellow Boysenberry Bramble Cowl with textured stitches, wrapped around a woman's shoulders indoors.

Boysenberry Bramble โ€” Pattern Instructions

Tier 1
Entrelac builds upon itself on the bias in this pattern. In order to do that we have to begin with a tier of base triangles that we can work off of to make our square blocks on the next tier.
Base Triangle 1
Ch 2.
Row 1 (RS): Sc in 2nd ch from hook and mark this sc โ€” 1 st. Ch 2 (does not count as a st), turn.
Row 2: (Hdc, sc) in sc โ€” 2 sts. Ch 1, turn.
Row 3: Sc in first 2 sts and in next ch โ€” 3 sts. Ch 2, turn.
Row 4: (Hdc, sc) in first st, sc in each of next 2 sts โ€” 4 sts. Ch 1, turn.
Row 5: Sc in first 4 sts and in next ch โ€” 5 sts. Ch 2, turn.
Row 6: (Hdc, sc) in first st, sc in each of next 4 sts โ€” 6 sts. Ch 1, turn.
Row 7: Sc in first 6 sts and in next ch โ€” 7 sts. Ch 2, turn.
Row 8: (Hdc, sc) in first st, sc in each of next 6 sts โ€” 8 sts. Ch 1, turn.
Row 9: Sc in first 8 sts and in next ch โ€” 9 sts. Ch 2, turn.
Row 10: (Hdc, sc) in first st, sc in each of next 8 sts โ€” 10 sts. Ch 1, turn.
Row 11: Sc in first 10 sts and in next ch โ€” 11 sts. Ch 2, turn.
Row 12: (Hdc, sc) in first st, sc in each of next 10 sts โ€” 12 sts. Ch 1, turn.
Row 13: Sc in first 12 sts and in next ch โ€” 13 sts. Ch 2, turn.
Row 14: (Hdc, sc) in first st, sc in each of next 12 sts โ€” 14 sts. Ch 1, turn.
Row 15: Sc in first 14 sts and in next ch, mark last sc made โ€” 15 sts. Ch 1 loosely; do not turn.
Mark RS of triangle to keep track of RS of work.

Woman wears a hand-knit, textured Boysenberry Bramble Cowl indoors, with shelves of books and yarn in the background.

Base Triangle 2
Row 1 (RS): Sc in left edge of last sc worked โ€” 1 st. Ch 2, turn.
Rows 2-15: Work same as Rows 2-15 of Base Triangle 1.
Mark RS of triangle to keep track of RS of work.
Base Triangles 3-11
Work same as Base Triangle 2.
Fasten off.


Tier 2
This tier is built on Base Triangles of Tier 1.
Each square will begin with WS facing.
Join yarn with sl st to top corner of last completed triangle.
Square 1
Row 1 (WS): Working along side edge of triangle, sc in edge st of first 14 rows of triangle, sc2tog over edge st of next row and marked st on next triangle, remove marker, sl st in next st on same triangle โ€” 15 sts. Turn.
Row 2: Sk sl st, sc in each of next 15 sts. Ch 1, turn.
Row 3: Sc in first 14 sts, sc2tog over next sc and next st on adjoining triangle, sl st in next st on same triangle โ€” 15 sts. Turn.
Rows 4-14: Rep the last 2 rows 5 more times, then rep Row 2 only once more.
Row 15: Sc in first 14 sts, sc2tog over next sc and next st on adjoining triangle, mark sc2tog just made. Ch 1 loosely; do not turn.
Squares 2-11
Work same as Square 1.
Fasten off.


Tier 3
This tier is worked evenly, building on Tier 2.
Each square will begin with RS facing.
Join yarn with sl st to top corner of last completed square.
Square 1
Row 1 (RS): Working along side edge of square, sc in edge st of first 14 rows of square, sc2tog over edge st of next row and marked st on next square, remove marker, sl st in next st on same square โ€” 15 sts. Turn.
Row 2: Sk sl st, sc in each of next 15 sts. Ch 1, turn.
Row 3: Sc in first 14 sts, sc2tog over next sc and next st on adjoining square, sl st in next st on same square โ€” 15 sts. Turn.
Rows 4-14: Rep the last 2 rows 5 more times, then rep Row 2 only once more.
Row 15: Sc in first 14 sts, sc2tog over next sc and next st on adjoining square, mark sc2tog just made. Ch 1 loosely; do not turn.
Squares 2-11
Work same as Square 1.
Fasten off.


Tier 4
This is a 1-st decrease tier.
Each square will begin with WS facing.
Join yarn with sl st to top corner of last completed square.
Square 1
Row 1 (WS): Working along side edge of square, sc in edge st of first 12 rows of square, sc2tog over edge sts of next 2 rows, sc2tog over edge st of next row and marked st on next square, remove marker, sl st in next st on same square โ€” 14 sts. Turn.
Row 2: Sk sl st, sc in each of next 14 sts. Ch 1, turn.
Row 3: Sc in first 13 sts, sc2tog over next sc and next st on adjoining square, sl st in next st on same square โ€” 14 sts. Turn.
Rows 4-14: Rep the last 2 rows 5 more times, then rep Row 2 only once more.
Row 15: Sc in first 14 sts, sc2tog over next sc and next st on adjoining square, mark sc2tog just made. Ch 1 loosely; do not turn.
Squares 2-11
Work same as Square 1.
Fasten off.


Tier 5
This is a 1-st and 2-row decrease tier.
Each square will begin with RS facing.
Join yarn with sl st to top corner of last completed square.
Square 1
Row 1 (RS): Working along side edge of square, sc in edge st of first 12 rows of square, sc2tog over edge sts of next 2 rows, sc3tog over edge st of next row, marked st on next square, and next st on same square (this is the one you would have normally worked sl st into), remove marker, sl st in next st on same square โ€” 14 sts. Turn.
Row 2: Sk sl st, sc in each of next 14 sts. Ch 1, turn.
Row 3: Sc in first 12 sts, sc3tog over next 2 sc and next st on adjoining square, sl st in next st on same square โ€” 13 sts. Turn.
Row 4: Sk sl st, sc in each of next 13 sts. Ch 1, turn.
Row 5: Sc in first 12 sts, sc2tog over next sc and next st on adjoining square, sl st in next st on same square โ€” 13 sts. Turn.
Rows 6-12: Rep the last 2 rows 3 more times, then rep Row 2 only once more.
Row 13: Sc in first 12 sts, sc2tog over next sc and next st on adjoining square, mark sc2tog just made. Ch 1 loosely; do not turn.
Squares 2-11
Work same as Square 1.
Fasten off.


Tier 6
This is a 1-st decrease tier.
Each square will begin with WS facing.
Join yarn with sl st to top corner of last completed square.
Square 1
Row 1 (WS): Working along side edge of square, sc in edge st of first 10 rows of square, sc2tog over edge sts of next 2 rows, sc2tog over edge st of next row and marked st on next square, remove marker, sl st in next st on same square โ€” 12 sts. Turn.
Row 2: Sk sl st, sc in each of next 12 sts. Ch 1, turn.
Row 3: Sc in first 11 sts, sc2tog over next sc and next st on adjoining square, sl st in next st on same square โ€” 12 sts. Turn.
Rows 4-12: Rep the last 2 rows 4 more times, then rep Row 2 only once more.
Row 13: Sc in first 12 sts, sc2tog over next sc and next st on adjoining square, mark sc2tog just made. Ch 1 loosely; do not turn.
Squares 2-11
Work same as Square 1.
Fasten off.


Tier 7
This is a 1-st and 2-row decrease tier.
Each square will begin with RS facing.
Join yarn with sl st to top corner of last completed square.
Square 1
Row 1 (RS): Working along side edge of square, sc in edge st of first 10 rows of square, sc2tog over edge sts of next 2 rows, sc3tog over edge st of next row, marked st on next square, and next st on same square (this is the one you would have normally worked sl st into), remove marker, sl st in next st on same square โ€” 12 sts. Turn.
Row 2: Sk sl st, sc in each of next 12 sts. Ch 1, turn.
Row 3: Sc in first 10 sts, sc3tog over next 2 sc and next st on adjoining square, sl st in next st on same square โ€” 11 sts. Turn.
Row 4: Sk sl st, sc in each of next 11 sts. Ch 1, turn.
Row 5: Sc in first 10 sts, sc2tog over next sc and next st on adjoining square, sl st in next st on same square โ€” 11 sts. Turn.
Rows 6-10: Rep the last 2 rows twice more, then rep Row 2 only once more.
Row 11: Sc in first 10 sts, sc2tog over next sc and next st on adjoining square, mark sc2tog just made. Ch 1 loosely; do not turn.
Squares 2-11
Work same as Square 1.
Fasten off.


Tier 8
This is a 1-st decrease tier.
Each square will begin with WS facing.
Join yarn with sl st to top corner of last completed square.
Square 1
Row 1 (WS): Working along side edge of square, sc in edge st of first 8 rows of square, sc2tog over edge sts of next 2 rows, sc2tog over edge st of next row and marked st on next square, remove marker, sl st in next st on same square โ€” 10 sts. Turn.
Row 2: Sk sl st, sc in each of next 10 sts. Ch 1, turn.
Row 3: Sc in first 9 sts, sc2tog over next sc and next st on adjoining square, sl st in next st on same square โ€” 10 sts. Turn.
Rows 4-10: Rep the last 2 rows 3 more times, then rep Row 2 only once more.
Row 11: Sc in first 10 sts, sc2tog over next sc and next st on adjoining square, mark sc2tog just made. Ch 1 loosely; do not turn.
Squares 2-11
Work same as Square 1.
Fasten off.


Tier 9
This is a 1-st and 2-row decrease tier.
Each square will begin with RS facing.
Join yarn with sl st to top corner of last completed square.
Square 1
Row 1 (RS): Working along side edge of square, sc in edge st of first 8 rows of square, sc2tog over edge sts of next 2 rows, sc3tog over edge st of next row, marked st on next square, and next st on same square (this is the one you would have normally worked sl st into), remove marker, sl st in next st on same square โ€” 10 sts. Turn.
Row 2: Sk sl st, sc in each of next 10 sts. Ch 1, turn.
Row 3: Sc in first 8 sts, sc3tog over next 2 sc and next st on adjoining square, sl st in next st on same square โ€” 9 sts. Turn.
Row 4: Sk sl st, sc in each of next 9 sts. Ch 1, turn.
Row 5: Sc in first 8 sts, sc2tog over next sc and next st on adjoining square, sl st in next st on same square โ€” 9 sts. Turn.
Rows 6-8: Rep the last 2 rows once more, then rep Row 4 only once more.
Row 9: Sc in first 8 sts, sc2tog over next sc and next st on adjoining square, mark sc2tog just made. Ch 1 loosely; do not turn.
Squares 2-11
Work same as Square 1.
Fasten off.


Tier 10
This tier is worked evenly.
Each square will begin with WS facing.
Join yarn with sl st to top corner of last completed square.
Square 1
Row 1 (WS): Working along side edge of square, sc in edge st of first 8 rows of square, sc2tog over edge st of next row and marked st on next square, remove marker, sl st in next st on same square โ€” 9 sts. Turn.
Row 2: Sk sl st, sc in each of next 9 sts. Ch 1, turn.
Row 3: Sc in first 8 sts, sc2tog over next sc and next st on adjoining square, sl st in next st on same square โ€” 9 sts. Turn.
Rows 4-8: Rep the last 2 rows twice more, then rep Row 2 only once more.
Row 9: Sc in first 8 sts, sc2tog over next sc and next st on adjoining square, mark sc2tog just made. Ch 1 loosely; do not turn.
Squares 2-11
Work same as Square 1.
Fasten off.
Tiers 11 & 12
Work same as Tier 10, being sure to begin all Tier 11 squares with RS facing, and all Tier 12 squares with WS facing.


Tier 13
This tier is worked in Ending Triangles to make a flat top edge.
Each triangle will begin with RS facing.
Join yarn with sl st to top corner of last completed square.
Ending Triangle 1
Row 1 (RS): Working along side edge of square, sc in edge st of first 8 rows of square, sc2tog over edge st of next row and marked st on next square, remove marker, sl st in next st on same square โ€” 9 sts. Turn.
Row 2: Sk sl st, sc in each of next 7 sts, sc2tog over last 2 sts โ€” 8 sts. Ch 1, turn.
Row 3: Sc2tog over first two sts, sc in each of sc to last sc, sc2tog over next sc and next st on adjoining square, sl st in next st of same square โ€” 7 sts. Turn.
Row 4: Sk sl st, sc in each sc to last 2 sc, sc2tog over last 2 sts โ€” 6 sts. Ch 1, turn.
Rows 5-7: Rep the last 2 rows once more, then Rep row 3 only once more โ€” 3 sts. Ch 1, turn.
Row 8: Sk sl st, sc in next st, sc2tog over last 2 sts โ€” 2 sts. Ch 1, turn.
Row 11: Sc3tog in over next 2 sts and next st on square โ€” 1 st. Ch 1; do not turn.
Ending Triangles 2-11
Work same as Ending Triangle 1. Do not fasten off.
Finishing
Work 1 round in Reverse Single Crochet around top edge.
Fasten off.
Weave in ends.
Block to schematic measurements.


Blocking Tips

Entrelac fabric is the kind of fabric that blooms when itโ€™s blocked. Before blocking, the squares can look a little compressed and the woven effect feels subtle. After blocking, the squares relax open, the diagonal lines between them become crisp, and the whole cowl finally looks like the photos. Do not skip this step.

Wet block (recommended for this cowl):

  • Fill a clean sink or basin with cool water and a tiny splash of Eucalan wool wash. Soak the finished cowl for 15-20 minutes… gently press it under the water; do not agitate.
  • Drain the water without lifting the cowl (lifting a soaking-wet piece by one corner stretches it permanently). Press out as much water as you can with the cowl still in the basin, then transfer it onto a clean towel.
  • Roll the cowl up in the towel like a burrito and press to remove excess water.
  • Lay the cowl flat on blocking mats. Pin it to the schematic dimensions: bottom 46โ€ณ, top 28ยฝโ€ณ, length 20ยฝโ€ณ. Use blocking pins along both straight edges and at the bottom corners. Take your time getting the angles even.
  • Let it dry completely before unpinning… usually 12-24 hours depending on humidity.

Spray block (faster alternative): Pin the dry cowl to size on your blocking mats, then mist it thoroughly with cool water from a spray bottle until the fabric is damp throughout. Let dry completely. Less dramatic than a full wet block, but still effective.

โญ๏ธ Designer Tip… Pin every corner of every square. If you really want the woven effect to pop, place a pin at each corner of each entrelac square (where four squares meet). It's tedious but the difference is striking. The blocked fabric will show every interlocking block clearly. This is how you get that “did you really make that?” reaction.


Want to Go Deeper Into Crochet Techniques?

If single crochet entrelac sparks something in you… if you finish this cowl and immediately want to learn more crochet techniques that look harder than they are… check out the courses inside Marly Bird House. Itโ€™s where I teach the deeper, more technical side of crochet (and knitting) for crafters who want to grow past beginner-level patterns. Plus, members get early access to new free patterns and a private community to share your makes in.


A woman wears a colorful crocheted Boysenberry Bramble Cowl, showing wavy stitch texture and drape; blurred shelves behind her.

More Crochet Patterns Youโ€™ll Love

If you fall in love with single crochet entrelac (and you will), here are more crochet patterns from the blog to add to your queue:

  • Pieces of You Single Crochet Entrelac Wrap… the bigger sister to this cowl. Same technique, full 68โ€ณ wingspan. Your natural graduation project.
  • Free Crochet Corner-to-Corner Patterns Roundup… every C2C pattern on the blog. Same diagonal construction logic, different stitches. The natural cousin to entrelac.
  • Spring Fling 2026 Free Pattern Hub… 20 free knit and crochet patterns from my spring 2026 event.
  • Sunday Sideline Crochet Cardigan… another easy-elevated crochet make for when you want a wearable garment without the entrelac learning curve.
  • Super Simple Crochet Shawl… if you want a faster, even more beginner-friendly crochet shawl to alternate with this cowl.

Favorite & Queue on Ravelry

Save the Boysenberry Bramble cowl to your Ravelry queue so you can come back to it any time:

Favorite This Pattern on Ravelry - Marly Bird

A woman waves while holding a mug, surrounded by yarn for the Boysenberry Bramble Cowl crochet project and a checklist.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is single crochet entrelac hard?

Honestly, no… it just looks hard. If you can single crochet, slip stitch, and sc2tog, you have every stitch you need. The trickiest moment is the โ€œslip stitch in place of the ch-1 turnโ€ technique that joins each new square to the previous tier. It takes a few squares before it clicks, but once it does, the rest of the cowl is meditative repetition. Single crochet entrelac is genuinely the friendliest version of entrelac that exists.

What yarn can I substitute for Red Heart Unforgettable?

My #1 substitute is Loops & Threads Facets from Michaels… itโ€™s the same weight, same gradient cake construction, and same drape as Unforgettable. Lion Brand Mandala and Caron Cakes also work beautifully. The key is to stay in worsted weight (CYCA #4) and stick with a self-striping gradient cake yarn so you keep the color-shift effect that makes this cowl look intentional.

Do I need a Tunisian hook for crochet entrelac?

Nope! Thatโ€™s Tunisian entrelac, which is a different technique. The Boysenberry Bramble cowl uses a regular crochet hook (size G-6 / 4.25 mm) and only single crochet, slip stitch, and sc2tog. No special equipment, no new stitches to learn. If you already crochet, you already own everything you need.

How do I block an entrelac cowl?

Wet block by soaking the finished cowl in cool water with a small amount of no-rinse wool wash for 15-20 minutes. Press out the water (do not lift or wring), roll in a clean towel to remove more moisture, then pin to the finished schematic dimensions on blocking mats. Let dry completely before unpinning. Blocking is essential for entrelac fabric… the squares relax open and the woven effect becomes much more pronounced.

Why does the working direction change every tier?

Great question… thatโ€™s actually how entrelac fabric is constructed on the bias. Each tier of squares is worked in the opposite direction from the tier below it (RS facing one tier, WS facing the next). That alternating direction is what stacks the squares diagonally and creates the woven, interlocking-block look. If you worked every tier in the same direction, youโ€™d end up with a flat striped fabric instead of the basket-weave effect.

What weight is Loops & Threads Facets?

Loops & Threads Facets is a CYCA #4 worsted-weight yarn, 100% acrylic, in a gradient cake construction. Itโ€™s designed as Michaelsโ€™ in-house counterpart to Red Heart Unforgettable, so it slots in as a one-for-one substitute in any pattern that originally called for Unforgettable… including this one.

How much yarn do I need for this cowl?

The original pattern calls for 4 balls of Red Heart Unforgettable (270 yd / 100g each), so plan for approximately 1,000-1,100 yards of CYCA #4 worsted-weight gradient yarn. If youโ€™re using Lion Brand Mandala (which has more yardage per cake at ~590 yd), youโ€™ll need roughly 2 cakes. Always check your gauge before buying so you can adjust yardage if needed.

Can I make this cowl smaller or larger?

Yes… entrelac scales beautifully because the construction is repeatable. To make it smaller, work fewer base triangles in Tier 1 (each base triangle adds about 4โ€ณ of bottom circumference). To make it larger, work more base triangles. Just remember that every Tier 2-12 will then have that same number of squares, so plan your yardage accordingly. For a closer-fitting cowl, work fewer triangles; for a more dramatic shoulder-cape effect, add a couple.


A pink and green checkered crocheted cowl with visible textured stitches, worn draped around the neck indoors.

Final Thoughts

The Boysenberry Bramble cowl was the pattern I designed back in 2018 to introduce crocheters to single crochet entrelac in a friendly, achievable way… and seven years later, itโ€™s still doing exactly that. If you make it, share it with me using #BoysenberryBrambleCowl. I love seeing your color choices.

And remember… single crochet entrelac is NOT the scary version. Itโ€™s the friendly version. Youโ€™ve got this ๐Ÿ’›

โค๏ธ Your BiCrafty Bestie,
Marly Bird

A cartoon avatar of Marly Bird with glasses and a brown bun smiles warmly. Her green shirt and black jacket add a stylish touch, and colorful hearts surround her.

#mmmdi

Filed Under: Crochet, Free Patterns, Our Free Patterns, Pattern Tagged With: beginner crochet entrelac, Boysenberry Bramble, cake yarn, crochet cowl, crochet entrelac, free crochet cowl pattern, free crochet patterns, gradient yarn, intermediate crochet, Loops & Threads Facets, Marly Bird, SC entrelac, single crochet entrelac

Free Crochet Floral Motif Tee Pattern โ€” Sizes Small Through 5X

May 22, 2026 By Meg Leave a Comment

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๐ŸŒธ Spring Fling 2026 โ€” Day 15 Pattern ๐ŸŒธ

This pattern debuted as Day 15 of Spring Fling 2026 (Fri May 22, 2026) โ€” closing out Week 3 of the event. The free pattern stays free forever right here on the blog.

๐Ÿ‘‰ See the full Spring Fling 2026 lineup on the Hub

Share your finished Floral Motif Tee with the hashtags #SpringFling2026 + #FloralMotifTee ๐ŸŒธ

The Floral Motif Tee is a free crochet pattern for a lightweight, lacy summer sweater built from join-as-you-go floral motifs…and the brand-new updated version is now sized from Small all the way through 4X/5X. It's an intermediate crochet pattern designed by Marly Bird, worked at a 1 motif = 3.5″ gauge in CYCA #1 super fine yarn, with a finished bust circumference from 40″ to 64″. Free pattern on the blog. Ad-free PDF available.

Free crochet Floral Motif Tee pattern by Marly Bird โ€” purple lacy summer sweater worn over a denim jumper, three poses

Looking for a free crochet floral motif tee pattern that actually fits you… no matter what size you wear? The Floral Motif Summer Tee is one of my most-loved warm-weather designs, and I just gave it a serious update. The biggest news: this pattern now goes all the way up to size 4X/5X. That used to stop at 2X/3X…and I heard from so many of you that you wanted the bigger sizes. So here we are. New release, bigger size range, same lacy floral motif tee you've been asking for.

Hey, bestie ๐Ÿ’› If you've ever wanted to crochet a sweater that feels like wearing a summer garden… this is the one. Lightweight, breathable, lacy in all the right places, and now finally available in the sizes that the free pattern world tends to forget about.

โšก Quick Answer: The Floral Motif Tee is a free crochet pattern by Marly Bird for a lacy summer sweater made from joined floral motifs, now sized S/M, L/XL, 2X/3X, and 4X/5X (finished bust 40″, 48″, 56″, 64″). Intermediate skill level. Uses CYCA #1 super fine yarn and a G/6 (4 mm) hook. Free pattern below.

Affiliate Disclosure: This post contains affiliate links. To learn more please visit my privacy policy here ๐Ÿ’–

Marly Bird modeling the free crochet Floral Motif Tee pattern in size S/M with negative ease โ€” size-inclusive summer sweater

What You Will Love About This Free Crochet Floral Motif Tee Pattern ๐Ÿ’–

๐ŸŒธ Truly size-inclusive. The updated pattern is now written in four sizes that fit bust circumferences from 40″ all the way to 64″. For a free crochet sweater pattern, that's rare. Most free crochet garment patterns stop at 2X or sometimes 3X… this one keeps going.

๐ŸŒธ Lightweight and breezy for hot weather. The openwork floral motifs and lace panels mean this top breathes beautifully on a humid day. It's the kind of summer crochet sweater you can actually wear in July.

๐ŸŒธ Satisfying join-as-you-go construction. You build the motif strips first, then crochet the lace panels directly onto them. It feels like assembling a beautiful garment puzzle… and you can see your sweater coming together every single round.

๐ŸŒธ Works in any solid color. The lacy floral stitch pattern really shines in a solid color. Choose a soft pastel for a romantic vibe, a bold jewel tone for a statement piece, or a crisp white for a wardrobe staple.

๐ŸŒธ Reversible lace pattern. The wrong side and right side look the same. No “uh oh, I flipped it” moments.

Free crochet floral motif tee pattern in purple, styled over a black maxi dress โ€” lacy summer crochet sweater

Quick Pattern Overview

๐Ÿ“ Skill level: Intermediate. You'll need to be comfortable working in the round, reading written motif instructions, and joining motifs as you go. If you've made a granny square blanket, you can absolutely tackle this tee.

๐Ÿ“ Sizes: S/M, L/XL, 2X/3X, 4X/5X. Finished bust circumference: 40″, 48″, 56″, 64″. Designed with 2-6″ of positive ease (or wear it with negative ease like Marly does…more on that below).

๐Ÿงถ Yarn: CYCA #1 super fine weight, originally sampled in Miss Babs Kilimanjaro (now discontinued). Miss Babs Katahdin is the official replacement โ€” same 1,750-yd skein. See the yarn alternatives section below. 1 to 3 hanks depending on size.

๐Ÿช Hook: Size G/6 (4.0 mm)…or whichever hook you need to hit gauge.

๐Ÿ“ Gauge: 1 motif = 3.5″ ร— 3.5″ blocked. 4 stitch repeats ร— 10 rows = 5″ ร— 5″ in lace pattern, blocked.

๐Ÿชก Construction: Two strips of joined floral motifs form the front and back yokes, then lace panels are crocheted directly onto each motif strip. Shoulders, sleeves, and side seams are sewn after blocking.

Ad-free PDF of the Floral Motif Crochet Summer Tee pattern by Marly Bird โ€” clean printable instructions for crocheters
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The full Floral Motif Tee pattern is free right here on the blog. If you'd rather skip the ads, print clean pages, and have everything you need in one tidy PDF… the ad-free version is available in my shops:

Or if you'd rather have the free pattern delivered straight to your inbox plus get on my newsletter for weekly pattern roundups, BiCrafty tips, and the occasional behind-the-scenes peek… I'd love to have you ๐Ÿ’›

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A woman with glasses and curly hair models a colorful crocheted scarf, showing textured stitches and vibrant yarn.

Is This Crochet Floral Motif Tee Pattern Right for You?

This pattern is perfect for you if…

โœ… You're an intermediate crocheter who can comfortably read written pattern instructions, work in the round, and increase/decrease confidently. You don't need to be an advanced lace crocheter, but this isn't a “first sweater” project either.

โœ… You want a summer crochet sweater pattern that's actually wearable in warm weather. Lots of crochet sweaters end up feeling heavy in summer…the lacy motif construction here keeps the fabric airy.

โœ… You love the satisfaction of joining motifs as you go, watching the garment grow piece by piece rather than working one giant fabric.

โœ… You're size 4X or 5X and you're tired of free crochet patterns stopping at 2X. Same.

This might NOT be the right pattern for you if…

โŒ You're brand new to crochet. Save this one for a few projects down the road. (Try one of these free spring sweater patterns if you want a simpler crochet garment to start with.)

โŒ You want a chunky, cold-weather sweater. This is a CYCA #1 super fine pattern…beautiful, but not warm.

โŒ You don't want to block your finished piece. (I'm not even kidding… blocking is non-negotiable for this one. The lace pattern stays scrunched without it.)

Magenta crochet floral motif tee pattern detail โ€” close-up of intricate joined floral lace stitches

This Tee Fits Every Body: Sizes S Through 5X ๐ŸŒธ

Here's the part I'm most excited about. The original Floral Motif Tee was sized S/M through 2X/3X. The updated pattern adds a 4X/5X size, taking the finished bust circumference all the way up to 64″. For a free crochet sweater pattern, that's a genuinely uncommon size range…and it's there because so many of you asked for it.

The Full Size Chart

SizeTo Fit BustFinished BustFinished LengthMotifs per StripYarn (hanks)
S/M32-38″40″ / 101.5 cm21″ / 53.5 cm121
L/XL40-46″48″ / 122 cm24.5″ / 62 cm142
2X/3X48-54″56″ / 142 cm28″ / 71 cm162
4X/5X56-62″64″ / 162.5 cm31.5″ / 80 cm183

How to Pick Your Size: Positive vs. Negative Ease

Ease is just a fancy word for “how much room your sweater has around your body.” There are two ways to wear this tee, and the size you pick depends on the look you want:

๐Ÿ’› Positive ease means the sweater is LARGER than your bust measurement. This gives you a relaxed, drapey, flowy summer-top feel. The pattern was designed with 2-6″ of positive ease in mind, which is what you'll see on most crochet tees. To wear with positive ease, choose the size whose finished bust is 2-6″ larger than your actual bust.

Marly Bird in size S/M with negative ease โ€” free crochet floral motif tee pattern for a fitted summer crochet sweater
Marly is wearing the S/M with a 44″ bust. Perfect example of negative ease.

๐Ÿ’› Negative ease means your bust is LARGER than the sweater. This gives you a closer, more fitted look. Marly wore the S/M size in the sample photos with about 4″ of negative ease…so the sweater hugs the body and shows off the silhouette. To wear with negative ease, choose the size whose finished bust is a few inches SMALLER than your actual bust.

Neither is wrong. They're just different looks. Decide how you want to wear the tee BEFORE you crochet your motifs, then pick your size accordingly.


Picking Your Size if You're 4X or 5X

The 4X/5X size finishes at a 64″ bust circumference. If your actual bust measures:

๐Ÿ‘‰ 56-58″: The 4X/5X size will give you a relaxed, 6-8″ positive ease summer-tee fit. Comfortable and breezy.

๐Ÿ‘‰ 60-62″: The 4X/5X size will fit with 2-4″ of positive ease…the original design intention. This is the sweet spot.

๐Ÿ‘‰ 64-66″: You'll get a closer, near-zero-ease fit. Still totally wearable, especially if you like a more fitted summer top.

๐Ÿ‘‰ Larger than 66″? Drop me a message…I can talk you through adding extra motifs to size up further. The motif construction makes this easier than it sounds.

๐Ÿ’ก Designer Tip: Always crochet at least one motif as a test BEFORE you commit to all the motif strips. Block that one motif, measure it, and confirm it hits the 3.5″ gauge. If your motif is 3″ or 4″, that's not a “close enough” โ€” it's the difference between a sweater that fits and a sweater that doesn't. Adjust hook size up or down to hit gauge before you crochet 24-36 of them.

Pink crochet floral motif tee free pattern โ€” four views showing the size-inclusive lacy summer sweater and stitch detail

How a Crochet Motif Tee Is Constructed

If you've never made a motif-based crochet sweater, here's how this one comes together. It's different from a top-down raglan or a bottom-up seamed sweater… and honestly, I think it's more fun.

You start by crocheting two motif strips. Each strip is a long line of joined floral motifs…the number of motifs in each strip depends on your size (12 for S/M, 14 for L/XL, 16 for 2X/3X, 18 for 4X/5X). These strips will eventually sit on either side of the neck, running from the front to the back over the shoulders.

Each motif is joined to the previous one using the join-as-you-go method on the final round. You don't make 24 (or 36!) separate motifs and then sew them together. Instead, as you crochet the last round of each new motif, you slip stitch into the corresponding corners and edges of the previous motif. By the time the round is finished, the motifs are already attached. No sewing. No weaving. Just satisfying assembly as you go.

Once each strip is complete, you crochet the lace panels directly onto the long edges of the motif strips. This is where the body of the tee takes shape. The lace pattern is a simple 3-row repeat that becomes meditative once you get into the rhythm.

Then come the sleeves, the front-and-back joining seam, and finally blocking and finishing. The result is a lightweight summer tee where every floral motif is locked into a structural strip, the lace fabric drapes beautifully, and the whole thing breathes.

If you've been curious about working with crochet floral motifs, this is a beautiful way to put them into a wearable project rather than just a blanket or scarf. And if you've already enjoyed making a join-as-you-go blanket, the technique here will feel familiar…you're applying the same construction principle to a garment.

Free crochet floral motif tee pattern โ€” front and back views of the lacy purple summer crochet sweater by Marly Bird

Tips for Crocheting the Floral Motif Tee

๐ŸŒธ Block. Your. Motifs. I cannot say this enough. The unblocked motif looks like a scrunched little blob. The blocked motif opens up into a clean 3.5″ floral square. The whole pattern depends on those blocked dimensions. Don't skip it. (More on blocking below…and there's a full guide on blocking your crochet if you've never done it before.)

๐ŸŒธ Swatch your motif first. Make one motif, block it, measure it. If it's not 3.5″, adjust your hook size before you start a strip of 18.

๐ŸŒธ Use stitch markers liberally. Mark the right side and wrong side of your first motif so the front and back panels align correctly during assembly. >> Learn how to make crochet stitch markers <<

๐ŸŒธ Pick a solid yarn color. Variegated yarns hide the gorgeous lace stitch pattern. If you want the floral motifs to be the star, choose a single solid color. Pastels are romantic, jewel tones make a statement, and a crisp white reads as a wardrobe classic.

๐ŸŒธ Drape matters more than fiber. When you're substituting yarn, prioritize a fiber with good drape…wool/nylon blends, silk blends, or a high-twist cotton work beautifully. Pure mercerized cotton can feel stiff in this lace pattern. (See yarn substitution notes below.)

๐ŸŒธ Read the pattern through once before you start. Especially the section about the right and left halves being mirror images. It's easier to grasp the construction logic before you have a hook in your hand than mid-row when you're confused.

If you love working with crochet lace techniques, you'll enjoy this lace stitch pattern…it's reversible, it's rhythmic, and once you get into it, you'll be looking for excuses to crochet “just one more row.”

Free crochet floral motif tee pattern in purple โ€” Pinterest pin showing the size-inclusive lacy summer sweater

Color Inspiration: Pick a Shade That Shows Off the Lace ๐ŸŽจ

The lacy floral motifs in this tee REALLY shine in a solid color. Variegated and self-striping yarns are gorgeous in plenty of other projects, but they tend to hide the floral stitch detail here. Stick with a solid (or a tonal semi-solid that reads as a single color) and let the motifs be the star.

Here are some color directions to think about as you pick your shade:

๐ŸŒธ Soft pastels. Powder pink, sage green, dusty lavender, butter yellow, robin's-egg blue. Pastels feel romantic and garden-party. They photograph beautifully and pair effortlessly with white denim or linen.

๐ŸŒธ Crisp white or natural cream. The classic. A white floral motif tee reads as timeless and lets the lace texture do all the talking. Cream is more forgiving than bright white and shows less from across the room, so it's friendlier if you're worried about lace looking “see through.”

๐ŸŒธ Bold jewel tones. Deep teal, rich aubergine (the original sample color!), garnet red, emerald. Jewel tones make the floral motifs feel a little more dramatic and a little less “shabby chic.” Marly's original sample was knit in Miss Babs Kilimanjaro in Aubergine, and that deep purple really does show off every stitch.

๐ŸŒธ Earthy neutrals. Camel, terracotta, mushroom, soft taupe. These work beautifully if you want a wardrobe-staple tee that goes with everything in your closet.

๐ŸŒธ Statement brights. Coral, bright turquoise, sunshine yellow. Make a summer statement. Just keep it a solid bright, not a variegated bright.

Free crochet floral motif tee pattern in red โ€” size-inclusive lacy summer crochet sweater by Marly Bird
Free crochet floral motif tee pattern in orange โ€” size-inclusive lacy summer crochet sweater by Marly Bird
Free crochet floral motif tee pattern in mustard gold โ€” size-inclusive lacy summer crochet sweater by Marly Bird
Free crochet floral motif tee pattern in yellow โ€” size-inclusive lacy summer crochet sweater by Marly Bird
Free crochet floral motif tee pattern in grass green โ€” size-inclusive lacy summer crochet sweater by Marly Bird
Free crochet floral motif tee pattern in emerald green โ€” size-inclusive lacy summer crochet sweater by Marly Bird
Free crochet floral motif tee pattern in aquamarine โ€” size-inclusive lacy summer crochet sweater by Marly Bird
Free crochet floral motif tee pattern in forest green โ€” size-inclusive lacy summer crochet sweater by Marly Bird
Free crochet floral motif tee pattern in light blue โ€” size-inclusive lacy summer crochet sweater by Marly Bird
Free crochet floral motif tee pattern in cobalt blue โ€” size-inclusive lacy summer crochet sweater by Marly Bird
Free crochet floral motif tee pattern in light purple โ€” size-inclusive lacy summer crochet sweater by Marly Bird
Free crochet floral motif tee pattern in purple โ€” size-inclusive lacy summer crochet sweater by Marly Bird
Free crochet floral motif tee pattern in brown โ€” size-inclusive lacy summer crochet sweater by Marly Bird
Free crochet floral motif tee pattern in cream โ€” size-inclusive lacy summer crochet sweater by Marly Bird
Free crochet floral motif tee pattern in black โ€” size-inclusive lacy summer crochet sweater by Marly Bird
Marly Bird in the free crochet floral motif tee pattern โ€” close-up styling of the lacy summer crochet sweater

๐Ÿ’ก Designer Tip: Before you commit to a full sweater's worth of yarn in any color, crochet one motif and block it. Look at the blocked motif in natural daylight AND under indoor lighting. Some colors that look gorgeous under shop lighting can read very differently in the sun (or in your bathroom mirror). A single test motif costs you about 20 minutes…and could save you from 40 hours of regret.

Yarn & Materials

Yarn Used in the Sample

The original sample was crocheted in Miss Babs Kilimanjaro in the colorway Aubergine…an 85% Superwash Bluefaced Leicester Wool / 15% Nylon blend in CYCA #1 super fine weight (1,750 yards per 400 g hank). It's a gorgeous yarn with beautiful drape… but unfortunately Miss Babs has discontinued this base. The great news? Miss Babs has released Katahdin as the official replacement โ€” same skein size (1,750 yds / 400g), same BFL base, and there are plenty of other excellent substitutes too. See the full Alternative Yarn section below!

What to Look For in a Substitute

If you're swapping yarns, here's what matters for THIS pattern specifically:

๐Ÿ“ Weight: CYCA #1 super fine (sock or fingering weight). Anything heavier and the lace loses its airiness; anything lighter and the structure suffers.

๐Ÿชก Drape: This is the single most important factor. Wool/nylon blends, silk blends, and high-twist cottons drape beautifully. Pure mercerized cotton tends to feel stiff in this lace pattern.

๐Ÿงถ Yardage: Plan for at least 1,200 yards per 4-oz / 100 g put-up. Smaller sizes need around 1,750 yards total; the 4X/5X size needs closer to 5,250 yards if you use a yarn with a typical fingering put-up.

โœจ Stitch definition: The lace and motifs depend on crisp stitch definition. Yarns with too much halo (mohair, brushed alpaca, fluffy single-plys) will blur the floral details.

Hook

๐Ÿช Size G/6 (4.0 mm) crochet hook…or whichever size you need to achieve the 3.5″ blocked motif gauge. I like a smooth, ergonomic hook for fine-weight yarn since you'll be working a lot of stitches.

Notions & Blocking Supplies

  • Stitch Markers
  • Tapestry Needle
  • Scissors
  • Tape Measure
  • Notions Bag for Supplies (Optional)
  • Blocking Squares 
  • Blocking Pins 
  • Soaking Basin 
  • Eucalan Wool Wash 
  • Blocking Wires (ideal for lace work) 
  • Ball Winder and Swift

Alternative Yarn for the Free Crochet Floral Motif Tee

Since Miss Babs Kilimanjaro is discontinued, you'll need a substitute. The good news? Miss Babs themselves have released Katahdin as the direct replacement โ€” same giant 1,750-yard / 400g skein, same Superwash Bluefaced Leicester base, and lots of colors to choose from. Beyond Katahdin, this pattern is forgiving as long as you stay in the CYCA #1 super fine range and prioritize drape. Here are my favorite alternatives, organized by what you're going for.

๐ŸŒŸ Official Miss Babs Replacement: Katahdin

Miss Babs reached out to let us know that Katahdin is their direct substitute for the discontinued Kilimanjaro. Same skein size (1,750 yds / 14 oz), same 100% Superwash Bluefaced Leicester wool base, same beautiful BFL drape and glossy finish. The only difference: Katahdin has no nylon โ€” but BFL is naturally hardwearing, so it holds up beautifully in a garment. If you loved Kilimanjaro and want to support the same indie dyer who made the original, Katahdin is your first stop.

The Closest Match: Premium Wool & Wool-Blend Sock and Fingering Yarns

If you loved the look and feel of the original Miss Babs Kilimanjaro, look for a wool or wool-blend sock or fingering yarn (typically 75% wool / 25% nylon, or 85/15 like the original). These yarns give you the same beautiful drape, springy stitch definition, and rich color saturation. Hand-dyed yarn is a splurge, but you're going to be living with this sweater for years.

YarnFiberWeightWhy It Works
Miss Babs Katahdin โญ100% Superwash Bluefaced Leicester WoolCYCA #1 Light FingeringMiss Babs' own official replacement for the discontinued Kilimanjaro. Same giant 1,750-yd / 400g skein size, same BFL base, beautiful glossy finish and rich color depth. No nylon, but BFL is naturally durable. This is the closest you'll get to the original.
Knit Picks Stroll75% Superwash Merino / 25% NylonCYCA #1 FingeringThe single closest match for the Miss Babs base. Beautiful stitch definition, a huge color range, and the nylon gives you sweater durability.
Cascade Heritage75% Superwash Merino / 25% NylonCYCA #1 FingeringWorkhorse sock yarn that crochets up beautifully in lace. Affordable for the quality and comes in tons of colors.
Cascade 220 Superwash Fingering100% Superwash MerinoCYCA #1 FingeringIf you want pure merino softness and don't need the nylon's added durability. Lovely drape for warm-weather garments.
Malabrigo Sock100% Superwash Merino (hand-dyed)CYCA #1 FingeringFamously soft, deeply saturated, and richly tonal. Choose a solid or near-solid colorway to keep the motif detail readable.
Madelinetosh Tosh Merino Light100% Superwash Merino (hand-dyed)CYCA #2 Light FingeringA touch lighter than the original but still works beautifully. Madelinetosh's tonal colorways glow in this lace pattern.
Dream in Color Smooshy with YakMerino / Yak / NylonCYCA #1 FingeringThe yak adds a gentle warmth and softness, and the hand-dyed colors are stunning. A real treat-yourself yarn.

For Extra Drape and Sheen: Silk-Blend & Luxury Fingering

A silk-blend fingering yarn gives your Floral Motif Tee an extra-luxe drape and a subtle sheen that makes the lace look almost like jewelry. Silk softens the wool's springiness slightly, so the fabric falls a little more rather than holding its shape…gorgeous for a flowing summer top.

YarnFiberWeightWhy It Works
Cascade Heritage Silk85% Merino / 15% Mulberry SilkCYCA #1 FingeringThe silk adds quiet sheen and extra drape without sacrificing structure. One of my favorite “upgrade” yarns for a lace garment.
Knit Picks Gloss Fingering70% Merino / 30% SilkCYCA #1 FingeringMore silk than Cascade Heritage Silk, so you get a noticeable shimmer in the finished fabric. Drapes like a dream.
Knit Picks Twill FingeringMerino / Silk blendCYCA #1 FingeringA subtle tweed-textured silk blend. The little tweedy flecks add personality without competing with the floral motifs.
Knit Picks Capretta Superwash60% Merino / 30% Baby Alpaca / 10% NylonCYCA #1 FingeringNot silk, but it has that same buttery drape thanks to the baby alpaca. Lovely if silk allergies are a concern for you.

For a Pure Summer Fiber: Cotton & Cotton-Blend Fingering

If you live somewhere truly hot and want a plant-based summer tee, look for a cotton or cotton-blend yarn with a little linen, nylon, or acrylic added for drape. Pure mercerized cotton can feel stiff in a lace pattern, so a blend usually drapes better. Linen blends soften beautifully with each wash and develop gorgeous drape over time.

YarnFiberWeightWhy It Works
Knit Picks CotLin70% Tanguis Cotton / 30% LinenCYCA #2-3 (Sport/DK)The cotton-linen blend has that ideal mix of softness and drape. A touch heavier than the original, so expect a slightly larger finished garment…swatch first!
Scheepjes Whirlette60% Cotton / 40% AcrylicCYCA #1 FingeringLightweight, breathable, and ready-to-use balls (no winding hanks). The acrylic in the blend gives it a little extra drape.
Willow Yarns Freesia Cotton100% Mercerized CottonCYCA #1 FingeringIf you really want pure cotton, this is one of the better mercerized cottons for drape thanks to its tight twist. Block hard for the best results.
Premier Afternoon CottonCotton blendCYCA #2 SportA budget-friendly cotton option in a slightly heavier weight. Swatch first if you go with this one…the larger gauge will affect your finished measurements.

Budget-Friendly: Mainstream Yarn from Michaels

If hand-dyed and specialty yarn isn't where you want to spend right now, here are some affordable options you can pick up at Michaels. A few of these are heavier than CYCA #1, which means your finished tee will come out larger than the pattern measurements…so swatch a motif first to see what gauge you're actually getting. Sometimes that larger gauge produces a really lovely, drapier finished tee. Just decide on purpose, not by accident.

YarnFiberWeightWhy It Works
Loops & Threads Silky SoftSilky polyester blendCYCA #3 Light/DKBeautiful drape and a soft sheen, available in solid colors at Michaels. Heavier than the original, so expect a larger finished tee. Could be lovely for a more flowing summer fit.
Lion Brand Mandala StringCotton/poly string yarnCYCA #0-1 Lace/FingeringA lacy, lightweight cotton-blend string that crochets up beautifully in motif-and-lace patterns. Available in solid “Harmony” tone-on-tone colorways.
Caron Skinny CakesAcrylic blendCYCA #1 FingeringThis one IS a self-striping cake, so the floral motif detail will be partially hidden by the color changes. But if you love the watercolor look, it can be stunning. Read the colorway labels and pick one with subtle, low-contrast shifts.
Loops & Threads Luxe Merino Solid100% Merino WoolCYCA #4 WorstedSignificantly heavier than the original. The lace will be bolder, the fabric warmer, the finished tee larger. Treat it as a totally different garment with totally different math…but real merino at this price is hard to beat.

What to Avoid

โŒ Variegated and self-striping yarns. They hide the floral motif detail. Beautiful in plenty of other projects…not in this one.

โŒ Mohair, brushed alpaca, or any “halo” yarn. The fuzzy halo blurs the lace and makes the floral motifs look indistinct.

โŒ Anything bulkier than worsted weight. The pattern math is written for CYCA #1 super fine. The bigger you go, the more your finished measurements will balloon (and the warmer the finished tee).

โŒ Lace weight or laceweight cobweb yarns. Too light to give the motifs structure. You want at least fingering for the motif edges to hold their shape.

๐Ÿ’ก Designer Tip: Whatever yarn you choose, ALWAYS make a single motif and block it before you commit to the full sweater. The blocked motif tells you everything: gauge, drape, color saturation in real lighting, and how the lace pattern reads. Twenty minutes of swatching saves you hours of frogging.

Free crochet floral motif tee pattern in purple โ€” close-up of the joined floral motif stitches and texture

Love This Pattern? More Free Crochet Summer Patterns

If lacy summer crochet is your thing, you'll love these:

๐ŸŒท Wildflowers Crochet Floral Motifs…a deep dive into different floral motif designs you can use as building blocks for blankets, scarves, or even your own garments.

๐ŸŒท 12 Free Spring Sweater Patterns…a curated roundup of my favorite spring/summer sweater patterns in both knit and crochet, including some great size-inclusive options.

๐ŸŒท Join-As-You-Go Blanket Patterns…if you want to practice the join-as-you-go method on a smaller, no-fitting-required project before committing to a sweater, blankets are the perfect playground.

๐ŸŒท Crochet or Knit Lace…a comparison of crochet vs. knit lace techniques, perfect if you're trying to decide which to learn first or which approach suits your project.

Plus-size crochet floral motif tee free pattern in purple over black dress โ€” size-inclusive summer crochet sweater

Free Crochet Floral Motif Tee โ€” Pattern Details

Skill Level

Intermediate

Measurements

To Fit Size: S/M (L/XL, 2X/3X, 4X/5X)

Finished Measurements: Tee is 40 (48, 56, 64)” [101.5, 122, 142, 162.5 cm] bust circumference by 21 (24.5, 28, 31.5)” [53.5, 62, 71, 80 cm] from shoulder to bottom edge. Designed with 2-6″ of positive ease. Modeled by Marly with 4″ negative ease. See notes for more details.

Gauge

1 Motif = 3.5″ by 3.5″ [9 by 9 cm] blocked; use any size hook to obtain the gauge.

4 stitch repeats (24 sts) by 10 rows = 5″ by 5″ [12.5 by 12.5 cm] blocked.

Materials

Yarn: Miss Babs, Kilimanjaro (85% Superwash Bluefaced Leicester Wool / 15% Nylon, 1,750 yds / 1,600 m, 14 oz / 400 g, CYCA #1 Super Fine): 1 (2, 2, 3) hanks. Note: This yarn has been discontinued. See yarn substitution notes above.

Hook: Size G/6 (4.0 mm)

Notions: Stitch Markers

Tapestry Needle

Scissors

Tape Measure

Notions Bag for Supplies (Optional)

Blocking Squares 

Blocking Pins 

Soaking Basin 

Eucalan Wool Wash 

Blocking Wires (ideal for lace work) 

Ball Winder and Swift (great for yarn that comes in hanks)

โญ๏ธ Marly Bird Amazon Storefront โญ๏ธ

Abbreviations

  • Ch โ€” Chain(s)
  • Dc โ€” Double Crochet
  • Dc2tog โ€” Double Crochet Two Together
  • PM โ€” Place Marker
  • RS โ€” Right Side
  • Sc โ€” Single Crochet
  • Sl st โ€” Slip Stitch
  • Sp(s) โ€” Space(s)
  • St(s) โ€” Stitch(es)
  • Tch โ€” Turning Chain
  • WS โ€” Wrong Side

Special Stitches

โญ 2 Double Crochet Cluster (2dc-cl): *Yarn over hook, insert hook into indicated st, yarn over and pull up a loop, yarn over and draw through 2 loops on hook; repeat from * once more in same st, yarn over and draw through all 3 loops on hook.

โญ 3 Double Crochet Cluster (3dc-cl): *Yarn over hook, insert hook into indicated st, yarn over and pull up a loop, yarn over and draw through 2 loops on hook; repeat from * twice more in same st, yarn over and draw through all 4 loops on hook.

โญ Double Crochet 2 Together (Dc2tog): *Yarn over hook, insert hook into indicated st, yarn over and pull up a loop, yarn over and draw through 2 loops on hook; repeat from * in next indicated st, yarn over and draw through all 3 loops on hook. (1 st decreased)


Crochet Stitch Diagrams

โœจ Following along with the free pattern on MarlyBird.com? You'll have everything you need to make this Floral Motif Tee… but if you want the exclusive stitch diagram charts, those are only available in the ad-free PDF version.

You'll enjoy a clean, printable, ad-free experience while supporting Marly Bird's free tutorials and patterns ๐Ÿ’–

Ad-free PDF of the Floral Motif Crochet Summer Tee pattern by Marly Bird โ€” clean printable instructions for crocheters
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Schematic

Schematic diagram for the free crochet floral motif tee pattern showing finished measurements for sizes S/M through 4X/5X

Notes

  • Directions are for size S/M; changes for sizes L/XL, 2X/3X, 4X/5X are in parentheses. When only one number is given then that number applies to all sizes.
  • This summer tee can be worn with positive ease (the sweater is larger than your bust size) or worn with negative ease (your bust is larger than the sweater). Pick the size to crochet based on how you would like to wear the top. Marly is wearing the S/M size in the photos with negative ease.
  • The lace pattern is reversible, and the WS and RS are the same.
  • Summer Tee is made in pieces. First you make 2 strips of joined motifs. These will be on either side of the neck. Then the right front is crocheted directly onto one half of the motif strips. The right back is crocheted in the same manner except that the RS and WS are reversed. The directions are then repeated for the Left Half. The two are seamed by double crochets in the front and back. The shoulders, under arms, and side seams are sewn together after blocking.
  • Do not skip blocking. The lace pattern and motifs really open up when blocked and make the drape of the sweater so much nicer.

Video Tutorials

  • How to Wind Yarn
  • How to Bury Ends
  • Seaming Crochet
  • How to Read Crochet Diagrams
  • Wet Blocking

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Free crochet floral motif tee pattern in purple โ€” full-length wear shot of the size-inclusive lacy summer sweater

Free Crochet Floral Motif Tee โ€” Pattern Instructions

Lace Pattern for Gauge

Note: Lace pattern begins with a foundation chain for gauge swatching purposes only. In the actual garment, the lace is worked directly onto the Motif Strips rather than starting as a separate piece.

Chain a multiple of 6 + 2 extra for foundation, see stitch diagram for help.

Row 1 (WS): Skip 1 ch, sc in second ch from hook and in each ch to end, turn.

Row 2: Ch 4 (counts as 1 dc in first st and 1 ch-sp), skip first sc, skip next 2 sc, 3 dc in next sc (dc group made), ch 1, skip next 2 sc, dc in next sc, *ch 1, skip next 2 sc, 3 dc in next sc, ch 1, skip next 2 sc, dc in next sc; repeat from * to end, turn.

Row 3: Ch 4 (counts as 1 dc in first st and 1 ch-sp), skip first ch-1 sp, 3 dc in center dc of next 3-dc group, *ch 1, skip next ch-1 sp, dc in next dc, ch 1, skip next ch-1 sp, 3 dc in center dc of next 3-dc group; repeat from * to tch, ch 1, dc in third ch of tch, turn.

Repeat Row 3 only for Lace pattern.

Motif Strips

Make 2 Motif Strips. Motif Strips are made of 12 (14, 16, 18) motifs each. One strip goes on each side of the neck.

First Motif

See stitch diagram for help.

Ch 6, and sl st in first ch to form a ring.

Round 1: Ch 4 (counts as 1 dc and 1 ch-sp), [dc, ch 1] 15 times in ring, join with sl st in third ch of beg ch-4, do not turn โ€” 16 dc + ch-1 sps.

Round 2: Sl st in next ch-1 sp, ch 3 (does not count as a st), 2 dc-cl in same ch-1 sp as last sl st, ch 3, *3 dc-cl in next ch-1 sp, ch 3; repeat from * around, join with sl st to top of first dc-cl, do not turn โ€” 16 dc-cl + ch-1 sps.

Round 3: Sl st in next ch-3 sp, ch 1, sc in same sp as last sl st, *[ch 5, sc in next ch-3 sp] twice, (5 dc, ch 5, 5 dc) in next ch-3 sp, **sc in next ch-3 sp; repeat from * 3 more times, ending last repeat at **, join with a sl st in first sc. Fasten off โ€” 12 ch-5 sp + 40 dc.

Second Motif

Work same as First Motif up to Round 3.

Round 3 (joining round): Sl st in next ch-3 sp, ch 1, sc in same sp as last sl st, *[ch 5, sc in next ch-3 sp] twice, (5 dc, ch 5, 5 dc) in next ch-3 sp, sc in next ch-3 sp; repeat from * once more, [ch 5, sc in next ch-3 sp] twice, (5 dc, ch 2, sl st in corresponding corner sp of previous motif, ch 2 (counts as ch-5 sp), 5 dc) in next ch-3 sp, sc in next ch-3 sp, [ch 2, sl st in corresponding edge sp of previous motif, ch 2 (counts as ch-5 sp), sc in next ch-3 sp] twice, (5 dc, ch 2, sl st in corresponding corner sp of previous motif, ch 2, 5 dc) in next ch-3 sp, join with a sl st in first sc. Fasten off โ€” 12 ch-5 sp + 40 dc.

Remaining Motifs

Join 10 (12, 14, 16) more Motifs the same as Second Motif, joining them into a long Strip โ€” 12 (14, 16, 18) Motifs in each Strip. Make 2 strips.

Right Half

Right Front

With WS facing, join yarn with sl st at corner so you are ready to work up long edge of Strip.

Row 1 (WS): Ch 1, and work 103 (121, 139, 157) sc evenly across half the squares only (6 (7, 8, 9) squares). This will be approximately 17 sc per square. Leave remaining 6 (7, 8, 9) squares unworked, turn โ€” 103 (121, 139, 157) sc.

Row 2 (RS): Ch 4 (counts as 1 dc in first st and 1 ch-sp), skip first sc, skip next 2 sc, 3 dc in next sc (dc group made), ch 1, skip next 2 sc, dc in next sc, *ch 1, skip next 2 sc, 3 dc in next sc, ch 1, skip next 2 sc, dc in next sc; repeat from * to end, turn โ€” 17 (20, 23, 26) dc groups.

Row 3: Ch 4 (counts as 1 dc in first st and 1 ch-sp), skip first ch-1 sp, 3 dc in center dc of next 3-dc group, *ch 1, skip next ch-1 sp, dc in next dc, ch 1, skip next ch-1 sp, 3 dc in center dc of next 3-dc group; repeat from * to tch, ch 1, dc in third ch of tch, turn.

Repeat Row 3 10 (14, 18, 22) more times. Do not fasten off.

Crochet floral motif tee free pattern โ€” full-length view of the lacy purple summer crochet sweater

Sleeve

Row 1 (RS): Ch 3 (counts as 1 dc, this starts the arm shaping without the extra ch 1), 3 dc in center dc of first 3-dc group, *ch 1, skip next ch-1 sp, dc in next dc, ch 1, skip next ch-1 sp, 3 dc in center dc of next 3-dc group; repeat from * to last 5 (7, 9, 11) dc groups (11 (12, 13, 14) repeats total), ch 1, skip next ch-1 sp, dc in next dc, leave remaining sts unworked, turn โ€” 12 (13, 14, 15) dc groups.

Row 2: Ch 4 (counts as 1 dc in first st and 1 ch-sp), skip first ch-1 sp, 3 dc in center dc of next 3-dc group, *ch 1, skip next ch-1 sp, dc in next dc, ch 1, skip next ch-1 sp, 3 dc in center dc of next 3-dc group; repeat from * to last 3-dc group, ch 1, skip next ch-1 sp, dc in next dc, ch 1, skip next ch-1 sp, 2 dc in center dc of last 3-dc group, dc in top of tch, turn โ€” 11 (12, 13, 14) dc groups.

Row 3: Ch 2 (does not count as a st), skip first dc, dc in next dc, skip next dc, *ch 1, skip next ch-1 sp, dc in next dc, ch 1, skip next ch-1 sp, 3 dc in center dc of next 3-dc group; repeat from * to tch, ch 1, dc in third ch of tch, turn.

Row 4: Ch 4 (counts as 1 dc in first st and 1 ch-sp), skip first ch-1 sp, 3 dc in center dc of next 3-dc group, *ch 1, skip next ch-1 sp, dc in next dc, ch 1, skip next ch-1 sp, 3 dc in center dc of next 3-dc group; repeat from * to last 2 ch-1 sps, ch 1, skip next ch-1 sp, dc2tog over last 2 dc (skipping ch-1 sp between them), turn.

Row 5: Ch 3 (counts as 1 dc), skip first ch-1 sp, 3 dc in center dc of first 3-dc group, *ch 1, skip next ch-1 sp, dc in next dc, ch 1, skip next ch-1 sp, 3 dc in center dc of next 3-dc group; repeat from * to tch, ch 1, dc in third ch of tch, turn.

Repeat Rows 2-5 once, then Rows 2-4 once more โ€” 9 (10, 11, 12) dc groups. Fasten off.

Right Back

With RS facing, join yarn with a sl st at opposite corner of same long edge of Motif Strip, and work other half of the Strip the same way as Right Front. RS and WS switch for the Right Back.

Left Half

Repeat directions for Right Front and Back, then rotate the piece 180 degrees (see schematic for orientation of pieces).

Crochet floral motif tee free pattern โ€” detailed view of the lacy purple summer crochet sweater by Marly Bird

Finishing

Weave in all loose ends.

Joining Left and Right Halves

Lay out the two halves as shown in the schematic, and place a marker at inner edge of each half, 3.5 (4, 4.5, 5) Motifs (12.25 (14, 15.75, 17.5)” [31, 35.5, 40, 44.5 cm]) above bottom edge. The Left Front will be on your right and vice versa when facing the RS of the garment. See schematic for clarification.

With RS facing, join yarn with a sl st at lower inner corner of Left Front (bottom corner of bottom most motif).

Ch 3 (counts as 1 dc), dc in lower inner corner of Right Front, [dc in Left Front edge, dc in Right Front edge] 7 more times across bottom pair of Motifs, *dc in Right Front edge, dc in Left Front edge; repeat from * to marker, working about 8 dcs in edge of each Motif, and ending with a dc in Left Front edge. Ch 3, and sl st to Right Front edge.

Fasten off and remove markers.

For Back Panel, join 5 (6, 7, 8) motifs (17.5 (21, 24.5, 28)” [44.5, 53.5, 62, 71 cm]) in the same manner as for Front.

Seaming

Fold Sweater in half at shoulders. With yarn needle whip stitch or woven stitch together shoulders, tops and bottoms of sleeves, and side seams. Weave in ends.

Woman models a pink crochet floral tee layered over a denim shirt, showing stitch detail in a bright, cozy room.

Blocking Tips

Wet blocking is like sending your yarn on a spa retreat. It's the process where your yarn unwinds, enjoys a soothing cleanse, and settles gracefully into its final form, allowing its true beauty to flourish.

Here's how to pamper your crocheted Floral Motif Tee with a thorough wet block:

  • Submerge your piece in a basin or sink filled with cool water. Add a touch of gentle wool wash like Eucalan…it cleans AND conditions the fiber. Rinse only if your wash requires it.
  • Remove as much water as you can WITHOUT stretching or twisting. Press against the sink, or gently squeeze between your hands. Never wring.
  • ๐Ÿ’ก Always support the entire garment when lifting…gravity will pull on whatever you don't support and stretch it out of shape.
  • Lay the damp piece on a large towel, fold the towel ends over your project, and roll it up like a burrito to wick away more moisture. You want damp, not sopping… and not dry.
  • Place the piece on your blocking board, aligning with the grid for symmetry.
  • Gently expand the piece to the schematic measurements, especially the neckline width, the bottom-to-armhole length, and the shoulder-to-armhole length.
  • ๐Ÿšจ Use extra care to avoid overstretching! While the garment is damp, some yarns love to overstretch. Trust me…the sample tee could have been blocked to a 5XL by accident. Don't let it.
  • Pin sparingly to keep the fabric flat. Smooth with your hands.
  • Let it dry fully. This can take a full day. A fan speeds things up. Never block in direct sunlight (it can discolor the yarn).

Wet blocking is more than a finishing step…it's the moment your crochet stitches settle into the heirloom-quality piece you've been working toward. Don't skip it.

(If you're new to blocking, the full step-by-step is in my Blocking Made Easy guide.)

Favorite & Queue on Ravelry

Favorite and queue the Floral Motif Tee on Ravelry so you never lose track of it…and so I can see how many of you are making this beauty ๐Ÿ’›

Favorite and queue the free crochet floral motif tee pattern on Ravelry โ€” size-inclusive crochet sweater

More Free Crochet Summer Patterns You'll Love

๐ŸŒท 12 Free Spring Sweater Patterns…a curated roundup of my favorite warm-weather sweater patterns.

๐ŸŒท Wildflowers Crochet Floral Motifs…explore more floral motif designs for any project.

๐ŸŒท Join-As-You-Go Blanket Patterns…perfect practice if you want to master the JAYG method on a no-fit-required project.

๐ŸŒท Crochet or Knit Lace?…a comparison if you've ever wondered which approach to lace fits your style.

๐ŸŒท Blocking Made Easy with the Right Tools…the full primer on wet blocking your finished crochet (and knit) pieces.

Free crochet floral motif tee pattern FAQ โ€” common questions about this lacy summer crochet sweater answered

Frequently Asked Questions

What weight yarn works best for a crochet motif tee?

A CYCA #1 super fine (fingering / sock weight) yarn works best for this Floral Motif Tee. The lightweight yarn gives the lacy floral motifs and the lace panels the drape and breathability you want in a summer top. A wool/nylon blend is ideal because it offers stitch definition AND drape, but a silk-blend fingering yarn or merino fingering will also work beautifully. Avoid heavier yarns like worsted or DK for this specific pattern…the lace will lose its airy quality.

How do you join crochet motifs as you go?

Join-as-you-go (JAYG) crochet attaches each new motif to the previous one during the final round of the new motif. Instead of crocheting a complete corner or edge stitch, you slip stitch into the matching corner or edge space of the previous motif, then continue your round. By the time you finish the round, the motifs are already locked together…no sewing required. The Floral Motif Tee uses JAYG to build two long strips of joined motifs that form the front and back of the tee.

How do I block a crochet sweater?

Wet block your finished crochet sweater by submerging it in cool water with a no-rinse wool wash (Eucalan is a favorite), squeezing out the excess water without wringing, rolling it in a towel like a burrito, then laying it flat on a blocking mat. Gently shape it to the schematic measurements, pin sparingly, and let it dry completely (usually 24 hours). For the Floral Motif Tee, blocking is essential…it opens up the lace and floral motifs and creates the final drape.

What is positive vs. negative ease in crochet?

Ease refers to the difference between your body measurement and the finished garment measurement. Positive ease means the garment is larger than your body (a relaxed, drapey fit). Negative ease means your body is larger than the garment (a closer, more fitted look). The Floral Motif Tee is designed with 2-6″ of positive ease, but Marly wore the S/M sample with 4″ of negative ease for a more fitted look. Either is correct…pick based on the silhouette you want.

Can I make this crochet tee in plus sizes?

Yes. The updated Floral Motif Tee pattern is written in four sizes…S/M, L/XL, 2X/3X, and 4X/5X…with finished bust circumferences from 40″ to 64″. This is one of the few free crochet sweater patterns that goes all the way up to a 64″ finished bust. If your bust measures over 66″ and you'd like to size up further, the motif-based construction makes it relatively straightforward to add additional motifs to the strips and back panel.

How many motifs do I need to make for the Floral Motif Tee?

The Floral Motif Tee uses 24 motifs total for size S/M, 28 for L/XL, 32 for 2X/3X, and 36 for 4X/5X. The motifs are joined into two long strips (12, 14, 16, or 18 motifs per strip depending on size), with each strip running from the front to the back over one shoulder.

Is this pattern good for beginner or intermediate crocheters?

The Floral Motif Tee is an intermediate crochet pattern. You should be comfortable working in the round, reading written pattern instructions, working basic increases and decreases, and joining motifs together. Adventurous advanced beginners can absolutely tackle it, but it's not a “first sweater” project. If you've made a granny square blanket and a few simple garments, you have the skills to make this tee.

What's the difference between a motif tee and a regular crochet top?

A motif tee is built from small, individually crocheted shapes (motifs) that are joined together to form the garment. A “regular” crochet top is usually worked as a continuous fabric, either top-down, bottom-up, or in flat pieces that are seamed. Motif construction tends to result in lacier, lighter fabric with more visual interest, while continuous crochet often produces a denser, more uniform fabric. The Floral Motif Tee combines both: floral motifs form the yokes, and lace panels worked directly onto the motif strips form the body.

Final Thoughts

This updated Floral Motif Tee is one of my favorite patterns to share, and I'm so glad I finally got to size it all the way up to 4X/5X. Crochet should be for every body…and free crochet sweater patterns that fit larger sizes should be the norm, not the exception. So make this tee for yourself, make it for a friend, share the pattern with someone who's been searching for a free pattern in their size… and please come back and tell me how it turned out. I love seeing your makes ๐Ÿ’›

Tag me on Instagram @marlybird or share inside Marly's Minions on Facebook. I'm always rooting for you.

โค๏ธ Your BiCrafty Bestie,
Marly Bird

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“

Filed Under: Crochet, Free Patterns, Marly Bird Premium Patterns, Our Free Patterns, Pattern, Uncategorized Tagged With: crochet sweater 4x 5x, crochet tee, floral motif crochet, free crochet pattern, intermediate crochet, join as you go, lace crochet, plus size crochet, size inclusive crochet, summer crochet

Farmer’s Market Filet Crochet Bag โ€” A Free Modern Filet Crochet Pattern

May 20, 2026 By Marly Bird 2 Comments

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The Farmer's Market Filet Crochet Bag is a free crochet pattern designed by Robyn Chachula for Marly Bird. It's a sturdy 14″ x 16″ filet crochet market bag worked in joined rounds, then turned rounds, using a DK-weight cotton/hemp blend yarn. Filet crochet uses only chains and double crochets in an open grid, which makes it surprisingly approachable for intermediate crocheters… and the finished bag is gorgeous, breathable, and strong enough to carry a Saturday morning haul of tomatoes and a sourdough loaf.

If you've been curious about filet crochet but never quite found a project worth diving in for, this is the one. The technique is having a quiet renaissance right now… and a market bag is the perfect canvas for it. Free pattern on the blog. Ad-free PDF on Etsy, Shopify, and Ravelry for crafters who like to print and stitch without scrolling.

Marly Bird holding the Farmer's Market Filet Crochet Bag, a free crochet pattern by Robyn Chachula in green Hempathy yarn.

Hey, bestie ๐Ÿ’› Robyn Chachula designed this beauty for the Marly Bird community, and I cannot wait for you to make it. There's something about a handmade market bag that just feels like a love letter to summer โ€” to slow Saturday mornings, to local farmers, to the way a good cotton bag will hold half its weight in produce and STILL look like art slung over your shoulder. Robyn's filet grid does the heavy visual lifting, the construction is more forgiving than it looks, and once you click into the rhythm of “chain two, skip two, double crochet”… you're cruising.

This post may contain affiliate links. If you make a purchase through one of these links, I may earn a small commission at no additional cost to your yarn-loving heart. Thank you for supporting Marly Bird!

Marly Bird carrying the Farmer's Market Filet Crochet Bag at a summer farmers market - free filet crochet pattern.

๐ŸŒฝ Originally Released as Day 13 of Spring Fling 2026

The Farmer's Market Filet Crochet Bag debuted as the Day 13 brand-new release in our 20-day Spring Fling 2026 free pattern event, designed in collaboration with Robyn Chachula. The free pattern lives here on the blog forever โ€” and you can grab the ad-free PDF anytime on Etsy, Shopify, or Ravelry.

๐Ÿ‘‰ Browse all 20 Spring Fling patterns on the Hub โ€” or scroll down for the ad-free PDF.

What You Will Love About This Filet Crochet Bag ๐Ÿ’–

๐ŸŒฝ It's a modern take on a classic technique. Filet crochet has been around for over a century, but most filet patterns floating around the internet are dated or wedding-doily styled. This one is fresh, modern, and built for everyday use… a market bag you'll actually grab on the way out the door.

๐Ÿงถ The stitches are simpler than the result looks. If you can chain and double crochet, you can filet. The whole “grid” effect comes from alternating between chain-2 spaces (open squares) and groups of double crochets (filled squares). That's it. The chart does the design thinking for you โ€” you just read it and stitch.

๐ŸŒฟ The yarn breathes and holds shape. Elsebeth Lavold Hempathy is a cotton/hemp/modal blend with just enough body to keep the bag's silhouette structured, even when you're hauling a watermelon home. The hemp content also softens beautifully with washing โ€” like a good pair of linen pants.

๐Ÿ‘œ The integrated handles are a chef's kiss. No sewing on straps later. The handles are crocheted directly into the top edge with a clever chain-and-skip technique that gives you sturdy carry loops without breaking your rhythm at the end.

โœจ It's a gateway project for one of crochet's quietly hottest techniques. Filet crochet is having a moment โ€” Pinterest searches are climbing, indie designers are dropping filet patterns, and the vintage-modern look is everywhere. Learn it now on this bag, then run wild with curtains, runners, wall hangings, or your own custom designs.

Free filet crochet market bag pattern by Robyn Chachula for Marly Bird, shown in teal, blue, and purple color options.

Quick Pattern Overview

๐Ÿ“ Finished size: 14″ [35.5 cm] wide by 16″ [40.5 cm] tall, not including handles.

๐Ÿงถ Yarn: Elsebeth Lavold Hempathy โ€” DK-weight cotton/hemp/modal blend, 3 balls. Or any DK cotton-blend yarn that holds structure (alternatives below).

๐Ÿช Hook: Size G/6 (4.0 mm) โ€” or whatever size gets you gauge.

๐Ÿ“ Gauge: 7 ch-2 spaces and 8 rows = 4″ [10 cm] x 4″ [10 cm].

๐ŸŽฏ Skill level: Intermediate. You'll work joined rounds, turned rounds, and read a filet chart โ€” if you've made a granny square and aren't scared of charts, you've got this.

๐Ÿงต Designed by: Robyn Chachula for Marly Bird.

Ad-free PDF mockup of the Farmer's Market Filet Crochet Bag pattern in turquoise - free crochet pattern by Robyn Chachula.
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The full pattern is FREE here on the blog… and if you love the rhythm of scrolling through a blog post while you stitch, you're all set. But if you'd rather print the pattern, mark it up with sticky notes, and stitch without ads or scrolling, grab the ad-free PDF on Etsy, Shopify, or Ravelry. It's the same pattern in a clean, printable format.

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Is This Filet Crochet Bag Right for You?

This pattern is built for the intermediate crocheter who's ready to learn one new technique on familiar stitches. You'll need to be comfortable with chains, double crochets, half double crochets, slip stitches, working in the round (joined AND turned), and reading a simple chart. Everything else โ€” including the filet rhythm and the special stitches like the stacked double crochet โ€” is taught inside the pattern with full notes.

If you're newer to crochet, this isn't the place to start… but it's a beautiful goal project to work toward. Make a few quick crochet gifts first to build your stitch confidence, then come back for the filet adventure.

If you've ever made a crochet bag before and want to level up into a more graphic, lacier look… you're going to LOVE this. The construction is the same flat-bottomed, worked-in-the-round approach you already know โ€” just with a filet chart layered on top.

Marly Bird with the Farmer's Market Filet Crochet Bag in green Hempathy, showing the modern filet crochet stitch pattern.

What Is Filet Crochet (And Why Is Everyone Doing It Again)?

Filet crochet is a technique that uses ONLY chains and double crochets, arranged in an open grid. Each square in the grid is either “open” (a chain-2 space with a double crochet on each side) or “filled” (two double crochets between the side stitches, no chains). When you stack rows of open and filled squares according to a chart, you create a pixelated image inside the fabric… flowers, geometric motifs, monograms, anything you can graph.

The technique dates back to the late 1800s, when it was used to imitate the look of expensive filet lace. For decades it was associated with doilies, table runners, and Victorian-era curtains. Then it went quiet for a while. And NOW… it's having a renaissance, and a really exciting one. Modern designers are using filet for market bags, plant hangers, wall art, garment yokes, and curtain panels โ€” taking the same century-old technique and putting it on bodies and in homes that look nothing like the 1890s.

The reason filet is back? It hits the same sweet spot the granny square hit in 2021… it's repetitive (meditative), beginner-accessible, looks complicated, and reads incredibly well in photos. If you've been hunting for a technique that's both easy on your hands AND visually impressive, filet is your answer.

๐Ÿ’ก Designer Tip: The hardest part of filet crochet isn't the stitches… it's reading the chart. The pattern includes a tip to place a stitch marker every 5 ch-2 spaces while you work, and I cannot recommend that enough. Even after years of designing filet patterns, I still mark every 5 squares. It turns a chart into a built-in self-check system โ€” if you miscount, you'll catch it within 5 stitches instead of at the end of the round.

Farmer's Market Filet Crochet Bag in red Elsebeth Lavold Hempathy DK weight cotton hemp yarn - free crochet pattern.

Yarn & Materials

The yarn matters a LOT for a market bag. You want something that has body (so the bag holds shape when empty), strength (so it doesn't sag into a pancake when loaded), AND breathability (because you might be carrying warm bread, fresh-picked tomatoes, or a wet bunch of greens). The Elsebeth Lavold Hempathy used in the original sample is a perfect storm of all three.

Original yarn: Elsebeth Lavold Hempathy โ€” 41% cotton / 34% hemp / 25% modal rayon, DK weight (CYCA #3), 153 yds / 50 g per ball. Color: #028 Blue Pine Green. You'll need 3 balls.

Yarn Alternatives

If you can't find Hempathy locally (it's an indie-friendly yarn… sometimes harder to source), here are ten fun yarn alternatives… all with my WeCrochet and LoveCrafts affiliate links so you can shop fast.

I picked these because they each give the bag a different personality. Some are tight matches to Hempathy. Some are wildcards that take the pattern somewhere new (Robyn would probably approve โ€” she's a master at “the same pattern, ten ways”). The best matches are DK-weight cotton/linen blends, but I've included worsted cotton options too if you want a chunkier, sturdier bag (use a smaller hook to keep gauge). As always, match gauge before committing to your full project.

Best DK-Weight Matches (closest to Hempathy)

YarnFiberWeightWhy it works
WeCrochet CotLin70% cotton / 30% linenDKThe closest match to Hempathy on this list. Linen content adds the same body and crispness the hemp gives in the original.
WeCrochet MementoCotton blendDKBeautiful stitch definition and a soft hand. Holds filet grid structure well.
Berroco Remix LightCotton/silk/linen/nylon/acrylic blendDKRecycled fiber blend with great body and a beautiful matte finish. Earth-friendly summer pick.

Sport-Weight Alternatives (slightly lighter, lacier look)

YarnFiberWeightWhy it works
WeCrochet Shine Sport60% cotton / 40% modalSportModal blend gives a soft sheen. Filet grid will look a touch more delicate and drapey… great if you want a lighter summer bag.
WeCrochet Salvage95% cotton (62-75% recycled) / 5% other fiberSportThe closest spirit-match to Hempathy on this list. Recycled cotton with a rustic, organic feel that softens beautifully with washing… just like a good pair of linen pants. Eco-friendly, breathable, and gives the bag a slightly toothier, hand-spun look that's gorgeous for the farmer's market vibe. 155 yds / 50 g per ball.

Worsted-Weight Options (sturdier, chunkier bag โ€” use a smaller hook)

These are heavier than the original yarn. If you use them, drop one hook size (try F/3.75 mm) and double-check your gauge. You'll get a denser, sturdier bag that can carry even heavier loads, with a slightly bolder filet grid.

YarnFiberWeightWhy it works
WeCrochet DillyDallyCotton blendWorstedSoft, washable, beginner-friendly. Solid match if you want the warmth and body of worsted.
Willow Yarns Freesia Cotton100% cottonWorstedPure cotton with great stitch definition. The classic market-bag fiber if you want a heavier, longer-lasting bag.
Herrschners Cottage Cotton60% cotton / 40% acrylicWorstedCotton-acrylic blend that's lighter on the hands and easier to wash than 100% cotton. Budget-friendly.
Bernat Softee Cotton60% cotton / 40% nylonDK / Light WorstedNylon adds strength and structure โ€” a smart pick for a bag that needs to carry weight without sagging.

If You Want to Go in a Completely Different Direction

YarnFiberWeightWhy it works
WeCrochet AnimationSuperwash merino / nylonFingering / SockHold this one DOUBLE STRANDED and it becomes a lovely DK-equivalent for the bag. Soft, snuggly, with the most gorgeous self-striping colorways. A really fun choice if you want a one-of-a-kind look.
Lighthouse WildflowersAcrylic / wool blendDK / LightVibrant variegated colorways and a soft hand. Gives the bag a different personality than the original cotton/hemp โ€” think “farmer's market in autumn” instead of “farmer's market in July.”

Yarn links above are LoveCrafts affiliate links โ€” if you buy through them, I earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. Thank you for stitching with me. ๐Ÿ’›

Marly Bird modeling the Farmer's Market Filet Crochet Bag, showing filet crochet stitch detail and integrated handles.
๐Ÿ’ก Designer Note โ€” Make This Bag in Any Color You Love: One of my favorite things about this pattern is how dramatically it changes personality based on the color you choose. The sample is stitched in Hempathy's Blue Pine Green for that classic farmer's market vibe, but I've seen testers make it in cream, blush pink, terracotta, mustard, deep teal, sage, navy, and a buttery yellow… and EVERY single one is gorgeous. The filet grid is so graphic that any color reads beautifully. Match it to your favorite summer dress, your kitchen towels, your wedding palette, or your team colors. Make one for every season. Make a rainbow of them and rotate. The pattern doesn't care… it just keeps looking good. (See the nine-color photo above for inspiration โ€” those are all real Farmer's Market Bags in the wild.)

Hook & Notions

You'll need a size G/6 (4.0 mm) crochet hook to start. If your gauge doesn't match the pattern after a few rounds, go up or down a hook size… gauge matters more than hook label, especially with filet where uniform spacing is what makes the grid look clean. You'll also need stitch markers (3-4) and a tapestry needle for weaving in ends.


Love This Yarn? More Patterns Using Cotton Blends

DK cotton-blend yarns are the workhorse of summer crochet. If you fall in love with how Hempathy (or any of the alternatives) behaves on this bag, here are more free Marly Bird crochet patterns that use the same yarn family โ€” perfect for stash-busting any leftover balls or building a coordinated set.

  • Solomon's Knot Crochet Tee โ€” Free Cotton Tee Pattern (S/M โ€“ 4X/5X)
  • Ramble and Rue Crochet Belt Bag โ€” Free Crossbody Bag Pattern
  • Bluebonnet Crochet Shawl โ€” Free Pattern with Leather Strap
Woman wears a blue Cotton Crochet Tee, showing off its stitch texture, in a warm craft room lined with yarn and supplies.
Two crochet crossbody bags with colorful granny squares and woven straps sit in a round basket, accented by greenery and beads.
Bluebonnet Crochet Lace Shawl - free crochet lace shawl pattern by Marly Bird in blue, teal, and brown.

Video Tutorials

  • How to Read Crochet Stitch Diagrams
  • How to do a Stacked Double Crochet
  • How to Bury in Your Ends (don't just crochet over the ends!)
Free Farmer's Market Filet Crochet Bag pattern by Robyn Chachula for Marly Bird in green Hempathy DK cotton hemp blend.

Farmer's Market Filet Crochet Bag โ€” Pattern Details

Designed by

Robyn Chachula for Marly Bird

Skill Level

Intermediate

Finished Measurements

Bag is 14″ [35.5 cm] wide by 16″ [40.5 cm] tall, not including handles.

Gauge

7 ch-2 sps and 8 rows = 4″ [10 cm] x 4″ [10 cm]; use any size hook to obtain the gauge.

Materials

Yarn: Elsebeth Lavold Hempathy (41% Cotton / 34% Hemp / 25% Modal Rayon, 153 yds (140 m) / 1.75 oz (50 g), CYCA #3 DK): #028 Blue Pine Green, 3 balls

Hook: Size G/6 (4.0 mm)

Notions: Stitch Markers

Tapestry Needle

Scissors

Tape Measure

Notions Bag for Supplies (Optional)

Leather tags (Optional)

Leather rivets (Optional)

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Abbreviations

  • BLO โ€” Back Loop Only
  • Ch โ€” Chain(s)
  • Dc โ€” Double Crochet
  • Hdc โ€” Half Double Crochet
  • PM โ€” Place Marker
  • RS โ€” Right Side
  • Sc โ€” Single Crochet
  • Sl st โ€” Slip Stitch
  • Sp(s) โ€” Space(s)
  • St(s) โ€” Stitch(es)
  • WS โ€” Wrong Side

Special Stitches

โญ๏ธ Stacked Double Crochet (Stacked Dc): (Do not ch 1 prior to making the first sc) Sc in first stitch, insert hook in between two legs of the base, yarn over and pull up a loop, yarn over and draw through 2 loops on hook.

Close-up of hands demonstrating a stacked double crochet stitch, highlighting textured rows of Tunisian crochet.

โญ๏ธ Sc in Third Loop: Insert hook in middle horizontal strand on WS of stitch (it is located under the top two loops in the back of the stitch), yarn over and pull up a loop, yarn over and draw through all 2 loops on hook.

Crochet Stitch Diagram

Farmer's Market Filet Crochet Bag base round chart with chains, slip stitches, and half double crochets - 35 sts.
Farmer's Market Filet Crochet Bag heart motif chart - modern filet crochet stitch diagram (5 rows by 8 columns).
Farmer's Market Filet Crochet Bag body chart showing filet stitch symbols, numbered rounds, and beginning/ending markers.

Notes

  • Base is worked in joined rounds.
  • Body is worked in turned rounds.
  • Body is worked in filet crochet.
  • When following the chart, begin in bottom right corner of chart and read from right to left for every RS round, and left to right for each WS round.
  • Each row of the chart is repeated twice per round, once for front and once for back.
  • Optional: Place marker every 5 ch-sp to help keep track where you are on the filet chart.

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I'm thrilled to share this amazing pattern with you, many patterns on my blog are absolutely free! I kindly request that you don't copy and paste or distribute this pattern. Prefer an ad-free experience? Buy a digital PDF pattern for a small fee from one of my online stores for a seamless crafting journey. 

I appreciate your support and readership. You are the reason I can keep doing what I love and sharing it with others. So, thank you from the bottom of my yarn-loving heart! Disclosure: This post contains affiliate links, meaning I get a commission if you decide to make a purchase through my links at no cost to you.

Marly Bird with the green Farmer's Market Filet Crochet Bag - free crochet bag pattern with sturdy integrated handles.

Farmer's Market Filet Crochet Bag โ€” Pattern Instructions

Base

Chain 37

Round 1: Place marker in chain behind hook (37th ch), 2 hdc in 3rd ch from hook, hdc in next 33 ch, 6 hdc in next ch, rotate chain to work in loop on opposite side, hdc in next 33 ch, 3 hdc in next ch, join to marked chain with sl st. Do Not Turn โ€” 78 hdc.

Round 2: Ch 2, move marker to chain behind hook, hdc in same stitch as join, [2 hdc in next hdc] twice, hdc in next 33 hdc, [2 hdc in next hdc] six times, hdc in next 33 hdc, [2 hdc in next hdc] three times, join to marked chain with sl st. Do Not Turn โ€” 90 hdc.

Round 3: Ch 2, move marker to chain behind hook, hdc in same stitch as join, [hdc in next hdc, 2 hdc in next hdc] twice, hdc in next 35 hdc, [2 hdc in next hdc, hdc in next hdc] twice, [2 hdc in next hdc] twice, [hdc in next hdc, 2 hdc in next hdc] twice, hdc in next 35 hdc, [2 hdc in next hdc, hdc in next hdc] twice, 2 hdc in next hdc, join to marked chain with sl st. Do Not Turn โ€” 102 hdc.

Round 4: Ch 2, move marker to chain behind hook, hdc in same stitch as join, [hdc in next 2 hdc, 2 hdc in next hdc] twice, hdc in next 37 hdc, [2 hdc in next hdc, hdc in next 2 hdc] twice, [2 hdc in next hdc] twice, [hdc in next 2 hdc, 2 hdc in next hdc] twice, hdc in next 37 hdc, [2 hdc in next hdc, hdc in next 2 hdc] twice, 2 hdc in next hdc, join to marked chain with sl st. Do Not Turn โ€” 114 hdc.

Round 5: Ch 2, move marker to chain behind hook, hdc in same stitch as join, [hdc in next 3 hdc, 2 hdc in next hdc] twice, hdc in next 39 hdc, [2 hdc in next hdc, hdc in next 3 hdc] twice, [2 hdc in next hdc] twice, [hdc in next 3 hdc, 2 hdc in next hdc] twice, hdc in next 39 hdc, [2 hdc in next hdc, hdc in next 3 hdc] twice, 2 hdc in next hdc, join to marked chain with sl st. Do Not Turn โ€” 126 hdc.

Round 6: Ch 2, move marker to chain behind hook, hdc in same stitch as join, [hdc in next 4 hdc, 2 hdc in next hdc] twice, hdc in next 41 hdc, [2 hdc in next hdc, hdc in next 4 hdc] twice, [2 hdc in next hdc] twice, [hdc in next 4 hdc, 2 hdc in next hdc] twice, hdc in next 41 hdc, [2 hdc in next hdc, hdc in next 4 hdc] twice, 2 hdc in next hdc, join to marked chain with sl st. Do Not Turn โ€” 138 hdc.

Round 7: Ch 2, move marker to chain behind hook, hdc in same stitch as join, [hdc in next 5 hdc, 2 hdc in next hdc] twice, hdc in next 43 hdc, [2 hdc in next hdc, hdc in next 5 hdc] twice, [2 hdc in next hdc] twice, [hdc in next 5 hdc, 2 hdc in next hdc] twice, hdc in next 43 hdc, [2 hdc in next hdc, hdc in next 5 hdc] twice, 2 hdc in next hdc, join to marked chain with sl st. Do Not Turn โ€” 150 hdc.

Round 8: Ch 1, sc in same stitch as join, sc in 3rd loop of each hdc around, join to first sc with sl st. Do Not Turn โ€” 150 sc.

Rounds 9-12: Ch 1, sc in each sc around, join to first sc with sl st. Do Not Turn โ€” 150 sc.

Body

Round 1: (RS) Stacked dc in first sc, *ch 2, skip 2 sc, dc in next sc; repeat from * around to last 2 sc, ch 2, skip last 2 sc, sl st to first dc, turn โ€” 50 ch-2 sps.

Rounds 2-25: Continue in filet crochet following filet chart in turned rounds.

Filet crochet chart showing a geometric cross and corner motif on a 25x25 grid. Caption below says "Filet Chart.

Filet Crochet Notes:

  • Start each round with a stacked dc.
  • When chart shows a white square, place a dc on either side and a ch-2 sp in between, skip the ch-2 sp or 2 sts of the previous round. See filet crochet stitch diagram example for assistance.
  • When chart shows a gray square, place a dc on either side and either 2 dc in the ch-2 sp or dc in next 2 dc. See filet crochet stitch diagram example for assistance.
  • Join with sl st to first dc at end of each round and turn.
  • Chart is used twice in each round; once for the front and once for the back of the bag.
Free Farmer's Market Filet Crochet Bag by Marly Bird in green, filled with bright pink yarn, showing openwork filet stitches.

Top

Round 1: Ch 1, sc in first dc, *2 sc in next ch-2 sp, sc in next dc; repeat from * around to last ch-2 sp, 2 sc in last ch-2 sp, sl st to first sc. Do Not Turn โ€” 150 sc

Rounds 2-4: Ch 1, sc in each sc around, sl st to first sc. Do Not Turn.

Round 5: Ch 1, sc in next 30 sc, ch 70 (will become handle), skip 15 sc, sc in next 60 sc, ch 70, skip 15 sc, sc in last 30 sc, sl st to first sc. Do Not Turn โ€” 120 sc + 2 ch-sps

Round 6: Ch 1, *sc in each sc across to handle ch, sc in each ch across; repeat from * around, sc in each sc to end, sl st to first sc. Do Not Turn โ€” 260 sc

Rounds 7-9: Ch 1, sc in each sc around, sl st to first sc. Do Not Turn. Fasten off.

Finishing

Weave in ends.

Farmer's Market Filet Crochet Bag styled with flowers - free modern filet crochet tote pattern by Robyn Chachula.

Blocking Tips

Blocking a filet crochet bag is the moment the whole project transforms. Pre-blocking, your filet grid will look slightly wonky and the bag shape will be a little floppy. Post-blocking, the grid opens up into a crisp, even pattern and the bag holds its shape like a champion. Don't skip this step โ€” it's what separates “okay” filet from “stunning” filet.

How to block this bag: Submerge the finished bag in lukewarm water with a small amount of wool wash (a no-rinse formula like Eucalan works great for cotton/hemp blends). Let it soak for 15-20 minutes. Lift gently, press out excess water against the side of the basin (do not wring), then roll in a clean dry towel and press to remove more moisture.

To shape, stuff the damp bag with crumpled plastic bags or a folded towel until it holds its 14″ x 16″ finished dimensions. Lay it flat or stand it upright on a blocking mat. Pin the handles into a smooth, even loop shape. Let it dry completely (24-48 hours depending on humidity) before unstuffing. The cotton/hemp blend will set into shape beautifully and hold it through years of farmer's market trips.

๐Ÿ’ก Designer Tip: If your finished bag pulls in at the top (some crocheters work the sc rounds tighter than the filet body), block it by stuffing the top opening with a slightly larger object โ€” a small mixing bowl or a stack of folded kitchen towels. This gently widens the opening as it dries and gives you that perfect “ready to be filled” silhouette.

Ad-free PDF mockup of the Farmer's Market Filet Crochet Bag pattern in turquoise - free crochet pattern by Robyn Chachula.
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Want to save this pattern for later? Heart it and queue it on Ravelry so you can find it any time. Ravelry favorites also help other crocheters discover the pattern โ€” every favorite is a vote that says “this is worth making.”

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Love Filet Crochet? Try This Next

If filet crochet clicked for you on this bag, you're going to want to keep going… and I've got the perfect next project. The Beginner Filet Crochet Shawl uses the same technique you just learned, but in a flat, drapey shawl shape instead of a structured bag. Same stitches. Same chart-reading skills. Brand-new project type. It's the second post in our growing filet crochet collection on Marly Bird.


More Free Crochet Bag Patterns You'll Love

If you fell hard for this bag, you're in good company โ€” crochet bags have been one of the fastest-growing categories on Marly Bird this year. Here are more free crochet bag and accessory patterns from the site to keep you stitching all summer long.

  • 126 Free Crochet Bag Patterns (Master Roundup)
  • Ramble and Rue Crochet Belt Bag โ€” A Free Crossbody Pattern
  • Pour Decisions Crochet Wine Cozy โ€” Free Pattern with Leather Strap
  • One Ball Wonders Crochet Cozy โ€” Book / iPad / Kindle Pattern
  • 13 BEST Crochet and Knitting Project Bags (Roundup)
  • Spring Fling 2026: 20 Days of Free Spring & Summer Patterns
  • Marly Bird Felted Weekender Bag โ€”This is also a full course in the Marly Bird House

Farmer's Market Filet Crochet Bag pattern FAQs - free crochet bag pattern by Robyn Chachula for Marly Bird in green.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is filet crochet?

Filet crochet is a technique that uses only chains and double crochets, arranged in an open grid of squares. Each square is either “open” (a chain-2 space with a double crochet on each side) or “filled” (two double crochets between the side stitches, no chains). Stack rows of open and filled squares according to a chart, and you create a pixelated image inside the fabric. It's a century-old technique having a modern renaissance, used today for market bags, wall hangings, plant hangers, and garment yokes.

How is filet crochet different from regular mesh crochet?

Both techniques create an open, airy fabric… but they read very differently. Regular mesh crochet uses one repeating stitch (like chain-spaces between single or double crochets) to create a uniform net. Filet crochet uses a STRUCTURED GRID of open AND filled squares to create patterns, motifs, and visual depth inside the open work. A regular mesh bag looks like a net. A filet bag looks like designed lace. Both are beautiful, but filet gives you a more sophisticated, graphic look with the same effort once you learn to read the chart.

Is filet crochet good for beginners?

Filet crochet uses only two stitches: chain and double crochet. That makes the stitches themselves beginner-friendly. The intermediate skill rating on this bag comes from reading a chart, working in joined and turned rounds, and managing the gauge across a larger project. If you can chain, double crochet, and follow a written pattern, you can absolutely learn filet โ€” but start with a smaller filet swatch or coaster before committing to a full bag.

How do you read a filet crochet chart?

Read filet charts square-by-square, starting at the bottom right corner. For Right Side (RS) rounds, read right-to-left. For Wrong Side (WS) rounds, read left-to-right. Each white square in the chart = an open mesh (chain-2 space with a double crochet on either side). Each gray (or filled) square = a solid mesh (two double crochets in the chain-2 space below, with a double crochet on either side). Use stitch markers every 5 squares to catch counting errors early.

What yarn is best for a crochet market bag?

The best yarn for a crochet market bag is a sturdy plant-fiber yarn with body โ€” cotton, linen, hemp, or blends of those fibers. You want enough stiffness that the bag holds its shape when empty, plus enough strength to carry heavy produce, breads, and groceries. The Farmer's Market Filet Bag uses Elsebeth Lavold Hempathy (cotton/hemp/modal DK), but any DK or worsted cotton-blend will work. Avoid wool, acrylic, and superwash yarns for market bags โ€” they stretch and sag under load.

How long does it take to crochet a market bag?

An intermediate crocheter can finish the Farmer's Market Filet Crochet Bag in a weekend of focused stitching… figure 10-15 hours of actual hook time, spread across two or three sessions. The base goes fast (about 2-3 hours). The filet body is the longest section but it's meditative and rhythmic once you click into reading the chart. The top and handles wrap up quickly. If you've never done filet before, add a few hours for the learning curve. Either way, this is a satisfying start-and-finish project, not a months-long commitment.

Can you use a filet crochet bag for groceries?

Yes โ€” a filet crochet bag is actually IDEAL for groceries, farmers market hauls, and produce shopping. The open mesh lets fruits and vegetables breathe (no condensation, no spoiled tomatoes by the time you get home), the cotton/hemp blend is strong enough to carry real weight, and the bag flattens for easy storage between trips. Filet crochet bags are a reusable, washable, plastic-bag-free way to do your shopping. Plus you'll get compliments at the checkout. Every time.

Can I make this filet crochet bag bigger or smaller?

Yes. To make a smaller version, use a thinner yarn (sport or fingering weight) with a smaller hook โ€” your gauge will tighten and the finished bag will scale down proportionally. To make a larger version, use a worsted or aran weight yarn with a larger hook. The Body of the bag is worked in multiples of 3 stitches per filet square (one dc + ch-2 + skipped sts), so you can also add or remove chart repeats. Just adjust your starting chain in the base to keep the math even.

How much yarn do I need for the Farmer's Market Filet Crochet Bag?

You'll need approximately 459 yards (3 balls of Elsebeth Lavold Hempathy at 153 yds each) in DK weight. If you're substituting a different yarn, aim for at least 450-500 yards of DK weight cotton-blend yarn to be safe. Buy one extra ball if you're using a hand-dyed yarn or anything with potential dye-lot variation โ€” you don't want to run out on the final handle round.

Why does the bag say “use any size hook to obtain the gauge”?

For filet crochet, the uniformity of the grid matters more than the specific hook label. Two crocheters can use the same yarn and the same labeled hook size and get completely different gauges based on their personal tension. The pattern recommends starting with a G/6 (4.0 mm) hook, but if your swatch doesn't match 7 ch-2 spaces and 8 rows over 4 inches, change hook size until it does. Gauge controls the finished size and the look of the filet grid.

Is the Farmer's Market Filet Crochet Bag washable?

Yes โ€” and that's one of the advantages of a cotton/hemp/modal blend. Hand-wash the bag in cool water with a gentle soap, press out excess water against the side of the sink (don't wring), and reshape while damp. Air dry flat or stuffed to maintain the 14″ x 16″ finished dimensions. The bag will actually get softer and prettier with each wash as the hemp content blooms and softens.

Can I sell items made from this free crochet pattern?

Yes โ€” you're welcome to sell handmade items made from this pattern in your own small business or at craft fairs. Please credit the designer (Robyn Chachula for Marly Bird) in your product listings. You may NOT sell, share, or redistribute the pattern itself, the PDF, or the chart in any form. The pattern stays with the original creators; the items you stitch from it belong to you.


Free Farmer's Market Filet Crochet Bag pattern shown in nine yarn color options - customize this filet crochet tote.

Final Thoughts

This bag is the kind of project I LOVE having on the site โ€” beautiful enough to gift, useful enough to actually use, and approachable enough that the technique becomes something you carry with you into other projects. Huge thanks to Robyn Chachula for designing it for us. After your Farmer's Market Filet Crochet Bag is finished, you'll look at filet patterns differently. Curtains, table runners, wall hangings, garment yokes… they all just got added to your “I could totally do that” list.

And on a Saturday morning, when you swing this bag over your shoulder and head to the market for tomatoes and a sourdough loaf, you'll get to say “thanks, I made it” approximately a dozen times. That never gets old. โœจ

If you make this bag, tag #FarmersMarketFilet and @marlybird on Instagram. I love seeing how you make the pattern your own… color choices, market styling, in-the-wild photos with actual produce. The community thread on this one is going to be GORGEOUS.

Meet the Designers

About Marly Bird
Marly Bird is a professional yarn artist, designer, and teacher who has been designing in the knit and crochet industry since 2007. She's the creator of the BiCrafty method… the only approach that teaches both knitting AND crochet together… and the host of one of the longest-running fiber arts podcasts and YouTube channels in the business. Marly's free patterns, video tutorials, and beginner-friendly teaching style have helped hundreds of thousands of crafters fall in love with the hook and needles. Find her work, free patterns, and online courses at marlybird.com and at Marly Bird House.
About Robyn Chachula
Robyn Chachula is a structural engineer turned full-time crochet designer, author, and teacher. She's published multiple bestselling crochet books (including Crochet Stitches VISUAL Encyclopedia, Unexpected Afghans, and Blueprint Crochet), has been designing for major yarn companies and magazines since 2006, and is celebrated in the crochet community for her clear charts, smart construction, and gorgeous modern takes on traditional techniques like filet and Tunisian crochet. Robyn and Marly have been designing together for years and the Farmer's Market Filet Crochet Bag is their newest collaboration. You can find more of Robyn's work at crochetbyfaye.com.

โค๏ธ Your BiCrafty Bestie,
Marly Bird

A cartoon avatar of a person with glasses and a brown bun smiles warmly. Their green shirt and black jacket add a stylish touch, while colorful hearts surround them like loving temperature blankets, stitching together an aura of love and positivity. -Marly Bird

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Filed Under: Crochet, Free Patterns, Marly Bird Premium Patterns, Our Free Patterns, Pattern, Uncategorized Tagged With: crochet bag, crochet market bag, DK cotton, farmers market bag, filet crochet, filet mesh, free crochet pattern, hempathy, intermediate crochet, market bag, mesh bag, Robyn Chachula, summer crochet, vintage crochet

Free Solomon’s Knot Crochet Cotton Tee Pattern in 4 Sizes (S/M โ€“ 4X/5X)

May 7, 2026 By Marly Bird Leave a Comment

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๐Ÿ“ Update โ€” May 2026: This pattern post has been fully refreshed with complete written instructions, special-stitch tutorials, schematic, blocking guidance, and updated yarn substitution links. Co-designer credit added for the brilliant Robyn Chachula, who collaborated with Marly on the design. Same beloved Solomon's Knot Crochet Tee… now with everything you need to make it from start to finish in one place.

The Solomon's Knot Crochet Tee is a free crochet tee pattern designed by Marly Bird and Robyn Chachula, available in 4 sizes from S/M through 4X/5X. Worked in two panels from the hem up using a herringbone double crochet body and an airy Solomon's Knot stitch sleeve, this oversized cotton tee is a breezy summer layering piece… drapey, breathable, and made in widely available Bernat Softee Cotton (a 60% cotton / 40% acrylic light worsted blend). Skill level: intermediate.

If you have been waiting for a free crochet tee pattern that actually wears like real summer clothes… not a stiff fabric square with sleeves, not something so heavy you can't put it on past May… meet the Solomon's Knot Tee.

Hey, bestie ๐Ÿ’›

This tee is one of the patterns I get asked about most when summer rolls around. I co-designed it with the brilliant Robyn Chachula, and we built it for the very specific moment when you want a crocheted top that you'll actually wear in 80-degree weather. Cotton blend yarn for breathability. An open Solomon's Knot stitch in the sleeves so air moves through the fabric. Oversized fit with 4-8 inches of ease so nothing clings. Reversible stitch pattern so it looks great no matter how you grab it off the back of a chair at 7 a.m.

Here is what makes this tee special: it is crocheted in two simple panels that get whip-stitched together at the shoulders and sides, with sleeves added directly off the body without complicated armhole shaping. That construction means most of the project is meditative herringbone double crochet on a long row, broken up by a stunning Solomon's Knot lace section in the sleeves that looks way more advanced than it actually is.

If you have been curious about Solomon's Knot stitch (sometimes called the lover's knot)… this is the perfect pattern to learn it. You only need a few rows of it, and I am walking you through every step.

This post contains affiliate links. If you purchase through them, I may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you… and it helps keep these free patterns coming straight from my yarn-loving heart to yours. ๐Ÿ’›

Marly Bird wearing the Solomon's Knot Crochet Tee in Bernat Softee Cotton Dusk Sky, a free crochet tee pattern in sizes S/M to 4X/5X
๐ŸŒธ Spring Fling 2026: The Solomon's Knot Crochet Tee debuted as Day 4 of Spring Fling 2026, my 20-day knit and crochet pattern celebration. Browse all 20 patterns on the Spring Fling Hub โ†’

What You Will Love About This Pattern ๐Ÿ’–

๐Ÿ‘• A real summer crochet top. Cotton blend yarn, open Solomon's Knot lace in the sleeves, drapey not stiff. This isn't a “blanket masquerading as a top” pattern. You'll actually reach for it in July.

๐Ÿ“ Sizes S/M through 4X/5X. Four size groupings with 4-8 inches of positive ease. Designed to be oversized… if you're between sizes, you can size down for a closer fit.

๐Ÿงถ Two-panel construction. Crochet two flat panels (front + back), seam at the shoulders and sides, add sleeves directly off the body. No fiddly armhole shaping. No top-down math.

๐ŸŒฌ๏ธ Solomon's Knot sleeves. The open lace stitch in the sleeves looks intricate and is honestly just long loops + single crochet in a rhythmic pattern. You learn it in 10 minutes and it makes the whole tee look fancy.

Free Solomon's Knot Crochet Tee pattern by Marly Bird โ€” sizes S/M to 4X/5X in Bernat Softee Cotton, featuring open Solomon's Knot stitch sleeves and oversized cotton fit

๐Ÿ” Reversible stitch pattern. Both sides of the herringbone double crochet body look great. Pull it on inside-out and no one will know.

๐Ÿ’ฐ Affordable, accessible yarn. Bernat Softee Cotton is at Joann, Michaels, Walmart, and online for around $5 per ball. A full tee in the largest size needs 6 balls. Total project cost: under $35.

๐Ÿ‘ฏ Co-designed with Robyn Chachula. Robyn is one of the smartest construction designers in crochet, and her fingerprints are all over the smart panel sequencing here. Two industry veterans, one brilliantly simple summer top.

Solomon's Knot Crochet Tee styled with denim showing the open Solomon's Knot stitch sleeves and oversized drape

Quick Pattern Overview

๐ŸŽฏ Skill Level: Intermediate

๐Ÿ“ Finished Bust: 42.5 (50, 57, 66)” / 108 (127, 145, 167.5) cm. Sized S/M, L/XL, 2X/3X, 4X/5X. Designed with 4-8″ of positive ease for an oversized fit.

๐Ÿงถ Yarn: Bernat Softee Cotton (60% Cotton / 40% Acrylic, 254 yds/232 m, 4.2 oz/120 g, CYCA 3 light) in Dusk Sky. 3 (4, 5, 6) balls.

๐Ÿชก Hook: Size G/7 (4.5 mm) or size needed to obtain gauge.

๐Ÿ“ Gauge (blocked): 13 herringbone double crochet sts and 8 rows = 4″ x 4″ / 10 cm x 10 cm. Use any size hook to obtain gauge.

โฑ๏ธ Estimated time: 25-40 hours depending on size and crochet speed. Most crocheters finish in 2-3 weeks of regular project time.

Marly Bird wearing the Solomon's Knot Crochet Tee in Dusk Sky Bernat Softee Cotton โ€” free crochet tee pattern in sizes S/M to 4X/5X

Is This Crochet Tee Right for You?

This pattern is a perfect match if you want a wearable summer crochet top and you're ready to learn one or two new stitches. You will be right at home if you can:

  • Chain, single crochet, half double crochet, and double crochet
  • Read a written pattern with multi-size instructions in parentheses
  • Whip stitch two pieces of crochet fabric together (linked video tutorial below)
  • Wet block a finished piece (spray, pin, dry… that's it)

The two new stitches you'll learn (or get more comfortable with) are foundation single crochet (fsc), herringbone double crochet, and Solomon's Knot. All three have linked video tutorials in this post… and once you learn them, you have them in your toolkit for life.

If chain, single crochet, and double crochet still feel uncertain, start with my BiCrafty Bootcamp: Learn to Crochet first. Build the foundation, then come back here for your summer wardrobe.

โœจ Designer Tip: The Solomon's Knot stitch sounds intimidating, but here's the secret… it's just a really long chain stitch with a single crochet “anchor” worked into its back loop. The whole “trick” is pulling that loop up to about ยพ inch (about 2 cm) every single time. Get a ruler out for the first 5-10 knots so your eye learns the length, and after that you'll do it on autopilot. Consistent loop length = consistent fabric.
Solomon's Knot Crochet Tee in Bernat Softee Cotton Dusk Sky shown flat, featuring herringbone double crochet body and Solomon's Knot lace sleeves โ€” free crochet tee pattern by Marly Bird and Robyn Chachula

Explore More Free Crochet Top & Tee Patterns

If summer crochet tops are your thing, you are in good company. Browse the full collection or pick your next project:

  • Cutest Cotton Crochet T-Shirt Pattern… another reader-favorite cotton crochet tee in a different stitch
  • Stoney Creek Sleeveless Tee… a beginner-level sleeveless tee if you want something simpler
  • 60 Must-Have Crochet Tank Top Patterns for Summer… the master roundup of summer crochet tops
  • 50 Free Crochet Summer Top Patterns… another curated summer collection
  • Full Library of Free Knit & Crochet Patterns… every free pattern on the blog

What Is a Solomon's Knot Stitch?

The Solomon's Knot stitch (also called the lover's knot) is a classic crochet stitch that looks like an open, lacy mesh of long, knotted loops. It's worked from a foundation of regular crochet stitches and creates a fabric with lots of drape, lots of airflow, and a very distinctive textile look… think antique tablecloth or vintage shawl, modernized.

Mechanically it's two motions repeating: pull up a long loop (about ยพ inch / 2 cm), and then anchor that loop with a single crochet worked into the back loop you just created. Two stitches. That's the whole technique. The visual complexity comes from working those two stitches in a rhythmic grid… and from the magic of how the long loops drape after blocking.

You'll see Solomon's Knot in shawls, blankets, summer tops, and lace projects. It's especially loved for hot weather garments because the open structure breathes… very different from a dense single crochet fabric that can wear like cardboard in July.

For more Solomon's Knot patterns, see the Solomon's Knot Blanket and the Solomon's Knot Crochet Cuff (with video tutorial).

Solomon's Knot Crochet Tee styled over a black tank top โ€” free oversized crochet tee pattern in Bernat Softee Cotton Dusk Sky

Build Your Skills With This Pattern

The Solomon's Knot Tee is a quietly skill-building pattern. You'll come out the other side with three new techniques you can use for the rest of your crochet life:

๐Ÿชข Foundation single crochet (fsc). A starting row that creates the foundation chain and the first row of single crochet in one pass. No more counting and recounting a long, twisty chain. Once you learn this, you'll use it on every project that starts flat. >> Watch the Foundation Single Crochet Video <<

๐ŸŸ Herringbone double crochet. A subtle variation on regular double crochet where you draw the loop through the first loop on the hook before completing the stitch. The result is a slanted, tightly-woven texture that has more visual interest than a standard dc fabric. The whole body of the tee is herringbone dc. >> Watch the Herringbone Double Crochet Video <<

๐Ÿ’Ž Solomon's Knot. The signature stitch in the sleeves. Looks complicated, is honestly two motions repeated rhythmically. Once you know it, you can use it for shawls, blankets, scarves, summer wraps… it's a forever stitch.

โœจ Designer Tip: Practice each special stitch on a small swatch BEFORE you start the tee. Make a 4″ x 4″ foundation single crochet swatch, then a 4″ x 4″ herringbone double crochet swatch (this also confirms your gauge), and then a 6-row Solomon's Knot swatch. By the time your swatches are done you'll have all three techniques in muscle memory and the actual project will feel easy.
Solomon's Knot Crochet Tee styled over a white tank, showing the openwork Solomon's Knot stitch sleeves and drapey cotton fabric โ€” free crochet tee pattern by Marly Bird

Yarn & Materials

Yarn: The Solomon's Knot Tee is designed in Bernat Softee Cotton, a 60% cotton / 40% acrylic blend in the CYCA 3 (light worsted / DK) weight. The cotton gives breathability and a crisp stitch definition; the acrylic gives a little bit of bounce and machine washability. The colorway shown is Dusk Sky.

You'll need 3 (4, 5, 6) balls depending on your size, at 254 yards / 232 meters per 120 g ball.

Get the yarn: Bernat Softee Cotton (Marly's favorite source). Also widely available at Herrschners, Michaels, Yarnspirations, and Amazon.

Bernat Softee Cotton yarn in Dusk Sky โ€” 60% cotton 40% acrylic CYCA 3 light worsted blend used for the Solomon's Knot Crochet Tee free pattern

Yarn Substitutions

If you can't get Bernat Softee Cotton or want to use what's in your stash, look for a CYCA 3 (light worsted / DK) yarn that's predominantly cotton or a cotton/acrylic blend. The pattern depends on the cotton's slight stiffness for fabric structure and the acrylic for ease of care. Avoid 100% wool (too warm) and avoid 100% acrylic (the fabric won't hold the Solomon's Knot shape as crisply). Three good substitutes:

  • Lion Brand 24/7 Cotton… 100% mercerized cotton, slightly heavier drape
  • Berroco Remix Light DK… recycled cotton/acrylic/nylon/silk/linen blend, drapey and summer-perfect
  • WeCrochet/KnitPicks Dishie (held single)… 100% cotton, budget-friendly

Whatever yarn you choose: swatch and block your swatch first. The drape after blocking is the drape your tee will have, and cotton substitutes often surprise you.

Hooks & Notions

You'll need a size G/7 (4.5 mm) crochet hook (or size needed to obtain gauge), stitch markers, a tapestry needle for weaving in ends, blocking mats and pins, and a spray water bottle for blocking.

  • WeCrochet hooks (all sizes)… my go-to ergonomic hooks
  • Eucalan Wool Wash… gentle no-rinse wash for cotton blends
โญ๏ธ Marly Bird Amazon Storefront โญ๏ธ

Video Tutorials

Every special technique in this pattern has a free video tutorial. Watch before you start and you'll save yourself hours of “wait, what does that mean?”:

  • How to Read Crochet Diagrams >> Click Here for Video Help <<
  • Weave in Ends >> Click Here for Video Help <<
  • Wet Blocking >> Click Here for Video Help <<
  • Reverse Single Crochet>> Click Here for Video Help <<
  • Foundation Single Crochet >> Click Here for Video Help <<
  • How to do the Herringbone Double Crochet >> Click Here for Video Help <<

Love the Pattern but Want an Ad-Free PDF?

If you'd rather print a clean, ad-free PDF of the Solomon's Knot Tee for your project bag, you have three options:

  • ๐Ÿ“„ Solomon's Knot Tee Pattern on Etsy
  • ๐Ÿ›๏ธ Solomon's Knot Tee Pattern on Shopify
  • ๐Ÿงถ Solomon's Knot Tee Pattern on Ravelry
Solomon's Knot Crochet Tee ad-free PDF mockup โ€” buy the printable pattern on Etsy, Shopify, or Ravelry
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Solomon's Knot Crochet Tee โ€” Pattern Details

Skill Level

Intermediate. Comfortable with basic crochet stitches plus willingness to learn foundation single crochet, herringbone double crochet, and Solomon's Knot.

Sizes

S/M (L/XL, 2X/3X, 4X/5X). The top is oversized with 4-8″ of ease. Sweater shown is 2X/3X.

Note about size: When picking out your size, make sure you check the finished bust. The sweater is designed to be oversized… just to keep in mind, if you are between 2 sizes, you can certainly make it one size smaller to have a tighter fit.

Finished Bust Measurement

42.5 (50, 57, 66)” / 108 (127, 145, 167.5) cm bust circumference.

Gauge

Blocked gauge: 13 herringbone double crochet sts and 8 rows = 4″ x 4″ / 10 cm x 10 cm. Check your gauge. Use any size hook to obtain gauge. Swatch is all herringbone double crochet stitches.

Materials

Yarn: Bernat Softee Cotton (60% Cotton / 40% Acrylic, 254 yds/232 m, 4.2 oz/120 g, CYCA 3 light): Dusk Sky, 3 (4, 5, 6) balls.

Hook: G/7 (4.5 mm) or size needed to obtain gauge.

Notions: Stitch markers, tapestry needle, blocking mats and blocking pins, spray water bottle for blocking (optional).

โญ๏ธ Marly Bird Amazon Storefront โญ๏ธ

Abbreviations

  • ch โ€” chain(s)
  • hdc โ€” half double crochet
  • dc โ€” double crochet
  • dtr โ€” double treble crochet
  • fsc โ€” foundation single crochet
  • pm โ€” place marker
  • rev sc โ€” reverse single crochet
  • RS โ€” right side
  • sc โ€” single crochet
  • sl st โ€” slip stitch
  • sp(s) โ€” space(s)
  • st(s) โ€” stitch(es)
  • t-ch โ€” turning chain
  • WS โ€” wrong side

Special Stitches

Foundation Single Crochet (fsc).
First fsc: Ch 2 (does not count as sc), insert hook into 2nd ch from hook, yarn over and pull up a loop, yarn over and draw through 1 loop on hook (this forms a chain… optional note: placing a stitch marker can help you see the chain in the next stitch), yarn over and draw through 2 loops on hook (this forms the single crochet).
Next fsc: Insert hook into bottom of previous stitch (in the “chain” space), yarn over and pull up a loop, yarn over and draw through 1 loop on hook (forming a chain), yarn over and draw through 2 loops on hook (forming the next single crochet). Repeat directions for the desired number of stitches.

Herringbone Double Crochet (herringbone dc). Yarn over hook, insert hook into stitch indicated, yarn over and pull up a loop and through 1 loop on hook, yarn over and draw through 1 loop on hook, yarn over and draw through 2 loops on hook.

Reverse Single Crochet (rev sc). Also known as crab stitch. Working from left to right, insert hook from front to back in the next stitch to the right, yarn over and pull up a loop, yarn over and draw through 2 loops on hook.

Solomon's Knot. Draw up a long loop (about ยพ” / 2 cm), yarn over and gently pull through loop on hook (do not pull tight… it should look like a long chain), sc around back loop of stitch just made.


Stitch Diagram

The crochet stitch diagram is exclusive to the ad-free pdf.

  • ๐Ÿ“„ Solomon's Knot Tee Pattern on Etsy
  • ๐Ÿ›๏ธ Solomon's Knot Tee Pattern on Shopify
  • ๐Ÿงถ Solomon's Knot Tee Pattern on Ravelry

Schematic

Solomon's Knot Crochet Tee schematic showing finished bust, length, neck opening, and sleeve dimensions for sizes S/M, L/XL, 2X/3X, and 4X/5X

Notes

  • Directions are for smallest size; changes for other sizes are in parentheses. When only one number is given, it applies to all sizes.
  • Top is worked in 2 panels from the bottom hem to the shoulders. Sleeves are added directly off the body… with chains on one side and foundation single crochet on the other.
  • Stitch pattern is reversible.

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I'm thrilled to share this amazing pattern with you, many patterns on my blog are absolutely free! I kindly request that you don't copy and paste or distribute this pattern. Prefer an ad-free experience? Buy a digital PDF pattern for a small fee from one of my online stores for a seamless crafting journey. 

I appreciate your support and readership. You are the reason I can keep doing what I love and sharing it with others. So, thank you from the bottom of my yarn-loving heart! Disclosure: This post contains affiliate links, meaning I get a commission if you decide to make a purchase through my links at no cost to you.

Solomon's Knot Crochet Tee pattern cover by Marly Bird and Robyn Chachula โ€” free crochet tee pattern in Bernat Softee Cotton, sizes S/M to 4X/5X

Solomon's Knot Crochet Tee โ€” Pattern Instructions

Body (Make 2 Panels)

Foundation Row (WS): 69 (81, 93, 107) fsc (see Special Stitches), turn.

Row 1 (RS): Ch 2 (counts as a hdc), herringbone dc in each st across to last, hdc in last st, turn.

Repeat Row 1 7 (9, 11, 13) more times or to desired length of body (ending on a WS row), do not fasten off.

โœจ Designer Tip: The body length is meant to be customized. The pattern as written gives you a cropped tee… if you want a longer length (regular tee or tunic), repeat Row 1 more times before moving to the sleeves. Just make sure you end on a WS row so your sleeves start on the RS. Each additional row adds about ยฝ” / 1.25 cm of length.

Sleeves โ€” Solid Section

The sleeves are added directly off the body. The Row 1 instruction adds chains on one side and foundation single crochet on the other to create the sleeve width.

Row 1 (RS): Ch 19 (17, 17, 16), sc in 2nd ch from hook and each ch across, hdc in first st on body, herringbone dc in each st across to last, hdc in last st, 18 (16, 16, 15) fsc, turn โ€” 105 (113, 125, 137) sts.

Row 2: Ch 2 (counts as a hdc), herringbone dc in each st across to last, hdc in last st, turn.

Repeat Row 2 5 (7, 9, 11) times.

Sleeves โ€” Solomon's Knot Section

See stitch diagram for assistance with this section.

Row 1 (RS): Ch 1, sc in first st, *make 2 Solomon's Knots, skip 3 sts, sc in next st; repeat from * across to end, turn โ€” 52 (56, 62, 68) Solomon's Knots.

Row 2: Ch 5 (counts as a dtr), make 1 Solomon's Knot, *sc in sc between the next 2 Solomon's Knots, make 2 Solomon's Knots; repeat across to last 2 Solomon's Knots, sc in sc between the last 2 Solomon's Knots, make 1 Solomon's Knot, dtr in last sc, turn.

Row 3: Ch 1, sc in dtr, *ch 3, sc in next sc (between the 2 Solomon's Knots); repeat from * across to t-ch, ch 3, sc in t-ch, turn โ€” 26 (28, 31, 34) ch-3 sps.

Row 4: Ch 2 (counts as hdc), *3 herringbone dc in next ch-3 sp, herringbone dc in next sc; repeat from * across to last ch-3 sp, 3 herringbone dc in last ch-3 sp, hdc in last st, turn โ€” 105 (113, 125, 137) sts.

Marly Bird wearing the Solomon's Knot Crochet Tee in Bernat Softee Cotton Dusk Sky, a free crochet tee pattern in sizes S/M to 4X/5X

Row 5: Ch 2 (counts as a hdc), herringbone dc in each st across to t-ch, hdc in top of t-ch, turn.

Row 6: Ch 1, sc in first st, *make 2 Solomon's Knots, skip 3 sts, sc in next st; repeat from * across to end, turn โ€” 52 (56, 62, 68) Solomon's Knots.

Row 7: Ch 5 (counts as a dtr), make 1 Solomon's Knot, *sc in sc between the next 2 Solomon's Knots, make 2 Solomon's Knots; repeat across to last 2 Solomon's Knots, sc in sc between the last 2 Solomon's Knots, make 1 Solomon's Knot, dtr in last sc, turn.

Row 8: Ch 1, sc in dtr, *make 2 Solomon's Knots, sc in next sc (between the 2 Solomon's Knots); repeat from * across to t-ch, make 2 Solomon's Knots, sc in t-ch, turn.

Row 9: Ch 5 (counts as a dtr), make 1 Solomon's Knot, *sc in sc between the next 2 Solomon's Knots, make 2 Solomon's Knots; repeat across to last 2 Solomon's Knots, sc in sc between the last 2 Solomon's Knots, make 1 Solomon's Knot, dtr in last sc, turn.

Row 10: Ch 1, sc in dtr, *ch 3, sc in next sc (between the 2 Solomon's Knots); repeat from * across to t-ch, ch 3, sc in t-ch, turn โ€” 26 (28, 31, 34) ch-3 sps.

Row 11: Ch 2 (counts as hdc), *3 herringbone dc in next ch-3 sp, herringbone dc in next sc; repeat from * across to last ch-3 sp, 3 herringbone dc in last ch-3 sp, hdc in last st, turn โ€” 105 (113, 125, 137) sts.

Row 12: Ch 2 (counts as a hdc), herringbone dc in each st across to t-ch, hdc in top of t-ch, turn.

Row 13: Ch 1, sc in first st, *make 2 Solomon's Knots, skip 3 sts, sc in next st; repeat from * across to end, turn โ€” 52 (56, 62, 68) Solomon's Knots.

Row 14: Ch 5 (counts as a dtr), make 1 Solomon's Knot, *sc in sc between the next 2 Solomon's Knots, make 2 Solomon's Knots; repeat across to last 2 Solomon's Knots, sc in sc between the last 2 Solomon's Knots, make 1 Solomon's Knot, dtr in last sc, turn.

Row 15: Ch 1, sc in dtr, *ch 3, sc in next sc (between the 2 Solomon's Knots); repeat from * across to t-ch, ch 3, sc in t-ch, turn โ€” 26 (28, 31, 34) ch-3 sps.

Row 16: Ch 2 (counts as hdc), *3 herringbone dc in next ch-3 sp, herringbone dc in next sc; repeat from * across to last ch-3 sp, 3 herringbone dc in last ch-3 sp, hdc in last st, turn โ€” 105 (113, 125, 137) sts.

Row 17: Ch 2 (counts as a hdc), herringbone dc in each st across to t-ch, hdc in top of t-ch, turn.

Row 18: Ch 2 (counts as a hdc), herringbone dc in each st across to t-ch, hdc in top of t-ch. Fasten off.

Marly Bird modeling the Solomon's Knot Crochet Tee in Bernat Softee Cotton, showing the airy Solomon's Knot stitch sleeves and oversized fit โ€” free crochet tee pattern

Finishing

Weave in all ends.

Pin panels to schematic size, lightly spray with water and allow to dry.

Hold RS of both panels together. Whip stitch underarm and side seam on each side of panel. Whip stitch shoulder seam together leaving a 12 (12, 13, 13)” or desired opening for neck. Turn RS out.

Join yarn to bottom edge of body with a sl st, ch 1, reverse sc around edge of body, sl st to first st, fasten off and weave in ends. Repeat on sleeve openings and neck opening.


Blocking Tips

Blocking matters for this tee. The herringbone double crochet body opens up beautifully after a wet block, and the Solomon's Knot sleeves go from “OK that's lacy” to “wow that's lace” once the long loops relax into their finished shape.

Wet blocking is the method for Bernat Softee Cotton (and any cotton blend). Lay the panels on blocking mats or a clean towel, pin them to the schematic dimensions, and lightly spray with water from a spray bottle until the fabric is evenly damp (not soaking). Smooth the stitches with your fingers, especially the Solomon's Knots… gently pull each long loop to its full length so the lace structure shows clearly. Let the panels dry completely (usually 6-12 hours) before unpinning.

If you substitute a different yarn, check the yarn label for blocking instructions. Most cotton blends respond well to wet blocking. Avoid steam blocking acrylic-heavy yarns at high heat… acrylic can melt or flatten permanently.

โœจ Designer Tip: Block the panels BEFORE you seam them. The drape and dimensions change after blocking, and seaming pre-blocked panels gives you cleaner seams than seaming and then blocking. It also lets you confirm your finished bust circumference before you commit to the side seams… if you want to size up or down a touch, this is the moment.

Solomon's Knot Crochet Tee styled over a white tank, showing the openwork Solomon's Knot stitch sleeves and drapey cotton fabric โ€” free crochet tee pattern by Marly Bird

Love This Yarn? More Patterns Using Bernat Softee Cotton

If you fall in love with Bernat Softee Cotton (and you will… it's affordable, soft, and washable), here are more crochet patterns that use it or a comparable cotton blend:

  • Cutest Cotton Crochet T-Shirt Pattern… another summer cotton tee from the blog
  • Stoney Creek Sleeveless Tee… cotton-friendly beginner pattern
  • Browse all free crochet patterns for more cotton-suitable summer designs
Solomon's Knot Crochet Tee ad-free PDF mockup โ€” buy the printable pattern on Etsy, Shopify, or Ravelry

Favorite & Queue on Ravelry

Please favorite and queue the Solomon's Knot Crochet Tee on Ravelry and tag your finished projects #SolomonsKnotTee so I can see them. Every color, every body, every finished photo… absolutely made my week.

Favorite This Pattern on Ravelry - Marly Bird

More Crochet Patterns You'll Love

  • Sookie Crochet Cardigan (XS-5X)… oversized cardigan I co-designed with Robyn Chachula
  • Solomon's Knot Crochet Blanket… master the stitch on a bigger canvas – free pattern from Yarnspirations
  • Solomon's Knot Crochet Cuff (with video)… a quick small project to learn the stitch
  • 60 Must-Have Crochet Tank Top Patterns for Summer… the master roundup
  • 50 Free Crochet Summer Top Patterns… another curated collection

Or browse my full library of free knit and crochet patterns for every free pattern on the blog.

Looking for a sleeveless, fingering-weight version? Designer Sati Glenn created an earlier sleeveless Solomon's Knot tee for WeCrochet using KnitPicks Gloss Fingering (merino/silk) with the Solomon's Knot stitch on the hem only. It's a totally different garment from the cotton tee on this page, but if that sleeveless fingering-weight version is what you came looking for, find Sati's pattern through WeCrochet here.

Solomon's Knot Crochet Tee FAQ section โ€” frequently asked questions about the free crochet tee pattern by Marly Bird

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the Solomon's Knot Tee really intermediate? It looks complicated.

Honestly, yes… but the “intermediate” label is mostly because of three special stitches you'll learn (foundation single crochet, herringbone double crochet, and Solomon's Knot), not because the construction is complex. Once you have those three stitches in your hands, the body of the tee is just rows of one stitch back and forth. The Solomon's Knot section in the sleeves is the showpiece, and it's much easier than it looks. All three special stitches have linked video tutorials.

What yarn can I substitute for Bernat Softee Cotton?

Any CYCA 3 (light worsted / DK) cotton or cotton-blend yarn that matches gauge on a G/7 (4.5 mm) hook. Good substitutes include Lion Brand 24/7 Cotton (mercerized cotton), Berroco Remix Light DK (recycled cotton/acrylic/nylon/silk/linen blend… drapey and summer-perfect), and WeCrochet Dishie (100% cotton… not our favorite for this but it would work). Avoid 100% wool (too warm for a summer tee) and avoid 100% acrylic (the stitch pattern needs cotton's slight stiffness to hold its shape).

How long does this crochet tee take to make?

Most crocheters finish in 25-40 hours depending on size and crochet speed. A realistic timeline is 2-3 weeks of regular project time. The two-panel construction means you can break it into two sessions of focused work plus a quick seaming session, so it's a great “I want a finished garment soon” project.

Can I make this tee longer or shorter?

Yes, easily. The body length is fully customizable… after the foundation row, repeat Row 1 as many times as you want before moving to the sleeves. The pattern as written gives you a cropped-to-regular tee. For tunic length, add 8-12 more rows. Each repeat of Row 1 adds about ยฝ” / 1.25 cm of length. Just make sure you end on a WS row before starting the sleeves.

What is a Solomon's Knot stitch?

The Solomon's Knot stitch (sometimes called the lover's knot) is an open, lacy crochet stitch made of long pulled-up loops anchored with single crochet. It creates a breathable, drapey fabric that's especially loved for summer garments and shawls. Mechanically it's just two motions: pull up a long loop (ยพ” / 2 cm) and anchor it with a single crochet in the back loop. Repeat in a rhythmic grid and you get the signature open lace look.

How do I care for this cotton crochet tee?

Bernat Softee Cotton is machine washable. For best results and longest life, machine wash on cool/gentle in a mesh laundry bag, and lay flat to dry. The acrylic content makes it more durable than 100% cotton, and the cotton content keeps it breathable. Re-block lightly if it ever loses its shape after washing… a quick spray and pin will bring back the drape.

Do I have to block this tee?

Yes, please. Blocking is what transforms the Solomon's Knot stitch from “rows of long loops” into the final lace fabric. Blocking is also how you confirm your finished dimensions match the schematic. Wet blocking (light spray + pin to schematic + dry) takes about 20 minutes of active work and 6-12 hours of drying. The pattern is designed for blocked dimensions, so skipping this step means your tee won't fit as designed.

Where can I get the ad-free PDF?

The ad-free PDF is available on Etsy, Shopify, and Ravelry. The PDF is the same pattern formatted cleanly for print, with the schematic and stitch diagram included. Many crocheters prefer it for travel projects or to keep in a project bag.

Solomon's Knot Crochet Tee ad-free PDF mockup โ€” buy the printable pattern on Etsy, Shopify, or Ravelry
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๐Ÿ’ฌ Final Thoughts

This tee has a special place in my heart. It's the pattern I reach for when someone asks “what's a beautiful summer crochet top that doesn't take six months?” It's the one I recommend when a crocheter wants to learn Solomon's Knot but feels intimidated by big lace projects. And it's the one I see in my comments and DMs every spring as soon as the weather warms up… readers asking “is this still available?” “Can you re-share the pattern?” “I want to make this for vacation.”

Thank you for being here, for letting me design for you, and for being the reason I get to keep sharing free patterns. If you make the Solomon's Knot Tee, please share your finished project with me. Tag @marlybird on social media or use #SolomonsKnotTee. Seeing your versions is one of the best parts of my week.

Love, Your BiCrafty Bestie, Marly Bird

Marly Bird Bitmoji with rainbow hearts

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Filed Under: Crochet, Free Patterns, Marly Bird Premium Patterns, Our Free Patterns, Pattern Tagged With: Bernat Softee Cotton, cotton crochet tee, crochet tee, free crochet tee pattern, herringbone double crochet, intermediate crochet, lover's knot stitch, Marly Bird, oversized crochet top, Robyn Chachula, solomon's knot crochet tee, solomon's knot stitch, summer crochet

Pieces of You: Free Single Crochet Entrelac Wrap Pattern

May 5, 2026 By Meg Leave a Comment

This free crochet entrelac pattern teaches you single crochet entrelacโ€ฆ a beginner-friendly version of the โ€œscaryโ€ knit technique youโ€™ve probably heard about. The Pieces of You crochet entrelac wrap is worked in tiers of squares with a single crochet you already know, finished in triangles for a clean straight edge, and shown off in a gorgeous gradient cake yarn. Designed by Marly Bird as part of Spring Fling 2026.

Hereโ€™s the thing nobody tells you about entrelacโ€ฆ single crochet entrelac is NOT the scary knit version. Itโ€™s NOT Tunisian entrelac either. Itโ€™s plain old single crochetโ€ฆ the very first stitch you ever learnedโ€ฆ worked in a clever order that builds up interlocking woven blocks. If you can sc, you can do this. The Pieces of You wrap is the perfect way to fall in love with the technique.

A woman models a large patchwork knit shawl with beige, gray, and cream squares on grass with leafy trees in the background.

Hey, bestie ๐Ÿ’› If entrelac has been on your โ€œsomeday when Iโ€™m braverโ€ list, today is your day. This free crochet entrelac pattern uses one stitch (single crochet), one gorgeous gradient cake yarn (Red Heart Itโ€™s a Wrap Rainbow), and one repeating set of tier instructions to build a 68โ€ณ wingspan wrap that looks like youโ€™ve been crocheting forever. I wrote it specifically to be the friendliest entry point into entrelac that exists on the internetโ€ฆ and Iโ€™m so excited for you to try it.

Affiliate disclosure: Some of the links in this post are affiliate links, which means if you click through and purchase, I may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. I only recommend yarns and tools Iโ€™ve used and trust with my yarn-loving heart. Thank you for supporting free patterns on the blog ๐Ÿ’›

A woman wears a crochet entrelac wrap in beige, tan, and gray, showing its texture and drape; โ€œPieces of You Crochet Shawlโ€ text below.

Table of Contents

Toggle
  • What You Will Love About This Pattern ๐Ÿ’–
  • Quick Pattern Overview
  • Is This Crochet Wrap Right for You?
  • What Is Single Crochet Entrelac?
  • SC Entrelac vs Knit Entrelac vs Tunisian Entrelac
  • Why Single Crochet Entrelac Is Easier Than You Think
  • The Corner to Corner Connection
  • Yarn & Materials
  • Love the Pattern but Want an Ad-Free PDF?
  • Pieces of You โ€” Pattern Details
  • GROW
  • Pieces of You โ€” Pattern Instructions
  • Blocking Tips
  • Make It Your Own: Color Variations & Yarn Substitutions
  • More Crochet Wrap & Shawl Patterns You'll Love
  • Favorite & Queue on Ravelry
  • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Final Thoughts
๐ŸŒธ Spring Fling 2026: Pieces of You debuted as Day 3 of Spring Fling 2026, my 20-day spring crochet and knit pattern celebration. Browse all 20 patterns on the Spring Fling Hub.

What You Will Love About This Pattern ๐Ÿ’–

โœจ Only one stitch. Single crochet, start to finish. No Tunisian hook, no special technique youโ€™ve never tried. If you can chain, single crochet, and slip stitchโ€ฆ you can crochet entrelac. Promise.

๐ŸŒˆ Gradient yarn does the heavy lifting. The Pieces of You wrap is designed for cake yarnโ€ฆ that magical self-striping yarn that shifts colors all on its own. You get a wrap that looks like you spent hours planning a color sequenceโ€ฆ when really, the yarn did it for you while you watched Netflix.

๐Ÿชก Designer-intentional drape. I deliberately call for a hook one size larger than the yarn label suggests. That looser gauge is what gives this wrap its drapey, wear-it-everywhere feel. (More on the why down in the materials sectionโ€ฆ itโ€™s one of my favorite teaching moments in this pattern.)

๐Ÿ“ Repeatable rhythm. Once you finish Tier 1 and Tier 2, every interior tier follows the same rhythm. It becomes meditativeโ€ฆ the kind of project you pick up after dinner and donโ€™t put down until youโ€™ve added another tier.

๐Ÿ“ Generous, wearable size. 68โ€ณ wingspan by 34โ€ณ deepโ€ฆ big enough to wrap, drape, and feel like a real shawl, not a scarf pretending to be one.

A crochet entrelac wrap in neutral tones is worn over blue jeans, highlighting its textured stitches outdoors in bright sunlight.

Quick Pattern Overview

๐Ÿงถ Skill Level: Intermediate (advanced beginner with patience can absolutely do this)

๐Ÿ“ Finished Size: 68โ€ณ [172.5 cm] wingspan x 34โ€ณ [86.5 cm] deep

๐Ÿ“ Gauge: 18 sc by 19 rows = 4โ€ณ x 4โ€ณ

๐ŸŒˆ Yarn: Red Heart Itโ€™s a Wrap Rainbow (CYCA #2 sport, 632 yds / 5.29 oz cake), Foggy colorway, 2 balls *sadly this yarn has been discontinued

๐Ÿช Hook: Size I/9 (5.5 mm)โ€ฆ yes, bigger than the ball band suggests. On purpose. Trust me.

๐ŸŽจ Construction: Worked in tiers of squares from corner to corner; final tier worked in triangles for a clean straight edge.


Is This Crochet Wrap Right for You?

This pattern is a beautiful fit if youโ€™ve crocheted a few projects beyond a granny square and youโ€™re ready to try something that looks impressive without actually being hard. You should be comfortable working single crochet, slip stitch, and reading row-by-row instructions. Each square is just scโ€ฆ but the connection between squares (the sc2tog into the previous tier + slip stitch turn) takes a few rounds of practice before it clicks.

If youโ€™ve been intimidated by entrelac on knitting Instagram or by Tunisian entrelac videosโ€ฆ this is your gateway. SC entrelac is genuinely the most approachable version of the technique that exists. And once youโ€™ve made one, youโ€™ll see entrelac everywhere and want to make ten more.

If youโ€™re a brand-new beginner who has never finished a project? Save this for your second or third make. Youโ€™ll enjoy it so much more once basic single crochet feels automatic.

A woman models a neutral-tone crochet entrelac wrap, showing textured blocks, worn over black in a colorful room.

What Is Single Crochet Entrelac?

Entrelac is a technique where small geometric shapes (usually squares) are worked one at a time and connected to the previous row of squares as you go. The result is fabric that looks woven, like a basket or a tile floor, even though itโ€™s all one continuous piece worked with one tool.

A single crochet entrelac pattern uses only single crochet stitches plus slip stitches to build those interlocking blocks. Thereโ€™s no Tunisian hook, no special equipment, and no new stitch to learn. The โ€œmagicโ€ is in the order you work the squaresโ€ฆ you work into the edges of previous squares to anchor the next row of blocks, which is what creates the woven illusion.

Thatโ€™s literally the whole secret. Stitches worked into edges of previous squares = interlocking blocks. The fabric does the impressive part for you.

A woman models a vibrant knitted wrap in purple, pink, and orange patchwork; โ€œWildberry Wrapโ€ appears vertically in pink text.

SC Entrelac vs Knit Entrelac vs Tunisian Entrelac

If youโ€™ve Googled โ€œentrelacโ€ before and ended up overwhelmed, hereโ€™s whyโ€ฆ most of the entrelac content online is one of two intimidating versions. Let me break down all three so you can see exactly where SC entrelac fits.

Knit entrelac. Worked with two knitting needles using a combination of pick-up stitches, short rows, and constant turning. Beautiful, but a real commitment of brain power. Most โ€œentrelac is hardโ€ reputations come from knit entrelac. But I am here to tell you, as somebody who literally wrote a book for How to Knit Entrelac, you can do this! (If you also knit, I have a stunning Dragonscale Knit Entrelac Blanket here on the blog thatโ€™s worth bookmarking once youโ€™ve conquered the crochet version.)

Entrelac knit blanket in blue, green, and yellow squares with woven texture; yarn skeins beside the folded project.

Tunisian entrelac. Worked with a Tunisian (Afghan) hookโ€ฆ the long one with a stopper on the end. Tunisian crochet has its own learning curve before you even get to entrelac, and many crocheters never use a Tunisian hook at all. My friend Mikey of The Crochet Crowd just released a beautiful Tunisian entrelac workshop, and itโ€™s gorgeous workโ€ฆ but itโ€™s a different skill set.

Single crochet entrelac (this pattern). Worked with a regular crochet hook using single crochet, slip stitch, and sc2tog. The same tools you already own. The same stitches you already know. Thatโ€™s it. Thatโ€™s the whole technique. SC entrelac is the friendliest version of entrelac (imho) that exists, and it produces a fabric just as beautiful as the other two.

Woman models a beige, cream, and gray crochet entrelac shawl in four poses; โ€œPieces of You Crochet Shawlโ€ text shown.

This is the differentiation that matters: when you see โ€œentrelacโ€ in the wild and feel a little flutter of fearโ€ฆ remember, the Pieces of You wrap is single crochet. Just single crochet. Youโ€™re already qualified.


Why Single Crochet Entrelac Is Easier Than You Think

1. You only need one stitch. Single crochetโ€ฆ the first stitch every crocheter learns. Plus the slip stitch to turn. Thatโ€™s the whole stitch vocabulary. No double crochet, no trebles, no special texture stitches.

2. Each square is independent and tiny. On this pattern, 18 stitches by 19 rows. Thatโ€™s a few minutes of crocheting per square. If you mess up a square, you frog one little block, not a whole row. The mental load of entrelac is way smaller than it looks.

3. The pattern is repeatable. Tier 3 establishes the rhythm. Tiers 4 through 10 repeat that exact same rhythm. Once youโ€™ve worked one full tier, the next seven feel like muscle memory.

4. The yarn does the visual work. Gradient cake yarn means you donโ€™t have to plan a single color change. You crochetโ€ฆ the colors shift on their ownโ€ฆ and the finished wrap looks intentional and designer-y. Effort vs. reward on this pattern is one of the best in my entire catalog.

A smiling woman with glasses holds up a large, hand-knit blanket made of beige, tan, and gray squares in a cozy, colorful room.

The Corner to Corner Connection

If youโ€™ve ever made a corner-to-corner (C2C) crochet blanket, you already know more than you think about entrelac. Corner to corner entrelac crochet is essentially what weโ€™re doing hereโ€ฆ building the fabric diagonally, one block at a time, from one corner outward. The Pieces of You crochet shawl is structured exactly the same way, just with single crochet squares instead of double crochet C2C blocks.

If you fell in love with C2C and want to level upโ€ฆ entrelac is your next stop. The construction logic is identical; the texture is just more sophisticated.

Curious about corner-to-corner entrelac crochet but not sure where to start? Think a shawl is too much? Not a problem!

Get this fun and easy crochet corner to corner single crochet entrelac block that can be turned into a afghan square, or pot holder, or throw pillow, or cushion, then simply sign up for the Marly Bird Newsletter and get the free downloadable pdf pattern for the C2C Single Crochet Entrelac Block

(Want to see what I more? Head over to my free corner-to-corner crochet patterns roundup for inspiration on where C2C and entrelac overlap.)

Watch the Full Video Tutorial

To view the video on YouTube Click Here


Yarn & Materials

Designer Yarn: Red Heart Itโ€™s a Wrap Rainbow

This wrap was designed using Red Heart Itโ€™s a Wrap Rainbow in the Foggy colorwayโ€ฆ a 55% acrylic / 45% cotton blend that comes in a generous 632-yard cake. The acrylic gives it body and durability; the cotton gives it that lovely soft drape. And because itโ€™s a self-striping cake, you get all the gradient color shifts without ever cutting yarn for a color change. Two cakes is all you need for the full 68โ€ณ wingspan.

Designer Tipโ€ฆ Why the bigger hook? The ball band on Itโ€™s a Wrap Rainbow recommends a smaller hook than Iโ€™m asking you to use. Thatโ€™s intentional. A size I/9 (5.5 mm) hook with this CYCA #2 sport-weight yarn creates a slightly looser fabricโ€ฆ and that looseness is what makes the wrap drape instead of stand stiff. If you go down to the ball-band-recommended hook, youโ€™ll end up with a sturdier fabric that wears more like a placemat than a wrap. Trust the bigger hook. (Same logic applies to many shawl and wrap patternsโ€ฆ designer-chosen gauge is almost always optimized for drape, not for matching the ball band.)

Colorful yarn cakes neatly stacked on the left; right side features "It's A Wrap One Ball Patterns" text and logo on light background.

Yarn Substitutions

If you canโ€™t find Red Heart Itโ€™s a Wrap Rainbow (itโ€™s been popping in and out of stock), or you want to play with a different gradient, here are my go-to substitute options for cake yarn projects:

Other gradient cake yarns to consider: Lion Brand Mandala String (size 1 weight yarn, new to us but might be great), Lion Brand Mandala (DK weight, comes in beautiful color stories; you may need 3 cakes for the full yardage), Caron Cakes (worsted weight; go down a hook size and check gauge carefully), Premier Sweet Roll (similar weight to Itโ€™s a Wrap, gorgeous self-striping), and the Facetsโ„ข Yarn by Loops & Threads (worsted weight, 100% Acrylic, similar drape behavior).

๐Ÿ’• The Chevron Waves Crochet Wrap โ€“ Another Lace Weight Crochet Shawl Free Pattern

If you want to swap to a non-cake yarn and choose your own colors, youโ€™ll need approximately 1,250 yards of CYCA #2 sport-weight yarn. Just be aware that without the self-striping element, youโ€™ll be doing your own color-change planningโ€ฆ which is its own kind of fun.

A woman models the Pieces of You wrap, highlighting its colorful geometric knit pattern and soft textured stitches.

Tools & Notions

Beyond yarn, hereโ€™s what youโ€™ll want on hand:

  • Crochet hook: Size I/9 (5.5 mm)
  • Stitch markersโ€ฆ youโ€™ll use these on the last stitch of every Row 19 to mark the corner of each finished square. Theyโ€™re essential, not optional.
  • Tapestry needle for weaving in ends
  • Blocking mats and pins (or blocking wires)โ€ฆ entrelac fabric blooms beautifully when blocked. Pick up blocking wires here if you donโ€™t have them yet.
  • Wool washโ€ฆ I love Eucalan for blocking, no rinse needed.
โญ๏ธ Marly Bird Amazon Storefront โญ๏ธ

Love the Pattern but Want an Ad-Free PDF?

The full Pieces of You pattern is right here on the blog for free, forever. But if youโ€™d rather have a clean, printable, ad-free PDF you can take to your reading chair (or to your favorite yarn shop), the formatted PDF is available in my shops:

  • Pieces of You on Etsy
  • Pieces of You on the Marly Bird Shop
  • Pieces of You on Ravelry
A woman models a large checkered crochet shawl using single crochet entrelac; pattern preview shown in the background.
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Pieces of You โ€” Pattern Details

Skill Level

Intermediate

Finished Measurements

68โ€ณ [172.5 cm] wingspan x 34โ€ณ [86.5 cm] deep

Gauge

19 sc by 19 rows = 4โ€ณ x 4โ€ณ [10 x 10 cm]; use any size hook to obtain the gauge.

Materials

  • Yarn: Red Heart Itโ€™s a Wrap Rainbow (55% acrylic / 45% cotton, 632 yds / 570 m, 5.29 oz / 150 g, CYCA #2 sport): Foggy colorway, 2 balls
  • Hook: Size I/9 (5.5 mm)
  • Notions: Stitch markers, tapestry needle

Abbreviations

  • Ch โ€” Chain(s)
  • PM โ€” Place marker
  • RS โ€” Right Side
  • Sc โ€” Single Crochet
  • Sc2tog โ€” Single Crochet Two Together
  • Sc3tog โ€” Single Crochet Three Together
  • Sl st โ€” Slip Stitch
  • Sp(s) โ€” Space(s)
  • St(s) โ€” Stitch(es)
  • Tch โ€” Turning Chain
  • WS โ€” Wrong Side

Special Stitches

โญ๏ธ Reverse Single Crochet (rev sc): Also known as a Crab Stitch. Working from left to right, insert hook from front to back in next stitch to the right, yarn over and pull up a loop, yarn over and draw through 2 loops on hook. This is what gives the finished wrap its tidy, twisted-rope edging.

โญ๏ธ Single Crochet 2 Together (sc2tog): *Insert hook into indicated stitch, yarn over and pull up a loop; repeat from * in next stitch indicated, yarn over and draw through all 3 loops on hook. In this pattern, sc2tog is the magic stitch that joins each new square to the edge of the previous tier.

โญ๏ธ Single Crochet 3 Together (sc3tog): *Insert hook into indicated stitch, yarn over and pull up a loop; repeat from * in next 2 stitches indicated, yarn over and draw through all 4 loops on hook. In this pattern, sc3tog is only used on the final row of the triangles.


Layout

Entrelac wrap diagram: 12-tier diamond grid, numbered color blocks, labeled rows, blue top row, arrows show direction.

Stitch Diagram

The crochet stitch diagram is exclusive to the ad-free pdf.

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Notes

The shawl is worked with a bigger hook than listed on the ball band on purpose. The looser gauge will help the fabric drape more and create a nicer garment.

The single crochet entrelac technique used in this shawl is similar to the corner to corner technique.

To work the entrelac technique, start by working the first square of Tier 1. All subsequent Tiers (2-11) work off of the previous tier to build up the work. See the layout and stitch diagram as a guide.

When starting a new ball of yarn, begin at the same starting color as used on Tier 1. (This is what keeps the gradient consistent across the whole wrap. The cake yarn shifts colors gradually within each ball, so re-starting at the matching color point on ball 2 keeps the visual flow uninterrupted.)

The final tier of the shawl is made in triangles instead of squares to finish with a straight edge. (Without the triangles, your wrap would end on a zigzagโ€ฆ the triangles fill in the negative space along the top edge and give you that clean, straight finish a wrap deserves.)

โญ๏ธ Designer Tipโ€ฆ The โ€œslip stitch in place of the ch-1 turnโ€: This is the trickiest part of any entrelac or mosaic-style pattern, and the part most crocheters trip on. When you reach the end of a row that connects to the previous tier, youโ€™ll work an sc2tog (joining your new square to the previous tier) and then a slip stitch into the next stitch on the previous tier. That slip stitch takes the place of the ch-1 youโ€™d normally do after turning. So when you turn for the next row, do NOT chain 1โ€ฆ the slip stitch already counts as your turning chain. This keeps the edge of your square clean and tight against the previous tier with no gaps. Read this twice. Then read it a third time as you work Square 1 of Tier 2. By Square 2 it will be muscle memory. [MARLY: please verify this explanation matches how youโ€™d describe it on video.]

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Woman models the beige and gray knit Pieces of You Wrap shawl, showing off its soft texture in a cozy, colorful room.

Pieces of You โ€” Pattern Instructions

Pattern was updated to have an odd number of stitches on 6-1-2026.

Tier 1

Chain 20.

Row 1 (RS): Sc in 2nd chain from hook and in each chain across, turn โ€” 19 sc.

Rows 2-19: Ch 1, sc in each sc across, turn. Place a marker in the last st on Row 19. Do not fasten off.

Tier 2

Square 1

Chain 20, turn.

Row 1 (WS): Sc in 2nd chain from hook and in each of the next 18 ch, sc2tog (the last chain and the marked stitch on square from previous tier), slip stitch in next stitch on square from previous tier [note: the slipped stitch takes the place of the ch 1 we usually do after the turn], turn โ€” 19 sts (17 sc + 1 sc2tog).

Row 2: Sc in sc2tog and in each sc across, turn โ€” 19 sc.

Row 3: Ch 1, sc in each of the next 18 sc, sc2tog (the last sc and the next stitch on square from previous tier), slip stitch in next stitch on square from previous tier, turn โ€” 19 sts (17 sc + 1 sc2tog).

Repeat Rows 2-3 eight more times, place a marker in the last stitch on Row 19, do not fasten off, do not turn.

Square 2

Working along the edge of the same square of previous tier:

Row 1 (WS): Ch 1, 19 sc evenly along the edge, turn โ€” 19 sc.

Rows 2-19: Ch 1, sc in each sc across, turn. Place a marker in the last st on Row 19.

Tier 3

Square 1

Chain 20, turn.

Row 1 (RS): Sc in 2nd chain from hook and in each of the next 18 ch, sc2tog (the last chain and the marked stitch on square from previous tier), slip stitch in next stitch on square from previous tier [note: the slipped stitch takes the place of the ch 1 we usually do after the turn], turn โ€” 19 sts (17 sc + 1 sc2tog).

Row 2: Sc in sc2tog and in each sc across, turn โ€” 19 sc.

Row 3: Ch 1, sc in each of the next 18 sc, sc2tog (the last sc and the next stitch on square from previous tier), slip stitch in next stitch on square from previous tier, turn โ€” 19 sts (17 sc + 1 sc2tog).

Repeat Rows 2-3 eight more times, place a marker in the last stitch on Row 19, do not fasten off, do not turn.

Square 2

Working along the edge of the same square of previous tier:

Row 1 (RS): Ch 1, 18 sc evenly along the edge, sc2tog (the last sc and the marked stitch on square from previous tier), slip stitch in next stitch on square from previous tier, turn โ€” 19 sts (17 sc + 1 sc2tog).

Row 2 (WS): Sc in sc2tog, and each sc across, turn โ€” 19 sc.

Row 3: Ch 1, sc in each of the next 18 sc, sc2tog (the last sc and the next stitch on square from previous tier), slip stitch in next stitch on square from previous tier, turn โ€” 19 sts (17 sc + 1 sc2tog).

Repeat Rows 2-3 eight more times, place a marker in the last stitch on Row 19, do not fasten off, do not turn.

Square 3

Working along the edge of the same square of previous tier:

Row 1 (WS): Ch 1, 19 sc evenly along the edge, turn โ€” 19 sc.

Rows 2-19: Ch 1, sc in each sc across, turn. Place a marker in the last st on Row 19.

Tiers 4-11

Repeat directions from Tier 3. Start with a Square 1, then repeat Square 2 for all interior squares, and finish with a Square 3. See layout for assistance.

โญ๏ธ Designer Tipโ€ฆ Reading the layout: Each tier adds one more square than the tier before it. Tier 1 = 1 square, Tier 2 = 2 squares, Tier 3 = 3 squares, and so on through Tier 11 (11 squares). The layout diagram shows you which way each square is oriented (RS or WS row) and which edge of the previous tier youโ€™re working into. Pin a printed copy of the diagram next to your project and check off each square as you finish it.
A woman models a striped, knit entrelac wrap scarf, showing its textured crochet pattern and soft drape over her head and shoulders.

Tier 12 (Triangle Finishing Tier)

This final tier uses triangles instead of squares to fill in the zigzag edge and give your wrap a clean, straight top edge. Each triangle decreases gradually until it tapers to a point.

Triangle 1

Chain 20, turn.

Row 1 (WS): Sc in 2nd chain from hook and in each of the next 18 ch, sc2tog (the last chain and the marked stitch on square from previous tier), slip stitch in next stitch on square from previous tier [note: the slipped stitch takes the place of the ch 1 we usually do after the turn], turn โ€” 19 sts (18 sc + 1 sc2tog).

Row 2: Sc in sc2tog and in each sc across to last 2 sc, sc2tog over last 2 sc, turn โ€”18 ( 17 sc + 1 sc2tog).

Row 3: Ch 1, sc2tog over first 2 sc, sc in each sc to last sc, sc2tog (the last sc and the next stitch on square from previous tier), slip stitch in next stitch on square from previous tier, turn โ€” 17 sts (15 sc + 2 sc2tog).

Row 4: Sc in sc2tog and in each sc across to last 2 sc, sc2tog over last 2 sc, turn โ€”16 sts (15 sc + 1 sc2tog).

Row 5: Ch 1, sc2tog over first 2 sc, sc in each sc to last sc, sc2tog (the last sc and the next stitch on square from previous tier), slip stitch in next stitch on square from previous tier, turn โ€” 15 sts (13 sc + 2 sc2tog).

Row 6: Sc in sc2tog and in each sc across to last 2 sc, sc2tog over last 2 sc, turn โ€” 14 sts (13 sc + 1 sc2tog).

Row 7: Ch 1, sc2tog over first 2 sc, sc in each sc to last sc, sc2tog (the last sc and the next stitch on square from previous tier), slip stitch in next stitch on square from previous tier, turn โ€” 13 sts (11 sc + 2 sc2tog).

Row 8: Sc in sc2tog and in each sc across to last 2 sc, sc2tog over last 2 sc, turn โ€” 12 sts (11 sc + 1 sc2tog).

Row 9: Ch 1, sc2tog over first 2 sc, sc in each sc to last sc, sc2tog (the last sc and the next stitch on square from previous tier), slip stitch in next stitch on square from previous tier, turn โ€” 11 sts (9 sc + 2 sc2tog).

Row 10: Sc in sc2tog and in each sc across to last 2 sc, sc2tog over last 2 sc, turn โ€” 10 sts (9 sc + 1 sc2tog).

Row 11: Ch 1, sc2tog over first 2 sc, sc in each sc to last sc, sc2tog (the last sc and the next stitch on square from previous tier), slip stitch in next stitch on square from previous tier, turn โ€” 9 sts (7 sc + 2 sc2tog).

Row 12: Sc in sc2tog and in each sc across to last 2 sc, sc2tog over last 2 sc, turn โ€”8 sts (7 sc + 1 sc2tog).

Row 13: Ch 1, sc2tog over first 2 sc, sc in each sc to last sc, sc2tog (the last sc and the next stitch on square from previous tier), slip stitch in next stitch on square from previous tier, turn โ€” 7 sts (5 sc + 2 sc2tog).

Row 14: Sc in sc2tog and in each sc across to last 2 sc, sc2tog over last 2 sc, turn โ€” 6 sts (5 sc + 1 sc2tog).

Row 15: Ch 1, sc2tog over first 2 sc, sc in each sc to last sc, sc2tog (the last sc and the next stitch on square from previous tier), slip stitch in next stitch on square from previous tier, turn โ€” 5 sts (3 sc + 2 sc2tog).

Row 16: Sc in sc2tog, sc in next 2 sc, sc2tog over last 2 sc, turn โ€” 4 sts (3 sc + 1 sc2tog).

Row 17: Ch 1, sc2tog over first 2 sc, sc in next sc, sc2tog (the last sc and the next stitch on square from previous tier), slip stitch in next stitch on square from previous tier, turn โ€”3 sts (1 sc, 2 sc2tog).

Row 18: Sc in sc2tog, sc2tog over last 2 sc, turn โ€“ 2 sts (1 sc, 1 sc2tog).

Row 19: Ch 1, sc3tog over sc2tog and next st on square from previous tier. Do not fasten off, do not turn. Place a marker in the last st on Row 19.

Triangle 2

Working along the edge of the same square of previous tier

Row 1 (WS): Ch 1, 18 sc evenly along the edge, sc2tog (the last sc and the marked stitch on square from previous tier), slip stitch in next stitch on square from previous tier, turn โ€”19 sts ( 18 sc, 1 sc2tog).

Row 2: Sc in sc2tog and in each sc across to last 2 sc, sc2tog over last 2 sc, turn โ€”18 ( 17 sc + 1 sc2tog).

Row 3: Ch 1, sc2tog over first 2 sc, sc in each sc to last sc, sc2tog (the last sc and the next stitch on square from previous tier), slip stitch in next stitch on square from previous tier, turn โ€” 17 sts (15 sc + 2 sc2tog).

Row 4: Sc in sc2tog and in each sc across to last 2 sc, sc2tog over last 2 sc, turn โ€”16 sts (15 sc + 1 sc2tog).

Row 5: Ch 1, sc2tog over first 2 sc, sc in each sc to last sc, sc2tog (the last sc and the next stitch on square from previous tier), slip stitch in next stitch on square from previous tier, turn โ€” 15 sts (13 sc + 2 sc2tog).

Row 6: Sc in sc2tog and in each sc across to last 2 sc, sc2tog over last 2 sc, turn โ€” 14 sts (13 sc + 1 sc2tog).

Row 7: Ch 1, sc2tog over first 2 sc, sc in each sc to last sc, sc2tog (the last sc and the next stitch on square from previous tier), slip stitch in next stitch on square from previous tier, turn โ€” 13 sts (11 sc + 2 sc2tog).

Row 8: Sc in sc2tog and in each sc across to last 2 sc, sc2tog over last 2 sc, turn โ€” 12 sts (11 sc + 1 sc2tog).

Row 9: Ch 1, sc2tog over first 2 sc, sc in each sc to last sc, sc2tog (the last sc and the next stitch on square from previous tier), slip stitch in next stitch on square from previous tier, turn โ€” 11 sts (9 sc + 2 sc2tog).

Row 10: Sc in sc2tog and in each sc across to last 2 sc, sc2tog over last 2 sc, turn โ€” 10 sts (9 sc + 1 sc2tog).

Row 11: Ch 1, sc2tog over first 2 sc, sc in each sc to last sc, sc2tog (the last sc and the next stitch on square from previous tier), slip stitch in next stitch on square from previous tier, turn โ€” 9 sts (7 sc + 2 sc2tog).

Row 12: Sc in sc2tog and in each sc across to last 2 sc, sc2tog over last 2 sc, turn โ€”8 sts (7 sc + 1 sc2tog).

Row 13: Ch 1, sc2tog over first 2 sc, sc in each sc to last sc, sc2tog (the last sc and the next stitch on square from previous tier), slip stitch in next stitch on square from previous tier, turn โ€” 7 sts (5 sc + 2 sc2tog).

Row 14: Sc in sc2tog and in each sc across to last 2 sc, sc2tog over last 2 sc, turn โ€” 6 sts (5 sc + 1 sc2tog).

Row 15: Ch 1, sc2tog over first 2 sc, sc in each sc to last sc, sc2tog (the last sc and the next stitch on square from previous tier), slip stitch in next stitch on square from previous tier, turn โ€” 5 sts (3 sc + 2 sc2tog).

Row 16: Sc in sc2tog, sc in next 2 sc, sc2tog over last 2 sc, turn โ€” 4 sts (3 sc + 1 sc2tog).

Row 17: Ch 1, sc2tog over first 2 sc, sc in next sc, sc2tog (the last sc and the next stitch on square from previous tier), slip stitch in next stitch on square from previous tier, turn โ€”3 sts (1 sc, 2 sc2tog).

Row 18: Sc in sc2tog, sc2tog over last 2 sc, turn โ€“ 2 sts (1 sc, 1 sc2tog).

Row 19: Ch 1, sc3tog over sc2tog and next st on square from previous tier. Do not fasten off, do not turn. Place a marker in the last st on Row 19.

Repeat Triangle 2 for all interior squares, end with a Triangle 3.ย  See layout for assistance.

Triangle 3

Working along the edge of the same square of previous tier:

Row 1 (WS): Ch 1, 19 sc evenly along the edge, turn โ€” 19 sc.

Row 2: Ch 1, sc in each sc across to last 2 sc, sc2tog over last 2 sc, turn โ€” 18 sts (16 sc + 1 sc2tog).

Row 3: Ch 1, sc2tog over first 2 sc, sc in each sc across, turn โ€” 17 sts (15 sc + 1 sc2tog).

Row 4: Ch 1, sc in each sc across to last 2 sc, sc2tog over last 2 sc, turn โ€” 16 sts (15 sc + 1 sc2tog).

Row 5: Ch 1, sc2tog over first 2 sc, sc in each sc across, turn โ€” 15 sts (15 sc + 1 sc2tog).

Row 6: Ch 1, sc in each sc across to last 2 sc, sc2tog over last 2 sc, turn โ€” 14 sts (16 sc + 1 sc2tog).

Row 7: Ch 1, sc2tog over first 2 sc, sc in each sc across, turn โ€” 13 sts (15 sc + 1 sc2tog).

Row 8: Ch 1, sc in each sc across to last 2 sc, sc2tog over last 2 sc, turn โ€” 12 sts (16 sc + 1 sc2tog).

Row 9: Ch 1, sc2tog over first 2 sc, sc in each sc across, turn โ€” 11 sts (15 sc + 1 sc2tog).

Row 10: Ch 1, sc in each sc across to last 2 sc, sc2tog over last 2 sc, turn โ€” 10 sts (16 sc + 1 sc2tog).

Row 11: Ch 1, sc2tog over first 2 sc, sc in each sc across, turn โ€” 9 sts (15 sc + 1 sc2tog).

Row 12: Ch 1, sc in each sc across to last 2 sc, sc2tog over last 2 sc, turn โ€” 8 sts (16 sc + 1 sc2tog).

Row 13: Ch 1, sc2tog over first 2 sc, sc in each sc across, turn โ€” 7 sts (15 sc + 1 sc2tog).

Row 14: Ch 1, sc in each sc across to last 2 sc, sc2tog over last 2 sc, turn โ€” 6 sts (16 sc + 1 sc2tog).

Row 15: Ch 1, sc2tog over first 2 sc, sc in each sc across, turn โ€” 5 sts (15 sc + 1 sc2tog).

Row 16: Ch 1, sc in each sc across to last 2 sc, sc2tog over last 2 sc, turn โ€” 4 sts (3 sc + 1 sc2tog).

Row 17: Ch 1, sc2tog over first 2 sc, sc in each sc across, turn โ€”3 sts (1 sc, 2 sc2tog).

Row 18: Ch 1, sc in next sc, sc2tog over last 2 sc, turn โ€“ 2 sts (1 sc, 1 sc2tog).

Row 19: Ch 1, sc2tog over last 2 sc. Fasten off. Weave in ends.

Border

With RS facing, join yarn with a slip stitch to any corner.

Round 1 (RS): *3 sc in corner, sc evenly along the edge; repeat from * around, sl st to first sc, do not turn.

Round 2: Reverse sc in each sc around, sl st to first sc to join, fasten off. Weave in ends.

Beige, cream, and gray checkered crochet entrelac shawl draped over shoulders; stitch pattern and texture are clearly shown.

Blocking Tips

Entrelac fabric is the kind of fabric that blooms when itโ€™s blocked. Before blocking, the squares can look a little compressed and the woven effect feels subtle. After blocking, the squares relax open, the diagonal lines between them become crisp, and the whole wrap finally looks like the photos. Do not skip this step.

Wet block (recommended for this wrap):

  • Fill a clean sink or basin with cool water and a tiny splash of Eucalan wool wash. Soak the finished wrap for 15-20 minutesโ€ฆ gently press it under the water; do not agitate.
  • Drain the water without lifting the wrap (lifting a soaking wet shawl by one corner stretches it permanently). Press out as much water as you can with the wrap still in the basin, then transfer it onto a clean towel.
  • Roll the wrap up in the towel like a burrito and press to remove excess water.
  • Lay the wrap flat on blocking mats. Pin it to the schematic dimensions: 68โ€ณ wingspan x 34โ€ณ deep. Use blocking pins along the top straight edge and at the bottom point. Take your time getting the angles even.
  • Let it dry completely before unpinningโ€ฆ usually 12-24 hours depending on humidity.

Spray block (faster alternative): Pin the dry wrap to size on your blocking mats, then mist it thoroughly with cool water from a spray bottle until the fabric is damp throughout. Let dry completely. Less dramatic than a full wet block, but still effective.

Designer Tipโ€ฆ Pin every corner of every square. If you really want the woven effect to pop, place a pin at each corner of each entrelac square (where four squares meet). Itโ€™s tedious but the difference is striking. The blocked fabric will show every interlocking block clearly. This is how you get that โ€œdid you really make that?โ€ reaction.


Make It Your Own: Color Variations & Yarn Substitutions

Stick with gradient cake yarn. The whole magic of this design is the self-striping color shiftโ€ฆ itโ€™s what makes a one-stitch wrap look intentional and designer-y. If you swap to a solid yarn, youโ€™ll have a pretty wrap, but youโ€™ll lose 80% of the visual impact. My strongest recommendation is to stay with a cake-style gradient yarn even if you swap brands.

Plan your second cake. Per the pattern notes, when you start the second cake of yarn, begin at the same color as the start of cake 1. This keeps the gradient flowing visually instead of jumping mid-wrap. Take 3 minutes to wind off (or pull from the center) until you reach the matching color pointโ€ฆ itโ€™s worth the small bit of waste for a wrap that looks cohesive.

Color shift placement. If you want full control over WHERE in the wrap the color shifts happen, pause and pull off color sections to create your own custom transitions. Most makers love the surprise of letting the cake do its thingโ€ฆ but if you want stripes to land at specific tier boundaries, you can absolutely engineer that.

Want a moodier version? Try a darker cake yarn (Lion Brand Mandala โ€œSphinxโ€ colorway, or any of the Hobbii Cotton Sky Cake darker palettes) for a winter-friendly Pieces of You. Same pattern, completely different vibe.


A woman models a vibrant entrelac crochet shawl in purples, pinks, and reds; detailed single crochet stitches are visible.
Wildberry Single Crochet Entrelac Wrap
A woman models a crochet infinity scarf in purple and blue hues, showing its textured wrap pattern against a beige jacket.
Single Crochet Entrelac Cowl + Video
Woman displays a vibrant geometric crochet blanket in a cozy yarn-filled craft room, highlighting stitch detail and texture.
Corner to Corner Throw
Woman models a pink and green crocheted shawl with bold text โ€œMarly Birdโ€ left; stitch texture visible over black top.
Boysenberry Bramble Single Crochet Entrelac Cowl

More Crochet Wrap & Shawl Patterns Youโ€™ll Love

If you fall in love with single crochet entrelac (and you will), here are more crochet wraps and shawls from the blog to add to your queue:

  • Free Crochet Corner to Corner Patterns Roundupโ€ฆ every C2C pattern on the blog, all in one place. The natural next stop if you loved this construction.
  • Boysenberry Bramble SC Entrelac Cowlโ€ฆ a smaller, faster project to keep practicing single crochet entrelac.
  • Spring Fling 2026 Hubโ€ฆ the full lineup of free patterns from this 20-day event, knit and crochet.
  • Wildberry Single Crochet Entrelac Wrapโ€ฆ beautiful pattern that highlights long color changing yarn.

Favorite & Queue on Ravelry

Save the Pieces of You wrap to your Ravelry queue so you can come back to it any time:

Favorite This Pattern on Ravelry - Marly Bird

A woman with glasses smiles near colorful yarn and a clipboard, suggesting a crochet entrelac project is being discussed.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is single crochet entrelac?

Single crochet entrelac is a crochet technique where small squares are worked one at a time and joined to the previous row of squares as you go, using only single crochet, slip stitch, and sc2tog. The result is a fabric that looks wovenโ€ฆ like interlocking blocksโ€ฆ even though itโ€™s all one continuous piece. Unlike Tunisian entrelac (which needs a special hook) or knit entrelac (which uses two needles and short rows), single crochet entrelac uses tools and stitches you already own.

Is SC entrelac the same as Tunisian entrelac?

No. Tunisian entrelac is worked with a Tunisian (Afghan) hook, which is a long crochet hook with a stopper on the end, using Tunisian stitches like Tunisian simple stitch. Single crochet entrelac uses a regular crochet hook and only single crochet stitches. Both produce a similar woven-block fabric, but the technique and tools are completely differentโ€ฆ and SC entrelac is much friendlier for crocheters who havenโ€™t learned Tunisian crochet yet.

Why is the recommended hook bigger than the yarn label suggests?

Designer-chosen gauge for shawls and wraps is almost always optimized for drape, not for matching the ball band. The Pieces of You wrap calls for a size I/9 (5.5 mm) hook with a CYCA #2 sport yarn, which is one or two sizes larger than the ball band recommends. That looser gauge gives the finished wrap its flowy, wearable drape. If you go down to the ball-band-recommended hook, youโ€™ll end up with a fabric thatโ€™s too dense and stiff to wear comfortably as a wrap.

Can I substitute the yarn?

Yes. The pattern was designed for Red Heart Itโ€™s a Wrap Rainbow, but any CYCA #2 sport-weight gradient cake yarn will work beautifully. Good substitute options include Lion Brand Mandala (DK weight, may need 3 cakes), Premier Sweet Roll, and Hobbii Cotton Sky Cake. You can also use a non-cake yarnโ€ฆ youโ€™ll need approximately 1,250 yards of CYCA #2 sportโ€ฆ but youโ€™ll lose the self-striping effect and need to plan your own color changes. And to keep the drape, it is recommended to use a hook larger than what the ball band calls for!

Whatโ€™s the difference between this and corner-to-corner crochet?

Corner-to-corner (C2C) crochet and single crochet entrelac share the same diagonal constructionโ€ฆ both build fabric one block at a time, working outward from one corner. The difference is the stitch and texture. Traditional C2C uses double crochet โ€œblocksโ€ of 3 dc, creating a stair-step pattern. Single crochet entrelac uses larger 18-stitch single crochet squares, creating a smoother, more woven look. If youโ€™ve made a C2C blanket, you already know the construction logicโ€ฆ entrelac is the next step up in texture sophistication.

Is this beginner-friendly or do I need to be experienced?

The pattern is rated Intermediate, but advanced beginners can absolutely tackle it. You should be comfortable with single crochet, slip stitch, sc2tog, and reading row-by-row written instructions. The trickiest moment is the โ€œslip stitch in place of the ch-1 turnโ€ technique that joins each square to the previous tierโ€ฆ it takes a few squares before it clicks, but once it does, the rest of the wrap is meditative repetition. Brand-new crocheters who have never finished a project should save this for their second or third make. Just have Blind Faith!

How long will this take to make?

Most intermediate crocheters finish the Pieces of You wrap in 35-50 hours of total crochet time, depending on speed and how often you frog. Thatโ€™s roughly 2-4 weeks of evening crocheting. Each square takes about 20-30 minutes once the rhythm sets in, and the wrap has 66 squares plus the triangle finishing tier. Pace yourselfโ€ฆ entrelac rewards rested, focused crocheting more than rushed marathon sessions.

How do I block a finished crochet wrap?

Wet block by soaking the finished wrap in cool water with a small amount of no-rinse wool wash for 15-20 minutes. Press out the water (do not lift or wring), roll in a clean towel to remove more moisture, then pin to the finished schematic dimensions on blocking mats. Let dry completely before unpinning. Blocking is essential for entrelac fabricโ€ฆ the squares relax open and the woven effect becomes much more pronounced. For a faster method, pin the dry wrap to size and mist thoroughly with a spray bottle.


Final Thoughts

Entrelac was on my โ€œsomedayโ€ list for years before I finally tried it. Once I learned the single crochet version, I made up for lost timeโ€ฆ I couldnโ€™t stop. The Pieces of You wrap is the pattern I wish someone had handed me at the beginningโ€ฆ approachable, gradient-yarn-friendly, beautifully drapey, and built so the construction makes sense as you go. If you make it, share it with me using the hashtag at the bottom of this post. I love seeing your color choices.

And rememberโ€ฆ single crochet entrelac is NOT the scary version. Itโ€™s the friendly version. Youโ€™ve got this

โค๏ธ Your BiCrafty Bestie, Marly Bird

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Filed Under: Crochet, Free Patterns, Marly Bird Premium Patterns, Our Free Patterns, Pattern Tagged With: C2C crochet, cake yarn, corner to corner entrelac, crochet entrelac, crochet technique tutorial, free crochet shawl pattern, free crochet wrap pattern, gradient yarn, intermediate crochet, Red Heart It's a Wrap Rainbow, SC entrelac, single crochet entrelac, spring fling 2026

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