How to Block Crochet — Wet, Steam, and Spray Methods

Blocking is the final step that turns finished crochet into a piece that looks photographed-from-a-magazine. It's the difference between a granny square that curls up at the corners and one that lies flat; between a doily that looks lumpy and one that frames like fine lace. Three methods — wet, steam, and spray — cover every project from a single coaster to a king-size blanket.

Why block?

Crochet stitches form a mechanical structure: yarn-over, hook-in, pull-through. The stitches hold their shape because of tension during making. Blocking RELAXES that tension by introducing water or steam, then locks the stitches into their final shape as they dry. The result is a piece that lies flat, has crisp corners, and is the size the pattern says it should be.

Unblocked crochet works fine for amigurumi (which is supposed to be 3D and bumpy) and for some structural projects like bags. But for anything flat — blankets, doilies, scarves, garments, granny squares destined for joining — blocking is what makes the difference between handmade-looking and professionally-finished.

What you need

Three blocking methods

Wet blocking

Soak the piece in cool water, gently squeeze out the excess (don't wring), then pin it into shape on the mat to dry. The strongest blocking method — fully resets the stitches.

Best for: Wool, cotton, linen, plant fibers. Pieces that need significant shaping like a curly granny square or a wonky shawl.

Steps: Fill a basin with cool water + a teaspoon of wool wash. Submerge the piece for 15-20 minutes. Lift OUT (don't drag), squeeze gently in a clean towel, lay on the mat, pin into shape, dry overnight.

Steam blocking

Hover a steam iron a few inches ABOVE the piece (never touch) and let the steam relax the stitches. Then shape and let cool. Faster than wet blocking but less aggressive.

Best for: Cotton and wool that need minor reshaping. Time-pressured situations. Larger pieces where soaking would be a hassle.

Steps: Pin the piece into shape on the mat FIRST. Set the iron to its steam setting. Hold it 2-3 inches above the fabric and pass it slowly across. Let cool completely before unpinning.

Spray blocking

Pin the piece into shape, mist it with water from a spray bottle, let dry. The gentlest method; useful when wet blocking would be too aggressive.

Best for: Acrylic that doesn't take to wet blocking. Pieces that need only minor reshaping. Anything you don't want to risk shrinking.

Steps: Pin into shape. Spray with cool water until damp but not soaked. Let dry completely (8-12 hours). Don't agitate or move while drying.

Which method per yarn fiber?

Fiber content determines which method works. Use this as a quick reference:

Tips for clean blocking

Common problems blocking fixes

These are the most common crochet problems that blocking can solve:

Block your finished projects

Whenever you finish a CrochetPop pattern that ends with a "block it flat" step, this guide is what's behind that recommendation. The pattern usually tells you which method; come back here for the details.

Granny Square →Filet Crochet →Crochet Hexagon →
How to Block Crochet — Wet, Steam, and Spray Methods Explained | CrochetPop