Types of Crochet Stitches
There are four main families of crochet stitches: basic stitches you build every project from, texture stitches that add dimension, lace stitches that open the fabric up, and colorwork for more than one color. This visual dictionary covers 31 stitches — each links to a free step-by-step tutorial with its chart symbol and US/UK names.
Basic Stitches
The foundation stitches every crochet pattern is built from — chain, single, half double, double, and treble crochet — plus increases, decreases, and how to start a piece.
Texture Stitches
Raised, dense, and dimensional stitches — puff, bobble, popcorn, and post stitches, plus textured repeats like moss, basketweave, and ripple.
Lace & Openwork Stitches
Open, airy stitches for shawls, wraps, and edgings — the picot, shell, V-stitch, and granny stripe.
Colorwork Stitches
Techniques for working with more than one color — starting with a clean color change. (More colorwork stitches are on the way.)
US vs UK terms — and how to read a stitch symbol
Crochet stitches use two naming systems, US and UK, for the same stitches with shifted names — a US double crochet is a UK treble crochet, and a US single crochet is a UK double crochet. Every tutorial here declares both. Each stitch also has a standard chart symbol, so you can read a pattern chart the same way a designer draws it.
Want to chart your own? Open the free pattern maker to turn any stitch into a repeat chart.