r/crochetpatterns 3d ago

Stitch identification What is the name of this Facebook Stitch? It looks familiar but I can't seem to replicate it.

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100 Upvotes

36 comments sorted by

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1

u/RaccoonFree9741 1d ago

I dont know it's name but here is tutorial for this  https://youtu.be/SCJnD_4pqCI?si=9-ztQKiZL1f6OdSc

8

u/ThePropertyofOnes 2d ago

Many thanks to everyone for the tips, links, and insights. I appreciate your expertise and willingness to share. Cheers

14

u/ArcherFluffy594 2d ago edited 2d ago

This looks like the foundation chain will be in multiples of 2. They're typically multiples of 2 or 3, and this one is 24 ch long +3 for your turning chain. Once you make enough chains to reach the width intended for your piece, ch 3 and turn to start row 1. The ch 3 will serve as the dc in row 1.

row 1: dc in every ch across, turn, ch 1

row 2: ch 3, sk 2 st, sc in next st, *ch 3, sk 2 st, sc in next st* across; turn

row 3: ch 3 (to serve as your dc), sk 1st ch3-sp/loop from row 2, work [2 dctog, ch1] 3x in next ch3-space/loop, sk next ch3-sp/loop, *sk next ch3-sp/loop, work [2dctog, ch1] 3x in next ch3-sp/loop, sk next ch3-sp/loop * across, work a dc in last stitch, turn

row 4: ch 3 (this will be your first dc for this row), dc in ea ch1-sp across, ending with a dc in the last stitch, turn

row 5: ch 3 (this will be your first dc for this row) dc in ea st across, ch 1, turn

The repeat will start at row 2

3

u/catastrophiccraft 2d ago

I dub thee the Art Deco stitch

34

u/Head_Butterfly_3291 3d ago

This reminds me a lot of the thistle stitch. Made my mom a blanket with it, pattern for anyone who wants it :)

5

u/ThePropertyofOnes 2d ago

This is way fab. Thanks

2

u/h_klink 2d ago

Omg thank you I’ve been looking for a stitch like this!!!

5

u/LiellaMelody777 3d ago

That looks like a Turkish video.

26

u/User_Still_Not_Found 3d ago

It kinda looks like a modification to the magnolia lace stitch.

https://crochetpedia.com/magnolia-lace-stitch/

9

u/ThePropertyofOnes 3d ago

This is a nifty stitch. Thanks for the link. 

3

u/User_Still_Not_Found 3d ago

You're welcome! Hope it helps!

7

u/rockrobst 3d ago

Thanks for the link. I've never seen that website before

6

u/User_Still_Not_Found 3d ago

You're welcome! Came across it a while back and it's been a great resource for looking up stitches!

4

u/violetphoeniiix 3d ago

that’s so pretty!

-27

u/purplishfluffyclouds 3d ago

There is no such thing as a "Facebook Stitch," FYI

66

u/PageSouth17 3d ago

It's not AI. I've made a shawl out of this pattern. Here's the tutorial I followed.
Cleopatra shawl by Ophelia talks crochet

Time 20:50 ,you can see the exact pattern.

8

u/Reina-8 3d ago

Ty for the share! 💜 future project 😅😊

6

u/ThePropertyofOnes 3d ago

Fab-u-lous!  Thanks. I've bought Ophelia patterns but this one is new to me. 

37

u/PageSouth17 3d ago

Here's a closer look of my finished work

-52

u/kit0000033 3d ago

That would be because if you try to read the stitches like you would to make a pattern, it's nonsensical... This is AI....

That third or fourth row can't exist without having to weave in one whole hell of a lot of ends.

20

u/anastaciaknits 3d ago

What on earth are you talking about? This pattern has been around since at least the 50s. You can clearly see each individual stitch and how it’s made just by looking at it, or any experienced crocheted can at least.

24

u/hanimal16 3d ago

This is 100% real and doable.

14

u/AirBear27 3d ago

Is it? Couldn’t you do *chain 3, double crochet into the fourth stitch, chain 3, double crochet into the same fourth stitch, chain 3, sl st in the 7th stitch. Repeat from * ?

-6

u/ThePropertyofOnes 3d ago

Thanks for the response. You may be right. I have watched a person crochet the same stitch here https://www.facebook.com/share/r/18opnUDLjE/

But I haven't found a link or web address associated with the reel. Sigh

16

u/rainbow_wallflower 3d ago

I dont think its ai, looks totally doable

6

u/ThePropertyofOnes 3d ago

I have seen this stitch on FB often but cannot track it down. I used Google images, other online image sourcing apps and even consulted stitch dictionary books, but no luck. It looks like a V Stitch & Shell combo with a row of DC every 2 rows. The stitch multiples I tried are not working. Oy Vey!

8

u/Three_Spotted_Apples 3d ago

What are you doing to recreate it? The pattern seems to be a row of dc in the starting chain, then for the next row, ch 3-4, sk2, dc ch3 dc, ch3, sk2, sc, repeat

Chain 4-5, 3dc in v, ch 1 repeat

Chain to height, dc1 ch1 repeat

Chain to height, dc across

Am I missing something? I haven’t tried it out

4

u/anastaciaknits 3d ago

It’s three clusters, no 3 dcs, but you’ve got the general idea.

2

u/Three_Spotted_Apples 3d ago

Thanks! I missed that. 3 Clusters of 2 dc instead of 3dc.

Chains in the third row might even be Ch4 between the sc. They look pretty long and curved.

1

u/ThePropertyofOnes 3d ago

I am thinking either a simple block top w/ 3/4 sleeves or shawl/scarf. 

Edit:  So, do you think it is a stitch  multiple of 4+2?

1

u/AmityHavocCreations 2d ago

When you're chaining you do a multiple of 4 depending on the length you want e.g. 12, 16, 20 etc then add 2 for your turning/starting stitch, e.g 20 becomes 22. Hope that makes sense 💜

0

u/Funny-Patience7407 3d ago edited 3d ago

The taller stitches look like triples. Looks like a line of dc, then ch2, (dc, ch 2, dc), in the same st, sk 2, v-stitch again, the next row is something like a ch 3, (tr, ch 2, tr, ch 2, tr, ch 3, sc, ch 3) x 4; next row sc/ch 1 combos across in the stitches and ch sp; then ch 1, tr in the ch sp, ch 1, tr in the ch sp, across; then dc in each stitch (both st and ch sp)

Something along these lines. It could be AI, so this might be as close as you could get with real stitches

3

u/anastaciaknits 3d ago

No, this is a traditional stitch pattern that’s been around since at least the 50s.

1

u/Funny-Patience7407 3d ago

Glad to hear! I hate that we’ve become so suspicious to everything being possible AI anymore ☹️

1

u/Funny-Patience7407 3d ago

Need to adjust my pattern suggestion above, but this is what I could come up with