Search
Close
  • The Pattern Shop
  • Our Free Patterns
    • Browse All Our Free Patterns
    • Our Free Knitting Patterns
    • Our Free Crochet Patterns
  • Blog
    • All Blog Posts
    • All Free Patterns
    • Dibble Dabble Inspiration
    • Giveaways
    • Make-Alongs
    • Product Reviews
    • Roundups
    • Tips, Tricks, Techniques for Knitting and Crochet
Stylized bird with pink and gray swirling tail above elegant โ€œMarlyโ€ text, logo for crochet accessories and home decor.
  • Marly Bird House
  • Learn to Knit & Crochet
    • Newbie? Start Here
    • Video Tutorials
    • Knitting Definitions
    • Crochet Definitions
    • Common Techniques
    • Size Charts for Knitting and Crochet Projects
  • About
ร—
  • The Pattern Shop
  • Free Patterns
  • Blog
  • Marly Bird House
  • Learn to Knit & Crochet
    • Newbie? Start Here
    • Video Tutorials
    • Knitting Definitions
    • Crochet Definitions
    • Common Techniques
    • Size Charts for Knitting and Crochet Projects
  • About
Stylized bird with pink and gray swirling tail above elegant โ€œMarlyโ€ text, logo for crochet accessories and home decor.
Search
Close

New Patterns NOW Available in Ad-Free PDF! Check out The Pattern Shop

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

May 22, 2026 By Meg Leave a Comment

“

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
Etsy
Shopify
Ravelry

Love the Pattern but Want an Ad-Free PDF? โญ

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’›

  • ๐Ÿ›’ Shop the pattern on Etsy
  • ๐Ÿ›’ Shop the pattern on Ravelry
  • ๐Ÿ›’ Shop the pattern in the Marly Bird Shopify Store

Join our Newsletter

Get Free Crochet & Knitting
Pattern Links & Coupons!

Hand-drawn bird with curling, detailed feathers and pink accents; cheerful pose showcases fine line and texture work.
>> Become An Insider <<
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
Etsy
Shopify
Ravelry

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

GROW

To Unlockย Exclusive Subscriber Contentย click the Box below and join for free by simply adding your email and creating a password! If you are having troubles, clear your cache or reset your password or login to the Grow Publisher Portal.

>> Learn More About Grow Here <<

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.

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

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
“

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

Bluebonnet Crochet Lace Shawl โ€” Free Crochet Pattern

May 12, 2026 By Meg Leave a Comment

”

The Bluebonnet Crochet Lace Shawl is a free crochet lace shawl pattern by Marly Bird, named for the Texas state wildflower. It's worked in lightweight (CYC #1 super fine) cotton-blend gradient cake yarn, using familiar stitches in the body… single crochet, half double crochet, and double crochet… with a detailed lace edging that echoes the layered petal structure of an actual bluebonnet bloom. Perfect for spring and summer layering.

The original Bluebonnet Shawl was designed for Red Heart It's A Wrap, which has since been discontinued. If you have a cake in your stash, this is the perfect pattern for it. And if you don't… I've gathered a small list of beautiful substitute yarns below that work just as well. The natural color shifts in any lightweight gradient cake yarn do most of the design work for you, the stitches are familiar, and the finished shawl is the kind of lightweight layer you'll actually reach for when the AC is set too cold.

Person models a blue and dark gray crochet lace shawl, showing stitch detail and drape; colorful background with shelves behind.

Hey, bestie ๐Ÿ’›

I'm so glad you're here. The Bluebonnet Shawl is one of those patterns I keep coming back to, year after year. The first version went up on the blog way back in 2018, and we've just refreshed the whole thing… new photos, updated formatting, the same beautiful pattern in our current standard layout. It feels like a brand-new shawl all over again.

โš ๏ธ A quick yarn note: The original Bluebonnet Shawl was designed for Red Heart It's A Wrap, which has been discontinued. If you have It's A Wrap in your stash, fantastic โ€” use it! If not, jump down to the Yarn & Materials section for my hand-picked substitute yarns. The pattern works beautifully with any lightweight (CYC #1) cotton-blend or cake gradient yarn. ๐Ÿ’™

If you've never made a lace shawl before, don't worry. We'll walk through it together. And if you're a seasoned lace crocheter… you're going to love how this stitch pattern flows.

*This post contains affiliate links. By clicking one of the links and making a purchase, a small portion will go to support the blog. The price you pay does not change. Thank you for your support of the blog.*

Blue and gray striped crochet lace shawl shown worn in three ways; close-up highlights stitch detail and drape.

What You Will Love About This Bluebonnet Crochet Lace Shawl ๐Ÿ’–

๐ŸŒธ A lace shawl that uses stitches you already know. The body of this shawl is worked entirely in single crochet, half double crochet, and double crochet. No surprise stitches in the main body, no charts you have to decode just to get started. The lace happens in the edging… by the time you get there, you'll already be comfortable with the yarn.

๐Ÿ’™ The yarn does half the design work. The Bluebonnet Shawl is designed for a lightweight (CYC #1) cotton-blend gradient cake yarn. The natural long color repeats in a gradient cake do all the color-block magic for you, with zero color management on your end. The original was Red Heart It's A Wrap (now discontinued); my substitute picks are below.

๐ŸŒฟ It's a true summer-weight shawl. Most lightweight shawl patterns call for fingering or sock yarn… which usually means a wool blend that's lovely in fall but stuffy in July. A cotton-blend lightweight yarn drapes beautifully and breathes well, making this the shawl you'll actually wear from spring through late summer.

๐Ÿ“ A petal-inspired lace edging. The stitch pattern in the lace border was designed to echo the layered petal structure of an actual bluebonnet bloom. It's a small design detail that I love… and one you can point to when someone asks “did you make that?”

๐Ÿ“„ Free here on the blog… ad-free PDF available too. The full pattern lives free right here on the blog, including the new stitch counts and updated formatting. If you'd rather work from a clean ad-free PDF (with charts), I've got you covered below.

Woman models a blue and gray crochet lace shawl, showing openwork stitches and soft drape over a white top indoors.

Quick Pattern Overview

๐Ÿงถ Craft: Crochet

๐ŸŒธ Pattern Name: Bluebonnet Crochet Lace Shawl

๐Ÿ“ Finished Size: Shawl is 23.5โ€ [59.5 cm] deep including border and 56โ€ [142 cm] in wingspan

๐ŸŽฏ Skill Level: Intermediate (advanced beginners welcome… the body is all familiar stitches, the lace edging adds the intermediate-level challenge)

๐Ÿงต Yarn: Lightweight (CYC #1 super fine) cotton-blend gradient cake yarn โ€” see Yarn & Materials below for substitute picks. (Original: Red Heart It's A Wrap, now discontinued.)

๐Ÿชก Hook: Size E/4 [3.5  mm]

๐Ÿ“ Construction: Worked flat, body in classic crochet stitches, finished with a layered lace edging

๐ŸŒธ Best for: Spring and summer layering, prayer shawls, gift shawls, “I want a lace shawl that doesn't require a 60-row chart” projects


Person models a blue crochet lace shawl in a cozy room; "Bluebonnet Crochet Shawl" pattern pages are visible behind them.
Etsy
Shopify
Ravelry

Love the Pattern but Want an Ad-Free PDF? โญ

The Bluebonnet Crochet Lace Shawl pattern is FREE right here on the blog… but if you'd rather work from a clean, printable, ad-free PDF (with crochet stitch charts and no scrolling), I have you covered.

Grab the ad-free PDF in the shop of your choice:

  • ๐Ÿ›’ Get the Pattern in my Shopify (shop.marlybird.com)
  • ๐Ÿ›๏ธ Get the Pattern in my Etsy Store
  • ๐Ÿ’› Get the pattern in my Ravelry Store

Get the latest Marly Bird patterns + bestie-only deals in your inbox every week. ๐Ÿ’›

Join our Newsletter

Get Free Crochet & Knitting
Pattern Links & Coupons!

Hand-drawn bird with curling, detailed feathers and pink accents; cheerful pose showcases fine line and texture work.
>> Become An Insider <<
A woman with glasses and curly hair models a colorful crocheted scarf, showing textured stitches and vibrant yarn.

Is the Bluebonnet Crochet Lace Shawl Right for You?

This pattern is a great fit if…

โœ… You have a cake of It's A Wrap in your stash โ€” OR you want a pattern designed for lightweight cotton-blend gradient cake yarn. The shawl was designed around the way these gradient cakes shift color naturally as you crochet. Substitute yarn picks are in the Yarn & Materials section.

โœ… You're an advanced beginner or intermediate crocheter ready to try lace. The body uses single crochet, half double crochet, and double crochet… stitches you already know. The lace edging is where you'll stretch, but you'll be comfortable with the yarn by then.

โœ… You want a lightweight, drapey shawl for spring and summer. The cotton/acrylic blend breathes well and doesn't overheat you in warmer weather.

โœ… You love a “the yarn does the work” pattern. No striping math, no color planning… just crochet and watch the cake yarn do its thing.

This pattern might NOT be the right fit if…

โŒ You've never held lace weight yarn and don't want to start there. The yarn is thin and the hook is small… it takes a little practice. (See the Build Your Skills section below for a gentle on-ramp.)

โŒ You're looking for a heavy, snuggle-up-in-winter shawl. This one's a featherweight… beautiful, but not your January blanket-shawl.


Explore More Free Crochet Shawl Patterns

If you love lace and lightweight crochet shawls as much as I do, you'll want to keep these in your queue too:

  • ๐ŸŒŠ Alpaca Clouds Crochet Wrap โ€” a free lace crochet shawl with a beginner-friendly cloud stitch and three sizes. The yarn is heavier than lace but the shawl is perfectly lightweight.
  • ๐ŸŒผ Fernanda Crochet Motif Shawl โ€” join-as-you-go motifs in DK weight
  • ๐Ÿงฃ Sunday Sideline Crochet Shawl โ€” one-skein triangle shawl for advanced beginners
  • ๐Ÿ’š Beginner Lace Border Crochet Shawl โ€” a gentle on-ramp to lace borders
  • ๐ŸŒˆ Rainbow Sprinkles Crescent Shawl โ€” also designed for cake yarns like It's A Wrap
  • ๐ŸŒฟ Chevron Waves Lacy Wrap โ€” another lightweight summer-shawl favorite

And if you want the full collection in one place, head over to the Free Crochet Patterns hub.

A woman models a neutral-tone crochet entrelac wrap, showing textured blocks, worn over black in a colorful room.
Woman models a vibrant crochet crescent shawl in pink, blue, and purple, showing off stitch texture and drape.
A woman models a textured blue alpaca crochet shawl, showing stitch detail; denim top and plants in the background.
Woman models a red crochet shawl with visible stitch detail over a floral dress, standing on grass with trees behind her.
Person models a vibrant Tunisian crochet shawl with a floral pin, displaying textured stitches indoors near bookshelves and plants.
Tunisian crochet scarf with floral and geometric patterns in orange, green, blue, teal, and white on mannequin.
Woman smiles, wearing a colorful floral crochet blanket; yarn and craft shelves are softly blurred behind her.

Is Lace Yarn Too Hard for Beginner Crocheters?

Honestly? Lace yarn isn't HARDER… it's just different. Here's what to know going in.

The biggest adjustment is tension. Lace weight yarn is thinner than the worsted or DK most crocheters start with, so your stitches will feel smaller and your hook will feel finer. The trick is to keep your tension consistent… not necessarily tight or loose, just even. Stitches should sit at a uniform height. Don't worry about speed.

The second adjustment is visibility. Lace yarn is easier to work with in good lighting. If you usually crochet on the couch under a lamp, set up a brighter task light for the first few rows… it makes a huge difference.

The good news: the body of the Bluebonnet Shawl uses three of the most common crochet stitches there are. You're already familiar with them. The yarn is the new variable… not the stitches. By the time you reach the lace edging, the yarn will feel completely normal in your hands.

๐ŸŒŸ Designer Tip: Before you start the shawl, swatch a 4-inch square in plain double crochet with your It's A Wrap and recommended hook. This gives your hands time to adjust to the yarn weight and lets you confirm gauge without commitment. Frog it after… no harm done… and you'll be ready to start the real project with confidence.
Crocheted fabric with teal and brown yarn, showing intricate patterns, clear scalloped edging, and visible texture.

Build Your Skills with the Bluebonnet Shawl

Every pattern is also a chance to grow as a crafter. Here's what you'll add to your skill set when you make the Bluebonnet Crochet Lace Shawl:

๐ŸŒธ Working with lace weight yarn. Once you've finished one lace-weight project, you'll have unlocked a whole category of patterns that probably felt intimidating before.

๐ŸŒธ Combining basic stitches into elegant fabric. Sc, hdc, and dc are workhorse stitches… but when you arrange them with intention, they create texture and drape that looks far more advanced than the technique itself.

๐ŸŒธ Working a lace edging. Lace borders are the gateway skill to true lace shawls. The edging on this pattern is a perfect introduction… contained, repeating, and visually rewarding.

๐ŸŒธ Blocking a finished lace project. Blocking is what transforms lace from “huh, looks crinkly” to “wow, look at that drape.” See the Blocking Tips section below for the steps.


Yarn & Materials

The Bluebonnet Crochet Lace Shawl is designed for a lightweight (CYC #1 super fine) cotton-blend gradient cake yarn. The original yarn was Red Heart It's A Wrap, which has been discontinued. The good news: a number of beautiful substitute yarns work just as well, and the pattern is forgiving enough to look gorgeous in any of them.

โš ๏ธ About Red Heart It's A Wrap: The original It's A Wrap (and the full It's A Wrap family โ€” Rainbow, Sprinkles, and Hues) has been discontinued by Red Heart. If you have a cake in your stash, you can absolutely still use it for this pattern โ€” in fact, that's exactly what it was designed for. But because it's no longer available to buy, my main recommendations below point to current substitute yarns.

Recommended Substitute Yarns

There isn't a perfect 1:1 big-box substitute for It's A Wrap, but these are the yarns I recommend (in order from “closest match” to “would look stunning, just adjust your hook”):

๐ŸŒฟ KnitPicks Candy Mountain โ€” the closest match. CYC #1 fingering/lace weight, gradient self-striping. Easy to find, ships fast, and the color shifts behave very much like It's A Wrap. My top pick for a current, easy-to-buy substitute.

๐ŸŒธ KnitPicks Summer Breeze โ€” sport weight (CYC #2), cotton blend. Slightly heavier than the original, which means a slightly heavier shawl and a slightly larger finished size. Use a hook size up from the pattern and check gauge. The drape is gorgeous.

๐Ÿ’™ Hobbii Sultan Deluxe Shine โ€” cotton-blend cake yarn from Hobbii (international shipping, but worth it for the colors). A great option if you want something a little more luxe than acrylic-blend.

๐ŸŒธ Hobbii Azalea and Hobbii Honolulu โ€” two more lovely cotton-blend cake yarns from Hobbii's collection. Great for spring/summer shawls.

๐ŸŒˆ Ice Yarns Cakes Cotton Fine โ€” a fantastic substitute, especially if you're trying to replace It's A Wrap Rainbow in any pattern (it works beautifully in the Tilted Blocks Shawl too).

๐Ÿงฉ Ice Yarns Cakes Puzzle โ€” another cake yarn option from Ice Yarns with similar weight and gradient behavior.

โ˜๏ธ Ice Yarns Mohair Pastel โ€” if you want a completely different vibe, a lace-weight mohair would give the shawl a soft, halo-y, dreamy texture. Pastel colorways are stunning for spring.

Honest heads-up: there aren't currently any big-box (Michaels, JOANN, Hobby Lobby) yarns at this exact weight + construction. So if you want a true cotton-blend lightweight cake yarn, you'll be ordering online from KnitPicks, Hobbii, or Ice Yarns. All three are reliable shippers โ€” just plan a few extra days into your project timeline.

๐ŸŒŸ Designer Tip: Whatever yarn you choose, swatch first. Lightweight cotton blends, sport weights, and mohair all behave differently โ€” a quick 4-inch gauge swatch will save you from “why is my shawl twice as big as the pattern says?” frustration later.

Other Materials You'll Need

  • ๐Ÿชก Crochet hook: Grab a set of affordable crochet hooks and never be without the right size!
  • ๐Ÿ“ Stitch markers, scissors, tapestry needle (all your usual finishing tools)
  • ๐Ÿ› Blocking supplies: blocking wires + pins and a no-rinse wool wash like Eucalan (works beautifully on cotton/acrylic blends, cotton, and mohair)
โญ๏ธ Marly Bird Amazon Storefront โญ๏ธ

Choosing Your Colors for the Bluebonnet Shawl ๐ŸŽจ

The original Bluebonnet Shawl is famous for those soft, dreamy blue-to-purple-to-cream color shifts โ€” that's the gradient cake yarn doing its magic. But here's the thing: this pattern looks gorgeous in just about any color story you can imagine. The stitch pattern itself โ€” the petal-inspired lace edging, the panel shaping in the body โ€” is what makes the shawl special. The yarn just dresses it up.

If a true blue-bonnet palette isn't your thing, or you want to make one for a friend whose favorite color is decidedly NOT blue, here are a few ways to think about color for this shawl:

Woman modeling a bluebonnet crochet lace shawl, showing openwork stitches and drape, worn over a white top and jeans.
Woman modeling a crochet lace shawl in teal and brown, highlighting delicate stitching and drape. "Marly Bird" in corner.

Classic Gradient Cake โ€” The Original Look ๐Ÿ’™

This is the shawl as it was designed โ€” natural color shifts that move through several related shades over the course of a single cake of yarn. There's zero color management on your end: you just keep crocheting and the colors change themselves. If you love the original Bluebonnet vibe, any of the substitute yarns in the Yarn & Materials section above will give you that same gradient effect (just in different color stories).

Bluebonnet Crochet Lace Shawl shown in a soft orange to blue gradient cake yarn โ€” the alternaive colorway to original sample- Hobbii Azalea lace yarn cake

A Different Gradient โ€” A Whole New Mood ๐ŸŒ…

Swap the cool blue-and-purple gradient for a warm sunset palette, a leafy forest gradient, or a soft pastel rainbow, and the shawl reads completely differently. Same stitches, same construction, totally new vibe. This is a great option if you're making the shawl as a gift and want to match the recipient's wardrobe or favorite colors.

Solid or Semi-Solid โ€” Let the Stitches Shine โœจ

Here's a secret about lace patterns: they often look BEST in a single solid color. When you remove the visual movement of a gradient, your eye lands on the lace itself โ€” the open spaces, the petal shapes in the edging, the way the panels swirl out from the center top. A solid Bluebonnet Shawl is a completely different garment than the gradient version, and honestlyโ€ฆ it might be my favorite way to make it.

Marly Bird wears lace crochet shawls in 16 colors, arranged in a grid. Each cowl showcases unique stitch and texture. Marly Bird logo bottom right.
Bluebonnet Crochet Lace Shawl shown in an alternate gradient colorway, demonstrating how the pattern looks in different color stories

If you go solid, I recommend a soft, slightly tonal yarn (a hand-dyed semi-solid with subtle variation, or a brand's “solid” colorway that still has a little depth) over a perfectly flat color. The tiny tonal shifts make the lace look richer without competing with it. Think of it like the difference between a flat painted wall and a wall with a soft tone-on-tone texture โ€” the textured one shows off everything in front of it better.

Color ideas for a solid Bluebonnet:

  • ๐Ÿค Soft cream or natural โ€” timeless, bridal, perfect for a wedding wrap
  • ๐Ÿฉถ Light gray or silver โ€” modern, sophisticated, pairs with everything in your closet
  • ๐Ÿ’™ A single shade of blue โ€” keeps the Bluebonnet name but simplifies the look
  • ๐ŸŒฟ Sage green or dusty rose โ€” gentle, wearable, neutral-adjacent
  • ๐Ÿ–ค Deep navy, charcoal, or burgundy โ€” dramatic, evening-friendly, the lace really pops
๐ŸŒŸ Designer Tip: If you can't decide between gradient and solid, ask yourself this: do you want the YARN to be the star, or do you want the STITCHES to be the star? Gradients hand the spotlight to the yarn. Solids hand it to the lace. Both are gorgeous โ€” there's no wrong answer, just two different shawls.

Video Tutorials

Two helpful video tutorials to keep open while you work on this shawl:

  • ๐ŸŽฅ How to Bury Ends ยป Click here for video help

Bluebonnet Crochet Lace Shawl shown in an alternate gradient colorway, demonstrating how the pattern looks in different color stories

  • ๐ŸŽฅ Reading Crochet Diagrams ยป Click here for video help
A person models a lacy blue crochet shawl, shown in three poses to display its intricate stitchwork and drape.

Bluebonnet Crochet Lace Shawl โ€” Pattern Details

Skill Level

Adventurous Beginner

Finished Measurements

Shawl is 23.5โ€ [59.5 cm] deep including border and 56โ€ [142 cm] in wingspan

Gauge

24 dc by 11 dc rows = 4โ€ [10 cm] by 4โ€ [10 cm]; use any size hook to obtain the gauge.

Materials

Crochet Yarn 

Red Heart, Itโ€™s a Wrap (50% Cotton/ 50% Acrylic, 1100 yds / 1006 m, 7 oz/ 200 g, CYCA# 1 fingering) : Action, 2 cakes

Note: Yarn has been discontinued. 

Crochet Hook

Size E/4 [3.5  mm]

Notions 

  • Stitch Markers
  • Tapestry Needle
  • Scissors
  • Tape Measure
  • Blocking Squares 
  • Blocking Pins 
  • Soaking Basin 
  • Eucalan Wool Wash 
  • Blocking Wires (ideal for lace work) 
โญ๏ธ Marly Bird Amazon Storefront โญ๏ธ

Abbreviations

Ch – Chain(s) 

Dc – Double Crochet 

Dtr – Double Treble Crochet

Hdc – Half Double Crochet

RS – Right Side 

Sc – Single Crochet

Sl st – Slip Stitch

Sp(s) – Space(s) 

St(s) – Stitch(es)

Tch– Turning Chain

WS – Wrong Side


Special Stitches

โญ๏ธDouble Treble Crochet (Dtr): Yarn over hook three times, insert hook into indicated stitch, yarn over and pull up a loop; [yarn over and draw through two loops] four times.

โญ๏ธReverse Single Crochet (reverse 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.


CROCHET STITCH DIAGRAM

โœจ Following along with the free pattern on MarlyBird.com? Youโ€™ll have everything you need to make the shawl, but if you want the exclusive stitch diagram charts, those are only available in the ad-free PDF version.

Youโ€™ll enjoy a clean, printable, ad-free experience while supporting Marly Birdโ€™s free tutorials and patterns ๐Ÿ’–

Etsy
Shopify
Ravelry

SCHEMATIC

Crochet shawl diagram with bluebonnet shape, labeled sides, and lines showing triangular lace sections for shaping.

Pattern Notes

The shawl is made from the center top to bottom with panel shaping increases made every other row. 

The color change happens naturally with the yarn. 

GROW

To Unlockย Exclusive Subscriber Contentย click the Box below and join for free by simply adding your email and creating a password! If you are having troubles, clear your cache or reset your password or login to the Grow Publisher Portal.

>> Learn More About Grow Here <<

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.

Person models a blue and dark gray crochet lace shawl, showing stitch detail and drape; colorful background with shelves behind.

Bluebonnet Crochet Lace Shawl โ€” Pattern Instructions

Body

๐ŸŒŸ Designer Note โ€” The Start of This Shawl Will Feel a Little Different (and That's Okay) ๐Ÿ’›

A heads-up before you pick up your hook: the way this shawl begins is probably different from any shawl you've started before. You'll chain just 5 stitches, work a tiny foundation row, and then in Row 3 you'll stretch your yarn down to work into the edge stitches of Row 1 โ€” essentially crocheting around the little starting nub to build out from the center top of the shawl.

If that sounds strange, that's because it IS a little strange the first time you do it. Most shawl patterns start with a long foundation chain or a magic ring, not a tiny anchor that you build outward from. I promise it works. Just follow the instructions exactly as written for Rows 1 through 4, and by Row 5 your shawl will look like a normal shawl-in-progress with the panel shaping clearly visible. You don't need to understand WHY it works at the start to get a beautiful finished piece โ€” you just need to trust the instructions for the first four rows.

Once you're past Row 4, the construction settles into a rhythm: each odd row adds 2 stitches and each even row adds 12 stitches, and the markers move out across the body to shape the five panels.

Ch 5

Row 1 (WS): 2 sc in second ch from hook, sc in each of next 2 ch, 2 sc in last ch, turn.โ€” 6 sts.

Row 2 (RS): Ch 1, 2 sc in first st, sc in each st to last st, 2 sc in last st, turn.โ€” 8 sts.

Row 3: Ch 1, sc in edge st of row 1 (stretch yarn to reach side, work over ch just made), 2 sc in first st of row 2, sc in each st to last st, 2 sc in last st, sc in left edge st of row 1, turn. โ€“ 12 sts.

Row 4: Ch 1, 2 sc in first st and each st across, turn. โ€“ 24 sts.

Row 5: Ch 1, 2 sc in first st, sc in each of next 2 sts, * ch 2, sc in next st, ch 2, sc in each of next 3 sts; repeat from * to last st, 2 sc in last st, turn. โ€“ 26 sc + 10 ch-2 sps.

Row 6: Ch 1, 2 sc in first st, * sc in each st to next ch-2 sp, sc in next ch-2 sp, sc in next st (place marker), sc in next ch-2 sp; repeat from * 4 more times, sc in each st to last st, 2 sc in last st, turn. โ€“ 38 sts, (7 sts in first and last sections, 6 sts in each of the 4 center sections).

Row 7: Ch 1, 2 sc in first st, * sc in each st to marker, ch 2, sc in marked st (move marker), ch 2; repeat from * 4 more times, sc in each st to last st, 2 sc in last st, turn.โ€” 40 sts + 10 ch-2 sps.

Row 8: Ch 1, 2 sc in first st, * sc in each st to next ch-2 sp, sc in next ch-2 sp, sc in next st (move marker), sc in next ch-2 sp; repeat from * 4 more times, sc in each st to last st, 2 sc in last st, turn. โ€“ 52 sts, (10 sts in first and last sections, 8 sts in each of the center sections).

Rows 9-16: Repeat Rows 7-8 โ€“ 108 sts, (22 sts in first and last sections, 16 sts in each of the center sections).  Note: Each odd row increases by 2 sts; each even row increases by 12 sts.

Row 17: Ch 1, 2 hdc in first st, * hdc in each st to marker, ch 2, hdc in marked st (move marker), ch 2; repeat from * 4 more times, hdc in each st to last st, 2 hdc in last st, turn.โ€”110 sts + 10 ch-2 sps.

Row 18: Ch 1, 2 hdc in first st, * hdc in each st to next ch-2 sp, hdc in next ch-2 sp, hdc in next st (move marker), hdc in next ch-2 sp; repeat from * 4 more times, hdc in each st to last st, 2 hdc in last st, turn. โ€“ 122 sts, (25 sts in first and last sections, 18 sts in each of the center sections).

Rows 19-28: Repeat Rows 17-18 โ€“ 192 sts, (40 sts in first and last sections, 28 sts in each of the center sections).

Row 29: Ch 2 (does not count as a st throughout), 2 dc in first st, * dc in each st to marker, ch 2, dc in marked st (move marker), ch 2; repeat from * 4 more times, dc in each st to last st, 2 dc in last st, turn.โ€”194 sts + 10 ch-2 sps.

Row 30: Ch 2, 2 dc in first st, * dc in each st to next ch-2 sp, dc in next ch-2 sp, dc in next st (move marker), dc in next ch-2 sp; repeat from * 4 more times, dc in each st to last st, 2 dc in last st, turn. โ€“ 206 sts, (43 sts in first and last sections, 30 sts in each of the center sections).

Rows 31-68: Repeat Rows 29-30 โ€“ 472 sts, (100 sts in first and last sections, 68 sts in each of the center sections).

Row 69: Ch 1, sc in each st across, (move markers up). Turn. 

Row 70: Ch 1, [sc in ea st across to marker, 2 sc in marked st] twice, sc in each st across to next marker, sc in marked st, [sc in ea st across to marker, 2 sc in marked st] twice, sc in each st across to end, turn — 476 sts.

Border

Note: Border edging is made from multiple short rows which create each scallop and shell individually.  The edging has a multiple of 25 plus 1.

FIRST HALF SHELL

Row 1a (WS): Ch 1, sl st next 5 sc, turn. 

Row 1b (RS): Skip 4 sl sts, 7 dtr in last sl st, reverse sc in each dtr just made (half shell completed), turn.

Row 1c (WS): Skip 3 sts on body, sl st in next st (same as prev sl st). 

REPEAT FOR BODY

Row 2a (WS): * Sl st in next 7 sts, ch 5, skip 2 sts along body, sl st in next st, ch 3, skip 1 st along body, sl st in next st, turn. 

Row 2b (RS): 12 dc in ch-5 space, skip 1 st along body, sl st in next st on body, ch 3, skip 1 st along body, sl st in next st, turn. 

Row 2c (WS): [Ch 2, skip 1 dc, dc in next dc] 6 times, ch 2, skip 1 st along body, sl st in next st, ch 3, skip 1 st along body, sl st in next st, turn.  

Row 2d (RS): [3 dc in next ch-2 sp] 7 times, skip 1 st along body, sl st in next st, turn. 

Row 2e (WS): [Ch 5, skip next dc, sl st in next dc] 10 times, ch 5, skip next dc**, sl st in next 9 sts along body, turn. 

Row 3a (RS): Skip next 4 sl sts, 13 dtr in next st (shell made), skip 3 sts along body, sl st in next st on body (same st as prev ch-5 sp), reverse sc in each dtr, turn.

Row 3b (WS): Skip 3 sts on body (from center of shell), sl st in next st, turn

Repeat from * on Row 2a thru Row 3b across to last 5 sts ending at ** on Row 2e. 

LAST HALF SHELL

Row 4a (WS): Sl st in each st to end, ch 5 (counts as dtr), turn. 

Row 4b (RS): 6 dtr in last st (half shell completed), skip 3 sts along body, sl st in next st, reverse sc in each dtr. Fasten off.

Finishing

Fasten off, weave in the ends. 


Crochet Lace Shawl in blue, green, and gray displayed to show intricate stitch detail and soft texture. Shelves behind.

Wash and Block

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 creation with a thorough wet block:

  • Begin by submerging your piece in a basin or sink filled with water. This is a great moment to add a touch of gentle soap or specialized wool washโ€”enhanced with lanolin and fiber conditionersโ€”to not only clean but also condition the yarn. (Just remember to rinse well, especially if you aren't using a no-rinse wash.)
  • Remove as much water as you can without stretching or distorting the fibers.

Some helpful techniques include:

  • Pressing the piece against the sink to shed excess water.
  • Gently squeezing between your handsโ€”just avoid any twisting or wringing.
  • ๐Ÿ’ก Always support the entire garment when lifting to prevent any part from stretching out of shape. 

Carefully lay the piece on a large towel without stretching it. Fold the towels ends over your project and roll it up like a burrito to wick away more moisture. Aim for a balanceโ€”your piece should be damp, not sopping, and certainly not dry, to avoid any creases. 

Place your piece on the blocking board with care. Now, shape it while it's damp.

Align with the grid if your board has one, centering your work for symmetry.

Gently expand your piece to the desired measurements, using your pattern's schematic and the grid for precision.

๐Ÿšจ USE EXTRA CARE TO AVOID OVERSTRETCHING! As the project is damp, some yarns like to overstretch or grow and you must be vigilant to avoid this.

Secure with pins, using them sparingly to keep the fabric flat. Smooth the piece with your hands to ensure an even spread.

Leave your masterpiece to dry and take this chance to cast on a new project. Drying could take a full day, but if you're pressed for time, setting up a fan can speed up the process significantly. Do not place the project in direct sunlight as it can discolor the yarn!

Remember, wet blocking is more than a finishing stepโ€”it's an act of transformation, turning your knitted work into an heirloom-quality piece. Now, step back, let the magic happen, and watch as your stitches settle into their new, polished configuration.


Person models a blue crochet lace shawl in a cozy room; "Bluebonnet Crochet Shawl" pattern pages are visible behind them.
Etsy
Shopify
Ravelry

Blocking Tips for Your Bluebonnet Shawl

Blocking is the single biggest thing you can do to make your finished shawl look professional. Lace especially needs it… the holes open up, the drape settles in, and the fabric flattens into the shape you designed it to be. Here's how I block this one.

  1. Weave in all ends first. You want them secure before blocking, because wet fibers can shift.
  2. Fill a clean sink or basin with cool water and a tiny splash of Eucalan wool wash. Soak the finished shawl for 15-20 minutes. Press it gently under the water, do not agitate.
  3. Drain. Gently press out excess water (do not wring). Roll the shawl in a clean towel and press to remove more water.
  4. Lay the damp shawl on blocking mats. Use blocking wires along the long edges to keep things straight, and T-pins to pin out each point of the lace edging.
  5. Let it dry completely. This usually takes overnight depending on humidity. Don't unpin too early… the shape sets as it dries.

Once it's blocked, the lace pattern opens up beautifully and the whole shawl drapes the way it's supposed to. This is the moment you'll be glad you bought blocking supplies. ๐Ÿ’›


Got It's A Wrap in Your Stash? More Patterns to Use It Up

If you have It's A Wrap (any of the four versions โ€” original, Rainbow, Sprinkles, or Hues) sitting in your stash from when it was still in production, you're not alone! It was a beloved yarn, and a lot of us bought more of it than we could use up before it disappeared. Here are more of my free patterns designed around this same gorgeous cake yarn:

  • ๐ŸŒˆ Rainbow Sprinkles Crescent Shawl โ€” crescent-shaped, designed for It's A Wrap Sprinkles
  • ๐ŸŒฟ Chevron Waves Lacy Wrap โ€” chevron lace, lightweight, summer-ready
  • ๐Ÿ“š It's A Wrap One-Ball Patterns Roundup โ€” the full collection of patterns from me and other designers that use just ONE ball of It's A Wrap yarn. The perfect stash-busting hub.

Favorite & Queue the Bluebonnet Shawl on Ravelry

Favorite This Pattern on Ravelry - Marly Bird

More Free Crochet Shawl Patterns You'll Love

Add these to your queue while you're here:

  • ๐ŸŒŠ Alpaca Clouds Crochet Wrap
  • ๐ŸŒผ Fernanda Crochet Motif Shawl
  • ๐Ÿงฃ Sunday Sideline Crochet Shawl
  • ๐Ÿ’š Beginner Lace Border Crochet Shawl
  • ๐Ÿ“š Browse the full Free Crochet Patterns hub
A woman in a teal crochet lace shawl smiles, highlighting the shawlโ€™s intricate openwork and soft texture.

Frequently Asked Questions

About the designer: Marly Bird is a knit and crochet designer, teacher, and host of Mondays with Marly podcast with professional experience designing since 2007 designing for major yarn brands including Red Heart, Cascade, Bernat, Yarnspirations, Lion Brand, and KnitPicks & WeCrochet. She is one of the few designers in the industry who teaches both knitting and crochet at a master level โ€” her signature “BiCrafty” approach. Marly's free patterns and tutorials have helped millions of crafters learn new techniques on marlybird.com and her YouTube channel.

Is the Bluebonnet Crochet Lace Shawl beginner-friendly?

It's best suited for advanced beginners and intermediate crocheters. The body of the shawl uses single crochet, half double crochet, and double crochet… stitches most crocheters know well. The intermediate-level challenge is the lace edging at the end, plus working with lace weight yarn for the first time. By the time you reach the edging, the yarn will feel comfortable in your hands.

What yarn should I use for the Bluebonnet Shawl now that It's A Wrap is discontinued?

My top substitute pick is KnitPicks Candy Mountain โ€” it's the closest match in weight and gradient behavior. Hobbii's Sultan Deluxe Shine, Azalea, and Honolulu cotton blends are excellent options too. Ice Yarns Cakes Cotton Fine is another favorite, especially if you're replacing It's A Wrap Rainbow specifically. See the full substitute yarn list in the Yarn & Materials section above. If you still have It's A Wrap in your stash, you can absolutely use it โ€” that's what the pattern was originally designed for.

Is lace weight yarn difficult for beginner crocheters?

It's not harder, just different. The yarn is thinner and the hook is smaller, so consistent tension matters more than with worsted weight. Good lighting helps a lot. I recommend swatching a small square in plain double crochet before you start the shawl… it gives your hands time to adjust without commitment.

How long does the Bluebonnet Crochet Lace Shawl take to make?

Most crocheters finish it in two to three weeks of casual evening crochet, depending on how much time you put in. The body works up faster than you'd expect for a lace-weight project because it uses tall stitches (hdc and dc) rather than only single crochet. The lace edging takes a little longer per row, but there are far fewer rows of it. [MARLY: confirm typical hours/weeks if there's a more specific estimate from pattern testing.]

Do I have to block this shawl?

Yes, please block it! Blocking is what makes lace look like lace. Before blocking, the fabric will look crinkly and the lace edging will feel a little scrunched up. After a proper wet-block (see the Blocking Tips section above), the lace opens up, the drape settles in, and the whole shawl transforms. It's the single biggest finishing step you can take.

Where can I get the ad-free PDF of the Bluebonnet Shawl?

The ad-free PDF (with crochet stitch charts) is available in my Ravelry shop, my Etsy shop, and at shop.marlybird.com. The PDF includes the full pattern plus charts that aren't shown on the blog version, so it's the easiest way to work the pattern without scrolling.

Why is it called the Bluebonnet Shawl?

It's named for the Texas state wildflower โ€” those gorgeous blue-purple blooms that carpet Texas highways every spring. The lace stitch pattern in the edging echoes the layered petal structure of an actual bluebonnet bloom, which is a small design detail I love. If you've ever driven through Texas Hill Country in April, you know exactly the color and softness this shawl is named for.

A woman models a crocheted lace shawl in blue and teal, showing stitch detail; yarn shelves fill the background.

Final Thoughts

The Bluebonnet Crochet Lace Shawl has been one of my favorite patterns for years, and getting to re-release it with fresh photos and our current standard layout feels like reintroducing an old friend. Whether you're crocheting it as a gift, a prayer shawl, or simply because you have a cake of It's A Wrap calling your name from the stash… I hope you love making it as much as I loved designing it. ๐Ÿ’™๐ŸŒธ

If you make one, please share it with me. Tag @MarlyBird on Instagram or post in the Marly's Minions Facebook group. There's nothing better than seeing your finished pieces. ๐Ÿ’›

And if this pattern brightened your day, share it with a fellow crocheter on Facebook โ€” that's how patterns like this one find the people who need them most. ๐ŸŒธ

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
๐ŸŒธ Spring Fling Day 7 Spotlight ๐ŸŒธ

This pattern debuted as Day 7 of Spring Fling 2026 (Tue May 12, 2026), part of my 20-day knit and crochet pattern celebration. The free pattern stays free forever right here on the blog… and you can grab the ad-free PDF anytime on Etsy, Shopify, or Ravelry.

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

Share your finished Bluebonnet Shawl with the hashtag #SpringFling2026 + #BluebonnetShawl ๐Ÿ’™
“

Filed Under: Crochet, Free Patterns, Marly Bird Premium Patterns, Our Free Patterns, Pattern Tagged With: crochet shawl, free crochet pattern, lace crochet, Marly Bird crochet pattern, Red Heart It's A Wrap, spring fling 2026, summer crochet

Let's Be Social

Join the Marly's Minions Facebook group to share, ask questions, or chat about all of your yarn related crafts!

Join the group
Cartoon of a smiling woman with brown hair in a bun, glasses, black jacket and green shirt, waving next to large "hi" text.

Quick Links

The Pattern Shop

Our Free Patterns

Blog

Marly Bird House

Learn to Knit & Crochet

About

Giveaway Terms and Privacy Notice

Find Us Everywhere

Join the Newsletter

YouTube Channel

Marly's Minions FB Group

Etsy Store

Ravelry Store

 

AN ELITE CAFEMEDIA HOME/DIY PUBLISHER

Information from your device can be used to personalize your ad experience. Do not sell or share my personal information.

Privacy Policyย  ย Termsย  ย Marly Bird Legal Documents Copyright © 2026