
You wanna get better at crochet? There’s a very specific moment every crocheter knows. You’re holding your work. It doesn’t look like the photo. The stitches feel uneven. You’re not entirely sure where the last row even began… and somehow, the yarn is judging you.
That moment? That’s where confidence usually disappears. Crocheting confidence isn’t about being perfect. It’s about reaching a point where you trust your hands enough to keep going anyway. Where you stop asking “am I doing this right?” every five minutes and start thinking “this is mine.”
This article isn’t about becoming the best crocheter in the room. It’s about becoming comfortable in your own rhythm—and actually enjoying it.
Why Crocheting Confidence Feels So Hard
Before we fix it, let’s name it. Most confidence issues in crocheting don’t come from lack of skill. They come from how we think about our skill.
Common blocks look like this:
• You’re afraid of making mistakes, so you hesitate.
• You want everything to look perfect, so nothing feels good enough.
• You open a pattern and immediately feel overwhelmed.
• You scroll through Etsy or Pinterest and suddenly everyone seems better than you.
And just like that, something that should feel calming turns into quiet pressure.
Here’s the truth: confidence doesn’t come first. It follows action. Always.

Build Crocheting Confidence Through the Basics
Confidence starts where your hands feel steady. Not in complex patterns. Not in advanced techniques. In the basics you repeat until they become automatic.
Start simple: Spend 10 minutes a day just working chains and single crochet rows. Focus on tension. Not speed or perfection. Just consistency.
Then build from there. Learn these five stitches well:
• single crochet
• half double crochet
• double crochet
• treble crochet
•slip stitch
If you need help with these basic stitches here is a collection of 5-25 second videos with every one of them.
You don’t need dozens of techniques. You need a few that feel familiar. Once these clicks, something shifts. Your hands stop asking for permission. They just move. And that’s where crocheting confidence begins.
Practice in Small, Repeatable Wins
Long sessions won’t build confidence. They usually build frustration. Instead, think small and frequent.
Try a 30-day rhythm:
• one small motif a day
• one flower
• one square
• one repeatable shape
Not to create a masterpiece. Just to create something finished. Because finishing matters. Every completed piece—even a tiny one—tells your brain: “I can do this.”
Track it if you want. Take photos. Keep them. Not for Instagram. For yourself. Watching your own progress is one of the fastest ways to build quiet confidence.

Mistakes Are Not the Problem (Avoiding Them Is)
Here’s the uncomfortable truth. The people who improve fastest are not the ones who avoid mistakes. They’re the ones who face them without drama.
Made a mistake? Good. Now you have information.
You can:
• frog it and redo
• leave it if it doesn’t matter
• adjust and move forward
Use stitch markers (or small pieces of yarn or wire). Count your stitches out loud. Slow down when something feels off. And most importantly, remove the emotional reaction. A missed stitch is not a failure. It’s just a missed stitch.
The moment you stop attaching meaning to mistakes, crocheting confidence grows fast. And believe me, there will be a time really soon that you will be able to watch your favorite shows while crocheting something that now looks impossible without any mistakes. It just takes practice.
Create a Mindset That Actually Supports You
Confidence is not just skill. It’s how you talk to yourself while you’re learning. Instead of: “This looks bad”, try: “I finished this row”. Instead of: “I don’t understand this”, try: “I’m learning this”. It sounds small, but it changes everything.
Also, don’t crochet in isolation forever. Share your work. Talk to other makers. Join a group. Post something imperfect. Not for validation. For perspective. You’ll quickly realize that everyone is figuring things out as they go. Even the ones who look like they aren’t.
Stop Comparing Your Beginning to Someone Else’s Middle
Comparison is the fastest way to destroy crocheting confidence. You see polished photos. Perfect tension. Clean finishing.
What you don’t see:
• the frogged rows
• the failed attempts
• the quiet frustration behind the scenes
Your work doesn’t need to look like theirs. It needs to look like yours. And if your style leans a little darker, more experimental, a little less “perfect”? Even better. That’s not a flaw. That’s identity.

Move From Following to Creating
At some point, confidence deepens when you stop just following patterns and start making small decisions.
• Change a color.
• Adjust a size.
• Combine elements from two different ideas.
Nothing dramatic. Just enough to say: “I’m not just repeating. I’m choosing.”
That shift—from execution to intention—is where confidence becomes ownership.
Celebrate the Right Things
Most people wait too long to feel proud. They wait for the “perfect” piece. The big project. The one that finally proves something.
Instead, celebrate:
• your first even row
• your first finished piece
• your first time understanding a pattern
• your first time fixing a mistake
These are not small things. They are the foundation. Confidence is built on accumulation, not milestones.
Your Crocheting Confidence Checklist
If you want something simple to follow, here it is:
Practice basics for 10 minutes daily:
• Learn and repeat core stitches
• Finish small projects often
• Treat mistakes as part of the process
• Track your progress visually
• Shift your self-talk to support learning
• Stop comparing, start observing
• Make small creative choices
Nothing complicated. Just consistent.

Final Thought
Crocheting confidence doesn’t arrive one day like a finished piece. It builds quietly. In the rows you repeat. In the mistakes you stop fearing.
In the moments you realize you didn’t overthink the last stitch.
So start where you are and get better at crochet with small steps. Your next piece doesn’t need to be perfect. It just needs to be yours. Pick up your hook.
Until next bloom,
🖤
Kootsiko
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