detail Archives - Lucy Kate Crochet https://lucykatecrochet.com/tag/detail Wed, 25 Mar 2026 06:51:18 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.8 Free Crochet Anteater Pattern https://lucykatecrochet.com/crochet-anteater https://lucykatecrochet.com/crochet-anteater#comments Tue, 19 Aug 2025 12:51:05 +0000 https://lucykatecrochet.com/?p=9279 A few months ago I made something rather different to my usual patterns, a crochet anteater. I absolutely loved how he turned out, but he isn’t your usual amigurumi animal so I wasn’t sure whether anyone else would want to make one. Well, I shared some photographs on social media, and it turned out I...

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crochet anteater

A few months ago I made something rather different to my usual patterns, a crochet anteater. I absolutely loved how he turned out, but he isn’t your usual amigurumi animal so I wasn’t sure whether anyone else would want to make one. Well, I shared some photographs on social media, and it turned out I was wrong. So here it is, the crochet anteater pattern!

What You’ll Need

To make my anteater I used the following:

  • 100g black DK yarn
  • 50g brown DK yarn
  • 25g white DK yarn
  • 3.5mm crochet hook
  • Yarn needle
  • 15mm safety eyes
  • Toy safe stuffing

The yarn I used was Hobbii’s Portobello yarn, which is a cotton, acrylic, wool blend. I recommend a cotton blend for this pattern for a similar finish, but you don’t need to use the same brand.

crochet anteater with okapi and unicorn

The Stitches

The pattern will include a few different stitches. If any of these are unfamiliar to you, I’ve linked to their guides below:

mc – magic circle
sc – single crochet
2sc – two single crochets into the same stitch
sc2tog – join two stitches together with one single crochet
cc – color change
ch – chain

anteater

Free Crochet Anteater Pattern

Begin using your black yarn and the 3.5mm crochet hook.

The Head

crochet anteaters head

Round 1

Make a magic circle of eight stitches (8)

Round 2

2sc x 8 (16)

Round 3 – 8

1sc x 16

Round 9

(1sc, 2sc) x 8 (24)

Round 10 – 16

1sc x 24

Round 17

(1sc x 2, 2sc)

Round 18 – 22

1sc x 32

Round 23

(1sc x 3, 2sc) x 3, 1sc x 20 (35)

Round 24

(1sc x 4, 2sc) x 3, 1sc x 20 (38)

Round 25 – 28

1sc x 38

crochet anteater finished

Round 29

(1sc x 5, 2sc) x 3, 1sc x 20 (41)

Round 30 – 36

1sc x 41

Round 37

(1sc x 5, sc2tog) x 3, 1sc x 20 (38)

Round 38

1sc x 38

Round 39

(1sc x 4, sc2tog) x 3, 1sc x 20 (35)

Round 40

(1sc x 3, sc2tog) x 3, 1sc x 20 (32)

Round 41

(1sc x 2, sc2tog) x 8 (24)

Stuff the end of the nose, add the safety eyes at round 24 level, tie them slightly together to give an indented look then finish stuffing the head.

Round 42

(1sc, sc2tog) x 8 (16)

Round 43

sc2tog x 8 (8)

Make sure you are happy with how stuffed the head is, then sew the head closed and set it to one side.

The Body

Begin working in the black yarn, using your 3.5mm crochet hook.

crochet anteaters body

Round 1

Make a magic circle of eight stitches (8)

Round 2

2sc x 8 (16)

Round 3

(1sc, 2sc) x 8 (24)

Round 4 – 10

1sc x 24

cc to brown yarn

Round 11 – 12

1sc x 24

cc to white yarn

Round 13

1sc x 24

cc to brown yarn

Round 14

1sc x 24

Round 15

(1sc x 2, 2sc) x 8 (32)

Round 16 – 18

1sc x 32

crochet anteater with the okapi

Round 19

(1sc x 3, 2sc) x 8 (40)

Round 20

1sc x 40

cc to white yarn

Round 21 – 22

1sc x 40

cc to brown yarn

Round 23

1sc x 40

Round 24

(1sc x 4, 2sc) x 8 (48)

Round 25

1sc x 48

cc to black yarn

Round 26 – 30

1sc x 48

Round 31

(1sc x 5, 2sc) x 8 (56)

Round 32 – 41

1sc x 56

Round 42

(1sc x 6, 2sc) x 8 (64)

Round 43 – 44

1sc x 64

Round 45

(1sc x 6, sc2tog) x 8 (56)

Round 46

(1sc x 5, sc2tog) x 8 (48)

Round 47

(1sc x 4, sc2tog) x 8 (40)

Round 48

(1sc x 3, sc2tog) x 8 (32)

Round 49

(1sc x 2, sc2tog) x 8 (24)

Round 50

(1sc, sc2tog) x 8 (16)

Fill with toy safe stuffing

Round 51

sc2tog x 8 (8)

Sew closed with your yarn needle

Make Two Front Legs

Begin using your black yarn

crochet anteaters front legs

Round 1

Make a magic circle of six stitches (6)

Round 2

2sc x 6 (12)

Round 3

1sc x 12

Round 4

(1sc, 2sc) x 6 (18)

Round 5 – 7

1sc x 18

Round 8

(1sc, sc2tog) x 6 (12)

cc to cream yarn

Round 9

(1sc, 2sc) x 6 (18)

Round 10

1sc x 18

cc to black yarn

Round 11 – 15

1sc x 18

Round 16

(1sc x 2, 2sc) x 6 (24)

Round 17 – 18

1sc x 24

cc to brown yarn

Round 19 – 27

1sc x 24

Round 28

(1sc x 2, sc2tog) x 6 (18)

Round 29

(1sc, sc2tog) x 6 (12)

Stuff the arm

Round 30

sc2tog x 6, then sew closed with your yarn needle.

Two Back Legs

You will be using black yarn for the back legs.

crochet anteaters back legs

Round 1

Make a magic circle of six stitches (6)

Round 2

2sc x 6 (12)

Round 3

1sc x 12

Round 4

(1sc, 2sc) x 6 (18)

Round 5

(1sc x 2, 2sc) x 6 (24)

Round 6 – 7

1sc x 24

Round 8

(1sc x 2, sc2tog) x 6 (18)

Round 9

(1sc, sc2tog) x 6 (12)

Round 10

(1sc, 2sc) x 6 (18)

Round 11

(1sc x 2, 2sc) x 6 (24)

Round 12 – 26

1sc x 24

Round 27

(1sc x 2, sc2tog) x 6 (16)

Round 28

(1sc, sc2tog) x 6 (12)

Stuff the leg

Round 29

sc2tog x 6 then sew closed.

The Tail

Use your brown yarn to create the tail. We’ll create a small stub, and then work loops of yarn into it.

crochet anteaters tail

Round 1

Make a magic circle of six stitches

Round 2 – 13

1sc x 6 (6)

Use the yarn tail to sew onto the body.

These rounds will make a long thin tail stud, which you will use to create the fluffy tail. When it’s attached to the body, take a yarn needle and sew loose loops of yarn in and out of each stitch around it, to create a long brush like tail as shown in the picture above.

Two Ears

The ears will also be made in brown yarn.

crochet anteaters ears

Round 1

Make a magic circle of eight stitches, but don’t close it

Turn

Round 2

Ch1, make 1sc into the same stitch, then 1sc x 6, then 2sc

Turn

Round 3

Ch1, 1sc into the same stitch, 1sc x 8, 2sc

Now sew one onto each side of the head, approximately nine stitches above the eyes.

Attaching the anteaters ears

Joining the Anteater Together

You are now ready to sew your anteater together.

Anteater ready to sew together

Use a steel yarn needle, the black yarn and tightly attach the head to the body, tilting the nose downwards.

Position for sewing the head

Then set on a flat surface, lay the back legs forward and sew them to the sides of the body.

Attaching the back legs

Finally attach the front legs to the sides of the body.

Pinning the front legs

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Free Crochet Whale Plushie Pattern for Beginners https://lucykatecrochet.com/free-crochet-whale-pattern-for-beginners https://lucykatecrochet.com/free-crochet-whale-pattern-for-beginners#respond Wed, 19 Mar 2025 13:22:25 +0000 https://lucykatecrochet.com/?p=8585 This crochet whale pattern was born when I received some gorgeous blue and gray yarns in a subscription box I was reviewing. I just instantly felt they were destined to become a whale, and I quickly set to work making one. This pattern is designed to be quick and easy to crochet, but if you’ve...

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free crochet whale pattern

This crochet whale pattern was born when I received some gorgeous blue and gray yarns in a subscription box I was reviewing. I just instantly felt they were destined to become a whale, and I quickly set to work making one.

This pattern is designed to be quick and easy to crochet, but if you’ve got any questions just pop them in the comments box at the bottom of this page.

What You’ll Need

I used the following to make my whale:

  • 50g blue worsted weight merino wool yarn
  • 50g cream worsted weight merino wool yarn
  • 4mm crochet hook
  • Yarn needle
  • Pins
  • Pipe cleaners
  • Toy safe stuffing
  • Stitch markers
hooks and needles yarn

The Stitches

You are going to crochet your whale in rounds, using these basic crochet stitches:

  • Magic circle
  • sc – single crochet
  • 2sc – two single crochets in the same stitch
  • sc2tog – use one single crochet to join two stitches

The Main Body and Head

Begin with your blue yarn and 4mm crochet hook.

Round 1

Make a magic circle of six stitches (6)

Round 2

2sc x 6 (12)

Round 3

(1sc, 2sc) x 6 (18)

Round 4

(1sc x 2, 2sc) x 6 (24)

Round 5

1sc x 24 (24)

Round 6

(1sc x 3, 2sc) x 6 (30)

Round 7

(1sc x 4, 2sc) x 6 (36)

Round 8 – 9

1sc x 36 (36)

Round 10

(1sc x 5, 2sc) x 6 (42)

Round 11 – 18

1sc x 42 (42)

Round 19

(1sc x 5, sc2tog) x 4, 1sc x 14 (38)

Round 20

1sc x 38 (38)

Round 21

(1sc x 4, sc2tog) x 4, 1sc x 14 (34)

Round 22

1sc x 34 (34)

Round 23

(1sc x 3, sc2tog) x 4, 1sc x 14 (30)

Round 24

1sc x 30 (30)

Insert safety eyes. Sit your crochet on a desk, with the magic circle end facing you. Count back 13 rounds, and place each eye about two stitches up from the desk.

Round 25 – 26

1sc x 30 (30)

Round 27

(1sc x 3, sc2tog) x 6 (24)

Round 28 – 29

1sc x 24 (24)

Round 30

(1sc x 2, sc2tog) x 6 (18)

Round 31

1sc x 18 (18)

Stuff your whale so far, being careful not to distort the position of the eyes or over stuff.

Round 32

(1sc, sc2tog) x 6 (12)

Round 33 – 39

1sc x 12 (12)

Insert a pipe cleaner into the whale, pushing it approximately half way through the body, leaving about a cm protruding. You’ll crochet around that as you continue.

Round 40

sc2tog x 6 (6)

Round 41 – 43

1sc x 6

Hand sew closed, and hide the yarn tail inside your whale.

The Underside

You are going to need your cream yarn and 4mm crochet hook for this section. It’ll be made in the same way as the body, but you are not going to stuff it, and flatten it when it’s complete.

Round 1

Make a magic circle of six stitches (6)

Round 2

2sc x 6 (12)

Round 3

1sc x 12 (12)

Round 4

(1sc, 2sc) x 6 (18)

Round 5

(1sc x 2, 2sc) x 6 (24)

Round 6 – 10

1sc x 24 (24)

Round 11

(1sc x 2, sc2tog) x 6 (18)

Round 12 – 15

1sc x 18

Round 16

(1sc, sc2tog) x 6 (12)

Round 17 – 21

1sc x 12 (12)

Round 22

sc2tog x 6

Round 23 – 25

1sc x 6, then hand sew to close.

You can now flatten your whale’s underside and pin it to the position where you want it to sit.

Hold the whale’s blue body upside down, and count down an even number of stitches from each eye to position the gray piece evenly.

Sew around the perimeter of the gray section using gray yarn, tightly working in and out of each stitch to firmly secure it in place.

Tail Fins

You will be using your blue yarn again for the tail fins. Make two fins, and we’ll sew them together and onto the tail section of the body to finish them.

Round 1

Make a magic circle of eight stitches (8)

Round 2 – 5

1sc x 8 (8)

Round 6

2sc, 1sc x 3, 2sc, 1sc x 3 (10)

Round 7

1sc, 2sc, 1sc x 4, 2sc, 1sc x 3 (12)

Round 8 – 9

1sc x 12

Lay both fins on the desk in front of you, and sew the ending point of the fins together. This will enable you to sew them in place more easily.

I recommend now pinning the fins where you would like them before sewing them on. Align one each side of the tail section of the body.

Side Fins

Continue to work in your blue colored yarn for these pieces.

Round 1

Make a magic circle of eight stitches (8)

Round 2 – 3

1sc x 8 (8)

Round 4

2sc x 8 (16)

Round 5 – 7

1sc x 16 (16)

Round 8

Flatten the shape, leaving the last stitch you made at one of the corners. Now work along the edge single crocheting the two sides together. You’ll make eight stitches in total.

Line up the edge of each fin with the thinner end of the underside of the whale, and sew them on using your blue yarn.

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How To Crochet A Manatee – Free Amigurumi Pattern https://lucykatecrochet.com/how-to-crochet-a-manatee https://lucykatecrochet.com/how-to-crochet-a-manatee#respond Mon, 26 Aug 2024 21:33:24 +0000 https://lucykatecrochet.com/?p=7824 A few days ago I posted on social media asking yous to let me know your favorite animals, to get some new inspiration for crochet designs. I was blown away by the response, there were so many great ideas! And the moment I saw a crochet manatee pattern suggested, I knew that was the one...

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my crochet manatee on the rug

A few days ago I posted on social media asking yous to let me know your favorite animals, to get some new inspiration for crochet designs. I was blown away by the response, there were so many great ideas! And the moment I saw a crochet manatee pattern suggested, I knew that was the one I’d be working on first.

photos of a crocheted manatee

There is something so uniquely adorable about these marine mammals. I’m desperate to see one in real life, but to my knowledge there aren’t any in aquariums in the UK, so as of yet I’ve not met a real sea cow.

So it’s a good thing I’ve crocheted my own amigurumi version, and now you can too!

crochet manatee photos

Your Kit List

Here’s what I used to produce this manatee amigurumi design. The yarn was from my stash. I’m pretty sure mine is from the Women’s Institute Soft and Cuddly line, but any DK yarn should work just fine.

  • 50g light gray DK yarn
  • 3.5mm crochet hook
  • 16mm safety eyes
  • Tapestry needle
  • Toy safe stuffing
Image of me holding crochet manatee

Reading This Pattern

This is a beginner friendly crochet project, however I do use abbreviations on my patterns. Here they are for those that aren’t familiar with the terms:

  • magic circle
  • sc – single crochet
  • 2sc – put two single crochets into one stitch
  • sc2tog – join two stitches together with one single crochet
  • FP – front post
  • FLO – front loop only
  • st – stitch
crochet manatee picture

The Manatee Pattern

This is a very low sew project, you’ll make your manatee in three parts, the head, body and tail, then two separate fins. That’s it!

Head, Body and Tail

my manatees head and body section

Round 1

Make a magic circle of four stitches (4)

Round 2

2sc x 4 (8)

Round 3

2sc x 8 (16)

Round 4

(1sc, 2sc) x 8 (24)

Round 5

1sc x 18, then 1sc x 6 into the BLO (24)

Mark stitches 19 and 25 of this round with a stitch marker or scrap of yarn.

Round 6

1sc x 24

Round 7

This round is going to need a pinch of concentration. You’ll begin working in a standard round, then move back to work a couple of stitches into a previous round so make sure to do this part without distractions if you can!

BLO rounds

1sc x 18, 1sc into the front post (FP) of stitch 19 of round 5. 1sc x 4, 1sc into FP of st 24 of round 5.

The rest of the pattern will be worked in standard rounds, this is to give your manatee the overhanging lip that’s so distinctive to the species.

image showing the lip

Round 8 – 10

1sc x 24

Round 11

FLO (1sc x 2, 2sc) x 8 (32)

(1sc x 2, 2sc) x 8 (32)

Round 12

(1sc x 3, 2sc) x 8 (40)

Round 13

1sc x 40

Round 14

(1sc x 4, 2sc) x 5, 1sc x 15 (45)

Round 15

(1sc x 5, 2sc) x 5, 1sc x 15 (50)

Round 16 – 19

1sc x 50

Round 20

(1sc x 5, sc2tog) x 5, 1sc x 15 (45)

Round 21

(1sc x 4, sc2tog) x 5, 1sc x 15 (40)

Add the safety eyes to the head. You want the lip section to be hanging between them, with the eyes offset at either side. You can also add a section of yarn to the backings of the safety eyes to draw them together slightly.

view of the manatee's safety eyes

Stuff the head gently, leaving the tipped lip empty of padding.

Round 22

1sc x 40

Round 23

(1sc x 4, 2sc) x 8 (48)

Round 24

(1sc x 5, 2sc) x 8 (56)

Round 25 – 35

1sc x 56

Round 36

(1sc x 5, sc2tog) x 8 (48)

Round 37 – 39

1sc x 48

Round 40

(1sc x 4, sc2tog) x 8 (40)

Round 41- 43

1sc x 40

Round 44

(1sc x 3, sc2tog) x 8 (32)

Round 45 – 47

1sc x 32

Round 48

(1sc x 2, sc2tog) x 8 (24)

Round 49 – 52

1sc x 24

Round 53

(1sc, sc2tog) x 8 (16)

Fill the rest of the body with toy stuffing.

Round 54

sc2tog x 8 (8)

Round 55

2sc x 8 (16)

Round 56 – 58

1sc x 16

Round 59

(1sc, 2sc) x 8 (24)

Round 60 – 61

1sc x 24

Round 62

(1sc x 2, 2sc) x 8 (32)

Round 63

(1sc x 2, sc2tog) x 8 (24)

Round 64

Photo showing the tail join

Flatten the tail to line up with the eyes. You might need to make 2 or 3 single crochets in addition to the end of the round to create an even finish. Now join the two sides together with single crochets. This will create a fanned end to the tail, 12 stitches in length.

Image showing finishing the tail with sewing

Attach a yarn needle, and insert the yarn into the tail, bringing it out at round 54. Complete the tail by sewing in and out of this round to secure the toy stuffing in the main body and not allow it to enter the tail section.

Crocheting the Fins

Image of me holding the amigurumi manatee

Round 1

Make a magic circle of six stitches (6)

Round 2

2sc x 6 (12)

Round 3

1sc x 12

Round 4

(1sc, 2sc) x 6 (18)

Round 5 – 6

1sc x 18

Round 7

(1sc x 2, 2sc) x 6 (24)

Round 8

Flatten the fins, and single crochet along the edge to join the two sides together. Cut off long yarn tails ready for sewing.

Attaching the Fins

You now just need to attach a yarn needle to the tail of the fins’ yarn and hand sew them onto the sides of your manatee.

Image of me sewing the manatee's fins onto the body

I think it looks cutest when the flippers are close to each other underneath your manatee, starting at round 22 level.

I’d love to hear what you think of this new design, I had a lot of fun making that characteristic mouth and hope you like it as much as I do!

Happy Crocheting,

Lucy Kate, x

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Free Crochet Okapi Pattern https://lucykatecrochet.com/free-crochet-okapi-pattern https://lucykatecrochet.com/free-crochet-okapi-pattern#comments Mon, 22 Jul 2024 16:04:13 +0000 https://lucykatecrochet.com/?p=7642 I have designed a lot of crochet toys over the past decade, but this one mattered more to me. Because the okapi isn’t just any other animal. It’s one that literally stopped me in my tracks the first time I saw one, as a child at Marwell Zoo in Hampshire, UK. There was a big...

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two views of my crochet okapi toy

I have designed a lot of crochet toys over the past decade, but this one mattered more to me. Because the okapi isn’t just any other animal. It’s one that literally stopped me in my tracks the first time I saw one, as a child at Marwell Zoo in Hampshire, UK. There was a big sign saying how shy they were, and to be quiet. I pushed the door tentatively, then stood and stared. I stared as my brothers cooed, I stared as my Mum hushed them, I stared as they moved on to see the rest. My feet were rooted, my eyes in disbelief.

crochet okapi photos

This must sound crazy now they are so much better known, but to me I’d seen the chimaera. Part horse, part zebra, part giraffe. All beauty.

I hope this pattern does even an iota of justice to an animal that still astounds me years later and well into adulthood, as it did as a little girl.

You might also like to make a giraffe or elephant pal for him when you’re done!

Here’s what you’ll need to have

I used the following yarns, but the pattern should still look great if you swap in the same weight of another brand or even color.

  • Womens’ Institute Premium DK black yarn
  • Hobbi Cotton Silk brown yarn (color 20)
  • Emu Classic Baby DK in white (color 201)
  • 16mm safety eyes
  • 3.5mm crochet hook
  • Toy safe stuffing
  • Yarn needle
  • Stitch markers
crochet okapi photos

And here’s what you need to know

This pattern uses standard amigurumi techniques including:

  • Magic circle
  • sc – single crochet
  • 2sc – put two single crochets into one stitch
  • sc2tog – join two stitches together with one single crochet
  • slst – slip stitch
  • cc – color change
  • ch – chain
photo of my crochet okapi sitting on my peg board shelf

Free Crochet Okapi Pattern

You’re going to make your toy okapi in sections, which will be hand sewn together at the end.

Head

side view of the crochet okapi's head

Start with your black yarn.

Round 1

Make a magic circle of eight stitches (8)

Round 2

2sc x 8 (16)

Round 3

(1sc, 2sc) x 8 (24)

Round 4 – 5

1sc x 24

Round 6

(1sc x 2, 2sc) x 8 (32)

Round 7 – 10

1sc x 32

cc white yarn

Round 11 – 16

1sc x 32

Round 17

(1sc x 3, 2sc) x 8 (40)

Round 18 – 20

1sc x 40

Round 21

(1sc x 4, 2sc) x 8 (48)

Round 22

1sc x 48

Round 23

(1sc x 5, 2sc) x 8 (56)

Round 24

1sc x 56

Round 25

(1sc x 6, 2sc) x 8 (64)

Round 26 – 29

1sc x 64

cc brown

Round 30 – 31

1sc x 64

Round 32

(1sc x 6, sc2tog) x 8 (56)

Round 33

1sc x 56

Round 34

(1sc x 5, sc2tog) x 8 (48)

Fill the okapi’s muzzle with toy stuffing, then insert the safety eyes at round 23, approximately 18 stitches apart. Use a scrap piece of yarn to tie the backs of the eyes together to give them an inset look.

Round 35

(1sc x 4, sc2tog) x 8 (40)

Round 36

(1sc x 3, sc2tog) x 8 (32)

Round 37

(1sc x 2, sc2tog) x 8 (24)

Round 38

(1sc, sc2tog) x 8 (16)

Round 39

sc2tog to close, then tie off. Hide the yarn tail inside the head.

Forehead patch

top view of the crochet okapi's head showing the patch

Use your brown yarn.

Round 1

Ch15 (15)

Round 2

Sk2, sc2tog, 1sc x 11, sc2tog (13)

Round 3

Ch2, turn, sk, sc2tog, 1sc x 9, sc2tog (11)

Round 4

Ch2, turn, sk, sc2tog, 1sc x 7, sc2tog (9)

Round 5

Ch2, turn, sk, sc2tog, 1sc x 5, sc2tog (7)

Round 6

Ch2, turn, sk, sc2tog, 1sc x 5, sc2tog (5)

Round 7 – 14

1sc x 5

Round 15

Ch1, turn, sc2tog x 2 (3)

Round 16

Ch1, turn, sc2tog (2)

Cut a long tail of yarn, and set to one side for sewing later.

Your Okapi’s Ossicones

my okapi's ossicones on the carpet

Make your ossicones in the same brown colored yarn.

Round 1

Make a magic circle of five stitches (5)

Round 2 – 3

1sc x 5

Round 4

2sc x 5 (10)

Round 5

(1sc, 2sc) x 5 (15)

Fill with toy stuffing, leaving the shape open like a little cone, and set to one side for sewing later.

Body

photo of the okapi's body

Begin in the white yarn.

Round 1

Make a magic circle of eight stitches (8)

Round 2

2sc x 8 (16)

Round 3

(1sc, 2sc) x 8 (24)

Round 4 – 6

1sc x 24

cc brown

Round 7 – 11

1sc x 24

Round 12

(1sc x 2, 2sc) x 8 (32)

Round 13 – 22

1sc x 32

Round 23

(1sc x 3, 2sc) x 8 (40)

Round 24 – 27

1sc x 40

Round 28

(1sc x 4, 2sc) x 8 (48)

Round 29

(1sc x 5, 2sc) x 8 (56)

Round 30 – 33

1sc x 56

Round 34

(1sc x 6, 2sc) x 8 (64)

Round 35 – 47

1sc x 64

Round 48

(1sc x 6, sc2tog) x 8 (56)

Round 49

(1sc x 5, sc2tog) x 8 (48)

Round 50

(1sc x 4, sc2tog) x 8 (40)

Round 51

(1sc x 3, sc2tog) x 8 (32)

Round 52

(1sc x 2, sc2tog) x 8 (24)

Fill with toy stuffing, ensuring the neck section is fairly full so that the head doesn’t sag down.

Round 53

(1sc, sc2tog) x 8 (16)

Round 54

sc2tog to close, tie off and hide the loose end inside the body of the toy.

Four Legs

image showing all four legs after crocheting, before sewing

Start with the black yarn.

Round 1

Make a magic circle of eight stitches (8)

Round 2

2sc x 8 (16)

Round 3

(1sc, 2sc) x 8 (24)

Round 4

(1sc x 2, 2sc) x 8 (32)

Round 5

BLO (1sc x 2, sc2tog) x 8 (24)

Round 6 – 7

1sc x 24

cc white

Round 8 – 15

1sc x 24

cc black

Round 16

1sc x 12

cc white

1sc x 12 (24)

Round 17

1sc x 24

Round 18

1sc x 12

cc black

1sc x 12 (24)

Round 19

1sc x 24

cc white

Round 20

1sc x 24

Round 21

1sc x 12

cc black

1sc x 12 (24)

cc white

Round 22 – 23

1sc x 24

cc black

Round 24 – 25

1sc x 24

cc white

Round 26

1sc x 24

Round 27

1sc x 12

cc black

1sc x 12

Round 28 – 29

1sc x 24

cc white

Round 30

1sc x 24

Round 31

1sc x 12

cc black

1sc x 12 (24)

cc white

Round 32

1sc x 24

Round 33

(1sc, sc2tog) x 8 (16)

Stuff the leg up to round 31, then flatten the top section.

You are now going sc the two sides of the top of the leg together, so eight stitches each joining a stitch on one side to the other.

The Okapi’s Tail

photo of the tail on the floor

Use your brown yarn.

Round 1

Make a magic circle of six stitches (6)

Round 2

2sc x 6 (12)

Round 3

(1sc, 2sc) x 6 (18)

Round 4 – 6

1sc x 18

Round 7

(1sc, sc2tog) x 6 (12)

Round 8 – 14

1sc x 12

Fill with toy stuffing.

Round 15

sc2tog x 6, then hand sew to close.

Swap to the black yarn, attach a yarn needle and sew loose loops of yarn into the top two rounds of stitches.

Ears

photo of the ears

Use your brown yarn for the ears.

Round 1

Make a magic circle of five stitches (5)

Round 2

1sc x 5

Round 3

2sc x 5 (10)

Round 4 – 5

1sc x 10

Round 6

(1sc, 2sc) x 5 (15)

Round 7 – 8

1sc x 15

Round 9

(1sc x 2, 2sc) x 5 (20)

Round 10 – 14

1sc x 20

Round 15

(1sc x 2, sc2tog) x 5 (15)

Round 16

1sc x 15

Round 17

(1sc, sc2tog) x 5 (10)

Round 18 – 19

1sc x 10

You are now going to edge your ears using surface crochet, in your black yarn. Flatten each ear section, and work around the circumference, crocheting single crochets through every stitch along the edge.

Joining Your Crochet Okapi Together

Lay out the sections of your okapi on the floor in front of you.

photo showing the parts laid out on the carpet

Each piece should be sewn together with the appropriate colored yarn, and ideally using a sharp steel needle. It should be wide enough to fit the yarn through the eye, but not so wide that the yarn slips straight out, or that the needle distorts the stitch shape.

We’ll begin by adding the facial features. Attach the forehead patch so that the long end lines up with the color change at the top of the head. It should taper to a point in line with the mid point between the eyes.

side view of the crochet okapi's head

The ossicones sit at either side of the bulged areas on the patches.

photo showing the ossicones being sewn on

The ears sit along the color change on the head, around three stitches up from each eye.

photo showing the ears being sewn on

The head can now be sewn on to the white neck section. Keep the muzzle pointing straight forward, and stitch tightly so that it doesn’t wobble in place.

Your arms are sewn at the point the neck turns into the body, and the legs sit pointing forward and slightly outward.

photo of the okapi sitting on a shelf

The tail should be attached so that it is resting against the floor when the okapi is sitting down.

okapi and giraffe toys sitting together on my shelf

If you have any questions, do let me know! And don’t forget to tell me how you get along making your own okapi toy.

Happy Crocheting,

Lucy Kate, x

photo of a crocheted okapi stuffed toy

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How To Crochet A Giraffe – Free Pattern https://lucykatecrochet.com/how-to-crochet-a-giraffe https://lucykatecrochet.com/how-to-crochet-a-giraffe#respond Mon, 15 Jul 2024 13:58:55 +0000 https://lucykatecrochet.com/?p=7556 This giraffe is a pretty special pattern for me, because it marks my return to crochet design after a couple of months’ break. Which might not sound like much, but I usually design constantly, so it’s been a thing! My crochet giraffe pattern is one of my larger creations at over 15 inches tall, but...

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closeup photo of the crochet giraffe next to a basket of amigurumi

This giraffe is a pretty special pattern for me, because it marks my return to crochet design after a couple of months’ break. Which might not sound like much, but I usually design constantly, so it’s been a thing!

My crochet giraffe pattern is one of my larger creations at over 15 inches tall, but it didn’t take too long to create. If you can read a simple amigurumi pattern and have crocheted a few times before, this could be the perfect next project for you.

photo of a crochet giraffe

Want a printable version of this pattern? It is available as a PDF download here, or scroll down for the free pattern:

This toy giraffe is also a great zoological companion for my zebra, okapi and elephant patterns if you’ve made them previously!

*The products linked in this pattern were carefully selected by me based on what I used to produce the design. If you decide to purchase using the links provided, I may earn a small commission on that sale at no extra cost to you.

Your Kit List

Here’s what I used to create my giraffe pattern.

You’ll have noticed that I used two different yarn weights in this pattern. It’s a little unconventional, but I wanted to give a lift to the hoof areas and patches, which I think this heavier weighted yarn achieves.

Stitches and Techniques

This pattern uses the standard amigurumi stitches, along with some hand sewing to attach the patches and join the toy together. Here are the abbreviations you’ll see and some links to tutorials for particular techniques.

photo of the amigurumi giraffe standing on a window sill

My Crochet Giraffe Pattern

I crocheted my giraffe in separate sections, and hand sewed the composite pieces together at the end.

The head

photo of the giraffe toy standing on my shelf

Work with your yellow yarn and 3.5mm crochet hook.

Round 1

Make a magic circle of eight stitches (8)

Round 2

2sc x 8 (16)

Round 3

(1sc, 2sc) x 8 (24)

Round 4 – 5

1sc x 24 (24)

Round 6

(1sc x 2, 2sc) x 8 (32)

Round 7 – 15

1sc x 32 (32)

Round 16

(1sc x 3, 2sc) x 8 (40)

Round 17 – 19

1sc x 40 (40)

Round 20

(1sc x 4, 2sc) x 8 (48)

Round 21

1sc x 48 (48)

Round 22

(1sc x 5, 2sc) x 8 (56)

Round 23

1sc x 56 (56)

Round 24

(1sc x 6, 2sc) x 8 (64)

Round 25 – 30

1sc x 64 (64)

Round 31

(1sc x 6, sc2tog) x 8 (56)

Round 32

(1sc x 5, sc2tog) x 8 (48)

Round 33

(1sc x 4, sc2tog) x 8 (40)

Round 34

(1sc x 3, sc2tog) x 8 (32)

Stuff the muzzle of the giraffe, then insert safety eyes at around level 22, and approximately 20 stitches apart. To inset the eyes, take a strand of yarn and tie to behind each safety eye backing and pull it taut.

Round 35

(1sc x 2, sc2tog) x 8 (24)

Round 36

(1sc, sc2tog) x 8 (16)

Stuff the remainder of the giraffe’s head.

Round 37

sc2tog to close. Hide the yarn tail inside the head.

Giraffe ears

picture showing the giraffe's ears

Use your 3.5mm crochet hook and yellow yarn again.

Round 1

Make a magic circle of five stitches (5)

Round 2

1sc x 5 (5)

Round 3

2sc x 5 (10)

Round 4 – 5

1sc x 10 (10)

Round 6

(1sc, 2sc) x 5 (15)

Round 7 – 8

1sc x 15 (15)

Round 9

(1sc x 2, 2sc) x 5 (20)

Round 10 – 11

1sc x 20 (20)

Round 12

(1sc x 2, sc2tog) x 5 (15)

Round 13

(1sc, sc2tog) x 5 (10

Round 14 – 15

1sc x 10

Flatten the piece, and gently push your finger into the wide section to give it shape. Slip stitch to close and leave a long tail of yarn for sewing later.

Making the ossicones

Image of the two ossicones

Your giraffe’s little horns are called ossicones, and you’re going to make two in the brown/orange yarn using your 3.5mm hook.

Round 1

Make a magic circle of eight stitches (8)

Round 2

2sc x 8 (16)

Round 3 – 5

1sc x 16 (16)

Round 6

sc2tog x 8 (8)

Round 7 – 10

1sc x 8 (8)

Slip stitch to finish. You can now stuff the ossicone, but leave the bottom end open for sewing later.

The body

Photo of the crochet giraffe's body

Your giraffe’s basic body will be made all in yellow yarn. The patches will get sewn on later, so for now just grab your yellow yarn and 3.5mm hook.

Round 1

Make a magic circle of eight stitches (8)

Round 2

2sc x 8 (16)

Round 3

(1sc, 2sc) x 8 (24)

Round 4 – 15

1sc x 24 (24)

Round 16

(1sc x 2, 2sc) x 8 (32)

Round 17 – 25

1sc x 32 (32)

Round 26

(1sc x 3, 2sc) x 8 (40)

Round 27 – 32

1sc x 40 (40)

Round 33

(1sc x 4, 2sc) x 8 (48)

Round 34 – 35

1sc x 48 (48)

Round 36

(1sc x 5, 2sc) x 8 (56)

Round 37

(1sc x 6, 2sc) x 8 (64)

Round 38 – 46

1sc x 64 (64)

Round 47

(1sc x 7, 2sc) x 8 (72)

Round 48 – 52

1sc x 72 (72)

Round 53

(1sc x 7, sc2tog) x 8 (64)

Round 54

(1sc x 6, sc2tog) x 8 (56)

Round 55

(1sc x 5, sc2tog) x 8 (48)

Round 56

(1sc x 4, sc2tog) x 8 (40)

Round 57

(1sc x 3, sc2tog) x 8 (32)

Round 58

(1sc x 2, sc2tog) x 8 (24)

Round 59

(1sc, sc2tog) x 8 (16)

Fill with toy stuffing.

Round 60

sc2tog to close, and hide the yarn tail end inside the body section.

Front legs

Picture of the giraffe's arms

Your legs will begin at the hooves in the darker shade, then change to yellow later so have both yarns to hand. Use your 3.5mm crochet hook.

Round 1

Make a magic circle of eight stitches (8)

Round 2

2sc x 8 (16)

Round 3

(1sc, 2sc) x 8 (24)

Round 4

BLO 1sc x 24 (24)

Round 5

(1sc, sc2tog) x 8 (16)

Round 6

1sc x 16 (16)

cc to yellow

Round 7 – 27

1sc x 16 (16)

Fill with toy stuffing

Round 28

sc2tog to close, then sew closed, leaving a long tail of yarn for sewing later.

Back legs

Picture of the giraffe's legs

Begin in the orange shade of yarn again.

Round 1

Make a magic circle of eight stitches (8)

Round 2

2sc x 8 (16)

Round 3

(1sc, 2sc) x 8 (24)

Round 4

(1sc x 2, 2sc) x 8 (32)

Round 5

BLO 1sc x 32 (32)

Round 6

(1sc x 2, sc2tog) x 8 (24)

Round 7

1sc x 24 (24)

cc yellow

Round 8

(1sc, sc2tog) x 8 (16)

Round 9 – 33

1sc x 16 (16)

Round 34

sc2tog to close, then sew closed, leaving a long tail of yarn for sewing later.

Giraffe patches

All of your giraffe’s patches will be made in the darker yarn using your 3.5mm crochet hook.

Big

Image of the big patches

Round 1

Make a magic circle of eight stitches (8)

Round 2

((dc, tr, dc), sc) x 3, (dc, tr, dc), slst

Small

Image of the small patches

Round 1

Make a magic circle of six stitches (6)

Round 2

3sc, slst, ((sc, dc, sc), slst) x 2

Micro

Picture of the smallest patches

Round 1

Make a magic circle of six stitches (6)

Round 2

(slst, 3sc, slst) x 2

Giraffe’s tail

image of the giraffe's tail

Round 1

Make a magic circle of six stitches (6)

Round 2

2sc x 6 (12)

Round 3 – 11

1sc x 12 (12)

Stuff the tail so far.

Round 12

Sc2tog to close.

Sewing your Giraffe Together

You’re now ready to sew your giraffe together. You’ll want to use the yarns you worked each section with, so mostly the yellow and the orange for the ossicones. Some pieces will have tail sections you can use for sewing, others you can use yarn from the skein.

Lay the sections out on the floor in front of you.

Exploded picture of the giraffe's composite parts

Begin by sewing the ears and ossicones onto the head. You want your ears to sit nine rows back directly from the eyes. Attach the base of the ears so they sit upright, with the section flattened.

The ossicones sit between and slightly forward of the ear positions. Weave in and out of the ends around the circumference of the circular base.

Image showing where to attach the ossicones and ears

Now you can sew the head onto the neck. I like to sit it so that the flat back of the head lines up with the neck, and sew in and out of the stitches around towards the chin side and back up.

Image showing the head placement on the body

You will be sewing the limbs onto the body using the long yarn tails you left earlier. Place the legs so that your giraffe is in a standing position, directly at the center of the body where you closed your circle.

Image showing the legs attachment onto the body

The arms need to sit where the neck widens into the body, at either side of the toy.

Image showing how to sew the giraffe's arms on

Finally weave the tail onto the back underside of the body, hanging down behind the legs.

Picture of the tail attachment point

Finishing Touches

Your giraffe is nearly complete now, we just need to add a few more details to really bring her to life.

Attaching the patches

I think the giraffe’s patches look best when sewn onto the body at random. I recommend placing them with a slight lean towards having larger patches lower down, but otherwise without a concerted plan.

Picture of my attachment of the patches

Pin the patches in place whilst you decide what you think looks best, then sew around the edge of each one with your tapestry needle and the brown yarn.

The giraffe’s mane and tail

I used a needle and the orange yarn to create the mane and tail. Attach the orange yarn, and starting at the top of the giraffe’s head, weave in and out of the stitches down the back of the neck. With each stitch, leave a loop of yarn exposed to form strands of hair. Once you’ve reached the nape of the neck, proceed back up sewing into the next set of stitches along.

Illustration of the mane sewing technique

In a similar manner, work the tail from the center of the magic circle around the first couple of rounds, looping into each stitch.

Nostrils

Finally, let’s make sure your amigurumi giraffe can breathe with a pair or nostrils. Keep your orange yarn on the tapestry needle, and sew back and forth across a three stitch gap around six rounds back from the starting magic circle of your giraffe’s muzzle.

Picture of the finished crochet giraffe

I can’t wait to hear what you think of your finished giraffe, so do let me know in the comments section below.

Lucy Kate, x

photos of a crochet giraffe front and back views

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Unique Crochet Unicorn Pattern https://lucykatecrochet.com/unique-crochet-unicorn-pattern https://lucykatecrochet.com/unique-crochet-unicorn-pattern#comments Fri, 31 May 2024 12:36:44 +0000 https://lucykatecrochet.com/?p=6768 My free crochet unicorn pattern has a unique twist. I set out when I originally designed it to lean into the glittery, shiny, rainbow, super extra level unicorn theme. But when I began, it turned out that I much preferred this toned back, muted color palette. And it really works! This pattern is surprisingly quick...

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picture of my crochet unicorn in front of my yarn

My free crochet unicorn pattern has a unique twist. I set out when I originally designed it to lean into the glittery, shiny, rainbow, super extra level unicorn theme. But when I began, it turned out that I much preferred this toned back, muted color palette. And it really works!

This pattern is surprisingly quick to work up given the fairly large size.

If you like this pattern, it’s actually one of a set of four, also including a horse, donkey and zebra. You can also find a cute simple version of a crochet unicorn here.

Your Kit List

Here’s what I used to create my crochet unicorn design:

picture of my crochet unicorn on my desk

Techniques and Tutorials

If you’re new to amigurumi, or crochet in general, then here’s a quick guide to the abbreviations I will use in this unicorn pattern and links to instructions for those techniques.

  • magic circle
  • sc – single crochet
  • 2sc – two single crochets into one stitch
  • sc2tog – use a single crochet to join two stitches together
  • ch – chain
  • turn – rotate the piece and work back into it
  • cc – color change
  • sk – skip the next stitch
  • surface crochet

Crochet Unicorn Pattern

This crochet unicorn is hooked up in stages, with a little hand sewing used to bring everything together.

Crocheting Your Unicorn’s Head

You are going to begin the unicorn with her muzzle. Grab your purple yarn and a 3.5mm crochet hook. We’ll kick off with a magic circle.

close up of crochet unicorn's head

Round 1

Make a magic circle of eight stitches (8)

Round 2

2sc x 8 (16)

Round 3

(1sc, 2sc) x 8 (24)

Round 4 – 5

1sc x 24 (24)

Round 6

(1sc x 2, 2sc) x 8 (32)

Round 7 – 9

1sc x 32

Round 10

(1sc x 2, sc2tog) x 8 (24)

Round 11

1sc x 24

Round 12

(1sc x 2, 2sc) x 8 (32)

Round 13 – 15

1sc x 32

cc white

Round 16 – 17

1sc x 32

Round 18

(1sc x 3, 2sc) x 8 (40)

Round 19 – 20

1sc x 40

Round 21

(1sc x 4, 2sc) x 8 (48)

Round 22 – 24

1sc x 48

Round 25

(1sc x 5, 2sc) x 8 (56)

Round 26 – 28

1sc x 56

Round 29

(1sc x 5, sc2tog) x 8 (48)

Round 30

1sc x 48

Round 31

(1sc x 4, sc2tog) x 8 (40)

Round 32

1sc x 40

Round 33

(1sc x 3, sc2tog) x 8 (32)

Round 34

1sc x 32

Stuff the muzzle up to the level that you are going to insert your eyes.

You’ll want the safety eyes to be approximately a third of the circumference apart, and around the level of your round 24 stitches. I tightened the eyes into the head just attaching a strand of yarn under the eye backing. This makes them a little indented.

Round 35

(1sc x 2, sc2tog) x 8 (24)

Round 36

(1sc, sc2tog) x 8 (16)

Fill the rest of the head with toy stuffing.

Round 37

sc2tog to close, then tie off.

Crochet Unicorn Ears

The main body of the ears are crocheted with the 3.5mm crochet hook and white yarn.

picture showing one of the crochet unicorn's ears being attached

Round 1

Make a magic circle of six stitches (6)

Round 2 – 3

1sc x 6

Round 4

2sc x 6 (12)

Round 5 – 7

1sc x 12

Round 8

(1sc, 2sc) x 6 (18)

Round 9 – 14

1sc x 18

Round 15

(1sc x 2, 2sc) x 6 (24)

Round 16 – 19

1sc x 24

Round 20

(1sc x 3, 2sc) x 6 (30)

Round 21

1sc x 30

Edging the ears

Lay your ear pieces onto a desk in front of you and gently press them flat. Then take each bottom corner and fold them in. Sew the ear into this shape.

Now pick up your purple yarn and a 3mm crochet hook, and surface crochet around the edge of the ear to define it.

Attaching the ears

Sew the ears so that they sit around four stitches apart at the top of the head.

The Unicorn Horn

I tried so many different methods of making the horn before I settled on this simple style, but I’m really pleased with how it came out.

You’ll be working with two strands together, one of white and one of purple. Grab a 5mm crochet hook for this part only.

image showing the crochet unicorn's horn getting attached

Round 1

Make a magic circle of four stitches (4)

Round 2

1sc x 4 (4)

Round 3

(2sc, 1sc) x 2 (6)

Round 4

(2sc, 1sc) x 2, 1sc x 2 (8)

Round 5 – 8

1sc x 8 (8)

You can now stuff the horn and sew it onto the forehead, sitting centrally between the levels of the ears and eyes.

Crocheting the Unicorn’s Body

Crochet your unicorn’s body in white yarn with the 3.5mm crochet hook. You’ll add the patch when it’s done.

image of me holding the crochet unicorn

Round 1

Make a magic circle of eight stitches (8)

Round 2

2sc x 8 (16)

Round 3

(1sc, 2sc) x 8 (24)

Round 4

(1sc x 2, 2sc) x 8 (32)

Round 5 – 16

1sc x 32

Round 17

(1sc x 3, 2sc) x 8 (40)

Round 18 – 19

1sc x 40

Round 20

(1sc x 4, 2sc) x 8 (48)

Round 21 – 24

1sc x 48

Round 25

(1sc x 5, 2sc) x 8 (56)

Round 26 – 42

1sc x 56

Round 43

(1sc x 5, sc2tog) x 8 (48)

Round 44

(1sc x 4, sc2tog) x 8 (40)

Round 45

(1sc x 3, sc2tog) x 8 (32)

Round 46

(1sc x 2, sc2tog) x 8 (24)

Round 47

(1sc, sc2tog) x 8 (16)

Fill with toy safe stuffing.

Round 48

sc2tog to close

The Patch

We’ll make your unicorn’s patch by crocheting back and forth around a chain. The 3sc is a cluster that you’ll make into the top of the chain, before continuing the crochet down the other side. When you reach the end of each round, you’ll flip the strip and work back around again.

image of the crochet unicorn's patch

Round 1

Ch11, sk, 1sc x 9, 3sc, 1sc x 9

Turn

Round 2

Ch1, sk, 1sc x 9, 3sc, 1sc x 10

Turn

Round 3

Ch1, sk, 1sc x 10, 3sc, 1sc x 11

Turn

Round 4

Ch1, sk, 1sc x 11, 3sc, 1sc x 12

Turn

Round 5

Ch1, sk, 1sc x 12, 3sc, 1sc x 13

Turn

Round 6

Ch1, sk, 1sc x 13, 3sc, 1sc x 14

Turn

Round 7

Ch1, sk, 1sc x 14, 3sc, 1sc x 15

Turn

Round 8

Ch1, sk, 1sc x 15, 3sc, 1sc x 16

Turn

Round 9

Ch1, sk, 1sc x 16, 3sc, 1sc x 17

Turn

Round 10

Ch1, sk, 1sc x 17, 3sc, 1sc x 18

Turn

Round 11

Ch1, sk, 1sc x 18, 3sc, 1sc x 19

Turn

Round 12

Ch1, sk, 1sc x 19, 3sc, 1sc x 20

Turn

Now cut a long tail of yarn at the end, and sew patch onto the front of your unicorn’s body. The flat edge should sit in line with how the body would sit upright once the limbs have been added. Try to make sure the pointed top of the patch points towards the center of the unicorn’s chin.

Unicorn’s Arms and Legs

Use the pattern below for the arms and legs. Begin your limbs in purple yarn, and using your 3.5mm crochet hook.

image of the unicorn's crocheted limbs

Round 1

Make a magic circle of eight stitches (8)

Round 2

2sc x 8 (16)

Round 3

(1sc, 2sc) x 8 (24)

Round 4

(1sc x 2, 2sc) x 8 (32)

Round 5

BLO (1sc x 2, sc2tog) x 8 (24)

Round 6

1sc x 24

Round 7

(1sc, sc2tog) x 8 (16)

Round 8

1sc x 16

cc white

Round 9

(1sc, 2sc) x 8 (24)

Round 10 – 32

1sc x 24

Round 33

(1sc, sc2tog) x 8 (16)

Fill with toy stuffing.

Round 34

sc2tog to close

Attach the limbs

Your unicorn’s limbs can now be hand sewn onto the body. Put the arms at around level of the body and place the legs so that your unicorn toy will sit upright.

The Tail

You are going to crochet the tail with a strand of gray and a strand of purple, using your 5mm crochet hook.

The tail is composed of a group of chains with single crochets into them.

image showing the unicorn's tail

Row 1

Ch50, turn, sk, 1sc x 49

Row 2 – 4

Ch45, turn, sk, 1sc x 44

Row 5 – 6

Ch40, turn, sk, 1sc x 39

To attach the tail, sew the beginning stitches of the chains together in a group, then sew that group directly onto your unicorn’s butt!

Lucy Kate, x

Crocheting the Mane

The mane is also crocheted with the 5mm hook and a strand of gray and a strand of purple yarn. You will crochet it in a similar way to the tail, but you’ll leave a train of chain loops between each section of hair so that you can sew it onto the back of the head in a line.

image of the unicorn's hair

Row 1

Ch21, turn, sk, 1sc x 20

Row 2

Ch31, turn, sk, 1sc x 29

Row 3

Ch25, turn, sk, 1sc x 23

Row 4 – 10

Ch35, turn, sk, 1sc x 33

Use the white strand to sew the hair onto the back of the head, as this will blend with the neck a little better.

picture of me holding the unicorn

Happy Crocheting!

*The products linked in this pattern were carefully selected by Lucy Kate Crochet. If you decide to purchase using the links provided, we may earn a small commission on that sale. This is at no extra cost to you.

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Unique Crochet Zebra Pattern https://lucykatecrochet.com/unique-crochet-zebra-pattern https://lucykatecrochet.com/unique-crochet-zebra-pattern#respond Fri, 26 Apr 2024 08:44:24 +0000 https://lucykatecrochet.com/?p=6394 I’ve got to tell you, this crochet zebra is probably one of the most complicated patterns I’ve ever created. But, stay with me, it won’t be nearly so tricky for you to follow along with as it was for me to design! I’ll explain. My free crochet zebra pattern has a unique twist. The stripes...

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image of crochet zebra on my desk

I’ve got to tell you, this crochet zebra is probably one of the most complicated patterns I’ve ever created. But, stay with me, it won’t be nearly so tricky for you to follow along with as it was for me to design! I’ll explain.

photo of a crocheted zebra

My free crochet zebra pattern has a unique twist. The stripes aren’t made with color changes, aside from the muzzle, they are all crocheted strips that are hand sewn onto the toy. This technique was a bit of a departure from the amigurumi norm for me, but it enabled me to produce markings that actually look like a real zebra. I didn’t want toy zebra stripes, I wanted the twists and angles of the real gorgeous creature. And I think I got pretty close.

I’ve taken detailed photos of my design process from start to finishing touches for you to follow along with, just remember to have a bunch of pins handy as well as your usual crochet kit!

I created this toy as a gift for a family friend, who adored my daughter’s horse and son’s donkey from my previous designs.

What I Used

I’ve shared the yarns I used, but you should be able to swap out of DK weight cotton blend black and white yarns and get a very similar effect.

image of the crochet zebra on a blanket

Techniques and Terms

  • sc – single crochet
  • 2sc – two single crochets into the same stitch
  • sc2tog – use one single crochet to join two stitches together
  • slst – slip stitch
  • sk – skip the next stitch
  • ch – chain
  • cc – color change
  • surface crochet
  • BLO – back loop only

The Crochet Zebra Pattern

You are going to crochet your zebra broadly speaking in three sections. There will be crocheting the body parts, crocheting the stripes, and sewing the stripes on and toy together. I’ll walk you through each bit, and if you have any questions drop them in the comments section below.

Crochet Zebra’s Head

image of crochet zebra focussing on the head

You are going to begin the zebra’s head with the muzzle, starting off with the black yarn and 3.5mm crochet hook.

Round 1

Make a magic circle of eight stitches (8)

Round 2

2sc x 8 (16)

Round 3

(1sc, 2sc) x 8 (24)

Round 4 – 5

1sc x 24 (24)

Round 6

(1sc x 2, 2sc) x 8 (32)

Round 7 – 9

1sc x 32

Round 10

(1sc x 2, sc2tog) x 8 (24)

Round 11

1sc x 24

Round 12

(1sc x 2, 2sc) x 8 (32)

Round 13 – 15

1sc x 32

cc almond

Round 16 – 17

1sc x 32

Round 18

(1sc x 3, 2sc) x 8 (40)

Round 19 – 20

1sc x 40

Round 21

(1sc x 4, 2sc) x 8 (48)

Round 22 – 24

1sc x 48

Round 25

(1sc x 5, 2sc) x 8 (56)

Round 26 – 28

1sc x 56

Round 29

(1sc x 5, sc2tog) x 8 (48)

side image of the finished crochet zebra

Round 30

1sc x 48

Round 31

(1sc x 4, sc2tog) x 8 (40)

Round 32

1sc x 40

Round 33

(1sc x 3, sc2tog) x 8 (32)

Round 34

1sc x 32

Insert your safety eyes into the face. I aim to have them about round 24, and approximately 20 stitches apart. You can tie the eyes together to draw them into the face if you’d like. I also recommend stuffing the muzzle at this point.

Round 35

(1sc x 2, sc2tog) x 8 (24)

Round 36

(1sc, sc2tog) x 8 (16)

Fill the rest of the head with toy stuffing.

Round 37

sc2tog to close, then tie off.

Adding the head stripes

image showing the striped zebra head

Your head is going to have stripes made up of looped chains, that you’re going to sew onto the head. So you’ll make each chain length, slip stitch into the first stitch to join as a circle, place with pins and then sew them on.

You’ll need chains that are 12, 60, 40, 30 and 35 stitches in length. The chain 12 is the only one you won’t loop, it just goes straight up the head from muzzle to hairline.

image of crochet zebra chain numbers

Place them as shown in the pictures.

image showing four views of the amigurumi zebra's head stripes

Zebra Ears

Create the ears in your almond yarn with the 3.5mm crochet hook.

image of crochet zebra's ears

Round 1

Make a magic circle of six stitches (6)

Round 2 – 3

1sc x 6

Round 4

2sc x 6 (12)

Round 5 – 7

1sc x 12

Round 8

(1sc, 2sc) x 6 (18)

Round 9 – 14

1sc x 18

Round 15

(1sc x 2, 2sc) x 6 (24)

Round 16 – 19

1sc x 24

Round 20

(1sc x 3, 2sc) x 6 (30)

Round 21

1sc x 30

Edging the ears

image of zebra sitting on my desk

To give black definition to your ears, you are going to first fold them into shape. I do this by sewing the ear flat and joining the two bottom corners together in the center.

Now swap to your black yarn and grab your 2.5mm crochet hook. Starting at the head level, holding the ear flat as you want it, make single crochets around the circumference of the shape.

You can now sew your ears onto the top of the head, leaving a stitch wide gap at the top between them. Sew with your almond yarn, and using a tapestry needle for this finer work.

Crocheting the Body

Crochet your zebra’s body in almond yarn with the 3.5mm crochet hook.

image of blank amigurumi zebra body

Round 1

Make a magic circle of eight stitches (8)

Round 2

2sc x 8 (16)

Round 3

(1sc, 2sc) x 8 (24)

Round 4

(1sc x 2, 2sc) x 8 (32)

Round 5 – 16

1sc x 32

Round 17

(1sc x 3, 2sc) x 8 (40)

Round 18 – 19

1sc x 40

Round 20

(1sc x 4, 2sc) x 8 (48)

Round 21 – 24

1sc x 48

Round 25

(1sc x 5, 2sc) x 8 (56)

Round 26 – 42

1sc x 56

Round 43

(1sc x 5, sc2tog) x 8 (48)

Round 44

(1sc x 4, sc2tog) x 8 (40)

Round 45

(1sc x 3, sc2tog) x 8 (32)

Round 46

(1sc x 2, sc2tog) x 8 (24)

Round 47

(1sc, sc2tog) x 8 (16)

Fill with toy safe stuffing.

Round 48

sc2tog to close

Body stripes

image showing the body stripes from four angles

Your body stripes will be created in the same way as the face stripes, but the placement is less fiddly. You’re going to make seven looped chains of 75.

image showing sewing on the stripes

Sew them onto the body, leaving naturally increasing white space at the center. This will be lined up with the face later on.

Zebra’s Arms

Begin your arms in black yarn, and using your 3.5mm crochet hook.

image of the zebra's arms

Round 1

Make a magic circle of eight stitches (8)

Round 2

2sc x 8 (16)

Round 3

(1sc, 2sc) x 8 (24)

Round 4

(1sc x 2, 2sc) x 8 (32)

Round 5

BLO (1sc x 2, sc2tog) x 8 (24)

Round 6

1sc x 24

Round 7

(1sc, sc2tog) x 8 (16)

Round 8

1sc x 16

cc almond

Round 9

(1sc, 2sc) x 8 (24)

Round 10 – 32

1sc x 24

Round 33

(1sc, sc2tog) x 8 (16)

Fill with toy stuffing.

Round 34

sc2tog to close

The arm stripes

Crochet your arm stripes as chains of 120 stitches for each arm. You will then need to hand sew the stripes in opposite directions on each limb.

Crochet Zebra’s Legs

Follow the arm pattern to create your legs, but you’re going to do the stripes a little differently.

image of the zebra's legs

Stripes for the legs

Your leg stripes are going to be sewn as two long chains, one for each arm. Ch81, sk, 1sc x 80, then sew this thicker stripe on as symmetrical spirals, rotating in opposite directions to each other.

The Tail

crochet zebra's tail image

Work in your almond yarn with your 3.5mm crochet hook.

Round 1

Make a magic circle of eight stitches (8)

Round 2

2sc x 8 (16)

Round 3 – 15

1sc x 16

Fill with toy stuffing, and sew onto the back end of your body section.

Tail fluff

image showing the zebra from behind

I created the furry end of the tail using a long strand of black yarn and a tapestry needle. I sewed in and out from the magic circle, working through each stitch for three rounds but leaving a long loop at each stitch.

Crocheting the Mane

You are going to sew the mane in the same way. Weaving in and out with your needle and black yarn, leaving large loops of yarn hanging from each stitch.

Zebra mane’s work directly down the back of the head, so don’t make a very wide line, just one or two loops at the level of each round will be fine.

Sewing the Amigurumi Zebra Together

Now you’ve got all your pieces, you can lay them together on the floor in front of you and have a good think about how you want your zebra to look. I have a clear idea in my head of posture, and you can just copy what I did with mine.

image of the crochet zebra before sewing

I like this style of toy to pose like a traditional teddy bear, with arms hanging down and legs level to allow it to sit. Try to align the shoulders with the expansion between the neck and body shapes.

For this toy, it’s important to make sure that your spirals of stripes on the arms and legs sit in a way that looks symmetrical too.

If you’re not very confident with sewing, pin around the edges of the limbs first before sewing so you don’t lose your place.

And if you have any questions about any of this, give me a shout in the comments section below.

Happy Crocheting!

Lucy Kate, x

*The products linked in this pattern were carefully selected by Lucy Kate Crochet. If you decide to purchase using the links provided, we may earn a small commission on that sale. This is at no extra cost to you.

photos of crochet zebra

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How To Crochet A Donkey – Free Amigurumi Pattern https://lucykatecrochet.com/how-to-crochet-a-donkey https://lucykatecrochet.com/how-to-crochet-a-donkey#comments Wed, 17 Apr 2024 14:40:00 +0000 https://lucykatecrochet.com/?p=6238 You know that situation where you design a toy horse for your daughter, so you then have to immediately make a crochet donkey for your son? No? Just me? Well, you get a new pattern out of it, so I won’t complain! My free crochet donkey pattern is an intermediate level design, but laid out...

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image showing two angles of the crochet donkey

You know that situation where you design a toy horse for your daughter, so you then have to immediately make a crochet donkey for your son? No? Just me? Well, you get a new pattern out of it, so I won’t complain!

photo of a crochet donkey

My free crochet donkey pattern is an intermediate level design, but laid out in simple, straight forward steps. You can absolutely give it a go as an amigurumi beginner, just be prepared for a bit of a learning curve.

If you prefer your patterns in PDF form and advert free, this pattern is also available to download from our shop here:

This design will use a range of skills, including surface crochet, hand sewing, and fairly heft dollop of patience too. But don’t let that put you off, I can confirm he’s well worth the effort if my son’s reaction was anything to go by!

This donkey is called Sausage Roll, because that’s what my four year old has named him… I can only apologise. The eleven year old called her horse Jeremy, so hopefully that’s some consolation. Since making this pattern I’ve also turned it into an awesome zebra, which has yet to be named!

Jayne's crochet donkey in chenille
Pattern tester Jayne created a gorgeous unique take on the pattern by using chenille yarn

Your Equipment List

Here’s what you’ll need to crochet your own donkey pal:

I highly recommend you use the yarn I did for this pattern, as I found it great to work with and had a super finish. It’s Hobbii’s DK cotton silk range. You’ll see on the packaging it advises a bigger hook size, but go with the 3.5mm for this pattern.

image of the crochet donkey sitting on my desk

Techniques and Tips

I’ll use abbreviations in the pattern instructions, so if you come across any you don’t recognise just flick up here and check out the information and links for clarification.

  • sc – single crochet
  • 2sc – two single crochets into one stitch
  • sc2tog – join two stitches together with one single crochet
  • cc – color change
  • BLO – crochet into the back loop only
  • ch – chain
  • turn – rotate the piece 180 degrees
  • slst – slip stitch
Lucille's crochet donkey based on my pattern
My pattern tester Lucille really made the mane her own, and I love it!

My Free Crochet Donkey Pattern

You are going to create your crochet donkey in sections, which will be hand sewn together as you go along.

Pattern tester Rebecca's donkey
Pattern tester Rebecca’s donkey has such a lovely expression

Amigurumi Donkey’s Head

We’ll start with the muzzle, working in your cream yarn with the 3.5mm crochet hook.

image showing my crochet donkey's head

Round 1

Make a magic circle of eight stitches (8)

Round 2

2sc x 8 (16)

Round 3

(1sc, 2sc) x 8 (24)

Round 4 – 5

1sc x 24 (24)

Round 6

(1sc x 2, 2sc) x 8 (32)

Round 7 – 9

1sc x 32

Round 10

(1sc x 2, sc2tog) x 8 (24)

Round 11

1sc x 24

Round 12

(1sc x 2, 2sc) x 8 (32)

Round 13 – 15

1sc x 32

cc gray

Round 16 – 17

1sc x 32

Round 18

(1sc x 3, 2sc) x 8 (40)

Round 19 – 20

1sc x 40

Round 21

(1sc x 4, 2sc) x 8 (48)

Round 22 – 24

1sc x 48

Round 25

(1sc x 5, 2sc) x 8 (56)

Round 26 – 28

1sc x 56

Round 29

(1sc x 5, sc2tog) x 8 (48)

Round 30

1sc x 48

Round 31

(1sc x 4, sc2tog) x 8 (40)

Round 32

1sc x 40

Round 33

(1sc x 3, sc2tog) x 8 (32)

Round 34

1sc x 32

Insert the safety eyes at round 22 level, approximately a third of the way around the head apart. If you like, you can tie the backs together with a piece of yarn to inset them slightly into the head.

crochet donkey

Round

(1sc x 2, sc2tog) x 8 (24)

Round

(1sc, sc2tog) x 8 (16)

Round

sc2tog to close, the tie off and hide the yarn tail within the head.

Crochet Donkey’s Ears

image of the crochet donkey sitting on the floor

Your crochet donkey’s outer ears will be started in the brown yarn, and worked with your 3.5mm crochet hook.

Round 1

Make a magic circle of six stitches (6)

Round 2 -3

1sc x 6

Round 4

2sc x 6 (12)

cc gray

Round 5 – 7

1sc x 12

Round 8

(1sc, 2sc) x 6 (18)

Round 9 – 14

1sc x 18

Round 15

(1sc x 2, 2sc) x 6 (24)

Round 16 – 19

1sc x 24

Round 20

(1sc x 3, 2sc) x 6 (30)

Round 21

1sc x 30

Slst, and tie off, leaving a long tail of yarn which you’ll use to sew the ear into shape then onto the head a little later.

Adrienne's crochet donkey
Pattern tester Adrienne’s crochet donkey looks stunning with an alternative colored ear highlight and mane

The inner ears

Use your cream yarn and 3.5mm crochet hook.

I worked around a starting chain to get this effect.

Ch9, sk, 1sc x 7, 3sc, 1sc x 7, 3sc, 1sc x 8, 3sc, 1sc x 9, 3sc, 1sc x 10, 3sc, 1sc x 11.

Sewing your crochet donkey’s ears

image showing ear construction

First you are going to construct the ear sections, then you’ll sew them onto the top of your donkey’s head.

Lay your gray section, flattened, on a desk. Place the cream section lined up with the bottom of the ear, in the center. Using a length of cream yarn and your needle, weave around the edge of the cream inner ear to attach it.

Now fold the gray sections bottom corners to meet in the middle, over the cream section, securing it firmly.

Holding the pointed end upright, now sew them to the top of your donkey’s head. The ears should sit in line with the position of the eyes.

Edging the donkey’s ears

You are now going to give definition to the ears by working a series of single crochets into the surface of the stitches around the perimeter of the ears. Use your 2.5mm crochet hook to make working into these smaller gaps a little easier.

Highlighting the Eyes

image showing a closeup of the donkey's eyes

Take your cream yarn and needle, and sew four big stitches around the edges of each safety eye, giving the impression of cream eyeliner. Go around the circumference twice, and hide the tail inside the head.

Crocheting the Nostrils

image of the nostrils being sewn

Your nostrils will be sewn in the brown yarn, work across three stitches in length from around the fourth to seventh round, in straight lines. Just to give a hint of the nose.

Crochet Donkey’s Body

This section will be made entirely in gray yarn, with the 3.5mm crochet hook.

Round 1

Make a magic circle of eight stitches (8)

Round 2

2sc x 8 (16)

Round 3

(1sc, 2sc) x 8 (24)

Round 4

(1sc x 2, 2sc) x 8 (32)

Round 5 – 16

1sc x 32

Round 17

(1sc x 3, 2sc) x 8 (40)

Round 18 – 19

1sc x 40

Round 20

(1sc x 4, 2sc) x 8 (48)

Round 21 – 24

1sc x 48

Round 25

(1sc x 5, 2sc) x 8 (56)

Round 26 – 42

1sc x 56

Round 43

(1sc x 5, sc2tog) x 8 (48)

Round 44

(1sc x 4, sc2tog) x 8 (40)

Round 45

(1sc x 3, sc2tog) x 8 (32)

Round 46

(1sc x 2, sc2tog) x 8 (24)

Round 47

(1sc, sc2tog) x 8 (16)

Fill with toy safe stuffing.

Round 48

sc2tog to close, tie off and hide the end of the yarn within the body.

Sewing the Head to the Body

image showing bodily newly sewn onto head

I like to position my crochet toys so that their chins are sloping downwards, but you can go with whatever you think looks best. Position the head to your satisfaction, then holding it in place with your non-dominant hand, use your dominant hand to weave in and out between the head and body securing each stitch together.

Crocheting the Patch

image showing the patch

You are now going to crochet a cream patch for your donkey’s tummy. You’ll work back and forth around a chain.

Round 1

Ch13, sk, 1sc x 11, 3sc, 1sc x 12

Turn

Round 2

Ch1, 1sc x 12, 3sc, 1sc x 13

Turn

Round 3

Ch1, 1sc x 13, 3sc, 1sc x 14

Turn

Round 4

Ch1, 1sc x 14, 3sc, 1sc x 15

Turn

Round 5

Ch1, 1sc x 15, 3sc, 1sc x 16

Now hand sew the patch so that the flat ends sits on the floor at the same level as your donkey’s body section.

The Donkey’s Mane

image showing part way through crocheting the donkey's mane

Donkeys have a short, bristle brush like mane that comes from their forehead to the back of the neck. Cut a long strand of your brown yarn and thread the tapestry needle. Now sew back and forth along the line you want the hair to fall, leaving each stitch as a loose loop.

Snip along each loop and tie them together to get that full donkey hair impact.

Crocheting the Legs

photo of the donkey

Begin the legs at the hooves, using your 3.5mm crochet hook and cream yarn.

Round 1

Make a magic circle of eight stitches (8)

Round 2

2sc x 8 (16)

Round 3

(1sc, 2sc) x 8 (24)

Round 4

(1sc x 2, 2sc) x 8 (32)

Round 5

BLO (1sc x 2, sc2tog) x 8 (24)

Round 6

1sc x 24

Round 7

(1sc, sc2tog) x 8 (16)

Round 8

1sc x 16

cc gray

Round 9

(1sc, 2sc) x 8 (24)

Round 10 – 32

1sc x 24

Round 33

(1sc, sc2tog) x 8 (16)

Stuff up to round 26, leave the rest empty.

Round

sc2tog to close

Edging the hooves

image showing the hooves being crocheted

You are now going to single surface crochet using the 2.5mm hook and brown yarn, around the back loop only section of each hoof to define it. At the end of the circle, hide the yarn tails inside the foot.

Attaching the Legs

Sew your legs on around the edge of the empty section of each limb. Arms should sit about round 16, legs should sit either side of the base of the body section.

Crochet the Tail

image of the tail

Your donkey’s short tail section will be worked in gray yarn with the 3.5mm crochet hook.

Round 1

Make a magic circle of six stitches (6)

Round 2

2sc x 8 (16)

Round 3 – 15

1sc x 16

Slst and tie off, leave a long tail for sewing. Fill to the top, then place against your donkey at the back, and sew it tightly in place.

The tail fur

Sew your donkey a lovely fluffy tail end using your needle and brown yarn. This time begin your loops of yarn at the center of the tail’s magic circle, then work around each stitch until you are about a third of the way down the tail. Tie off and hide the loose end inside the gray section.

*The products linked in this pattern were carefully selected by Lucy Kate Crochet. If you decide to purchase using the links provided, we may earn a small commission on that sale. This is at no extra cost to you.

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Jeremy the Crochet Horse – Free Pattern https://lucykatecrochet.com/crochet-cart-horse-pattern https://lucykatecrochet.com/crochet-cart-horse-pattern#respond Fri, 12 Apr 2024 13:15:53 +0000 https://lucykatecrochet.com/?p=6218 I created Jeremy the crochet horse last week for my daughter. This a beginner friendly crochet pattern, and the perfect addition to any pony lover’s amigurumi collection! I’ve used simple stitches in this design, and there are just a handful of color changes to make along the way. The mane might look gloriously complex, but...

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image showing side view of my free crochet cart horse pattern

I created Jeremy the crochet horse last week for my daughter. This a beginner friendly crochet pattern, and the perfect addition to any pony lover’s amigurumi collection! I’ve used simple stitches in this design, and there are just a handful of color changes to make along the way.

The mane might look gloriously complex, but in reality it’s just a series of neatly looped chain stitches!

Funnily enough, my crochet cart horse took a little longer than some of my other patterns to plan out, because I was under an extra layer of pressure to get the proportions and overall equine feel down just right.

You see, my daughter is horse mad. This is not an exaggeration. If we let her, she’d forgo all other daily activities and spend every minute with horses. She’s got the horse fever. I am telling you this, because I want you to appreciate that when I say getting this pattern right was rather important, I don’t want you to think i’m being glib. She’s a good kid, she was going to thank me and compliment the finished toy regardless, but the stakes here were more than slightly higher than normal. Thank goodness it turned it well, and I even ended up creating a similar donkey and zebra pattern too!

Your Kit List

I used hobbii’s friends cotton silk yarn for this pattern, but any DK weight yarn will work just fine. Make sure to check the recommended hook size on the packaging if you use a different brand, and you’ll usually need to size down at least .5mm from that to get nice tight stitches.

You’ll want to have the smaller size yarn needle to pull the loose ends of the mane into the body to hide them, or to leave a long train at the end of your yarn to attach the needle and do the same.

Techniques

  • sc – single crochet
  • 2sc – two single crochets into one stitch
  • sc2tog – join two stitches together with one single crochet
  • cc – color change
  • BLO – crochet into the back loop only
  • ch – chain
  • slst – slip stitch

Challenges

This crocheted cart horse is definitely beginner friendly, but it is not my quickest project. I found the body and head work up fairly fast, but the hair is made of a series of long, looped chains and they took a little time for me to work up in the bulk numbers I needed to get the look just right. That said, there is something very relaxing about a repeating pattern, so if you are anything like me, that bit of extra time will fly past nicely.

The Free Crochet Horse Pattern

You’re going to construct your crochet cart horse in sections, and sew them together as you go along.

The head

image showing the horse's head

Begin in your cream yarn, using your 3.5mm crochet hook.

Round 1

Make a magic circle of eight stitches (8)

Round 2

2sc x 8 (16)

Round 3

(1sc, 2sc) x 8 (24)

Round 4 – 5

1sc x 24

Round 6

(1sc x 2, 2sc) x 8 (32)

Round 7 – 9

1sc x 32

Round 10

(1sc x 2, sc2tog) x 8 (24)

cc brown

Round 11

1sc x 24

Round 12

(1sc x 2, 2sc) x 8 (32)

Round 13 – 18

1sc x 32

Round 19

(1sc x 3, 2sc) x 8 (40)

Round 20 – 22

1sc x 40

Round 23

(1sc x 4, 2sc) x 8 (48)

Round 24 – 26

1sc x 48

Round 27

(1sc x 5, 2sc) x 8 (56)

Round 28 – 30

1sc x 56

Round 31

(1sc x 5, sc2tog) x 8 (48)

Round 32

1sc x 48

Round 33

(1sc x 4, sc2tog) x 8 (40)

Round 34

1sc x 40

Round 35

(1sc x 3, sc2tog) x 8 (32)

Stuff your head so far.

Round 36

1sc x 32

Insert safety eyes, place them approximately at the level of round 30 and about a third of the circumference of the head apart. To give definition to the cheeks, I use a strand of yarn to tie the backs of the safety eyes together more tightly than they would naturally sit.

Round 37

(1sc x 2, sc2tog) x 8 (24)

Finish filling with toy stuffing.

Round 38

(1sc, sc2tog) x 8 (16)

Round 39

sc2tog to close, and hide the yarn tail within the head.

The outer ears

image showing the horse's ears

Your crochet horse’s outer ears will be in brown yarn, worked with your 3.5mm crochet hook.

Round 1

Make a magic circle of six stitches (6)

Round 2 -3

1sc x 6

Round 4

2sc x 6 (12)

Round 5 – 9

1sc x 12

Round 10

(1sc, 2sc) x 6 (18)

Round 11 – 14

1sc x 18

Round 15

(1sc x 2, 2sc) x 6 (24)

Round 16 – 17

1sc x 24

Round 18

(1sc x 3, 2sc) x 6 (30)

Round 19

1sc x 30

Slst, and tie off, leaving a long tail of yarn which you’ll use to sew the ear into shape then onto the head a little later.

The inner ear panel

Use your cream yarn and 3.5mm crochet hook.

I worked back and forth around a starting chain to get this effect.

Ch 8, 1sc x 6, 3sc, 1sc x 6

Turn

Ch1, 1sc x 6, 3sc, 1sc x 7, slst.

Sewing your crochet horse’s ears

First you are going to construct the ear sections, then you’ll sew them onto the top of your horse’s head.

Lay your brown section, flattened, on a desk. Place the cream section lined up with the bottom of the ear, in the center. Using a length of cream yarn and your needle, weave around the edge of the cream inner ear to attach it.

Now fold the brown sections bottom corners to meet in the middle, over the cream section, securing it firmly.

Holding the pointed end upright, now sew them to the top of your horse’s head. The ears should sit in line with the position of the eyes.

Your horse’s body

image showing the crochet horse

This section will be made entirely in brown yarn, with the 3.5mm crochet hook.

Round 1

Make a magic circle of eight stitches (8)

Round 2

2sc x 8 (16)

Round 3

(1sc, 2sc) x 8 (24)

Round 4

(1sc x 2, 2sc) x 8 (32)

Round 5 – 16

1sc x 32

Round 17

(1sc x 3, 2sc) x 8 (40)

Round 18 – 19

1sc x 40

Round 20

(1sc x 4, 2sc) x 8 (48)

Round 21 – 24

1sc x 48

Round 25

(1sc x 5, 2sc) x 8 (56)

Round 26 – 42

1sc x 56

Round 43

(1sc x 5, sc2tog) x 8 (48)

Round 44

(1sc x 4, sc2tog) x 8 (40)

Round 45

(1sc x 3, sc2tog) x 8 (32)

Round 46

(1sc x 2, sc2tog) x 8 (24)

Round 47

(1sc, sc2tog) x 8 (16)

Fill with toy safe stuffing.

Round 48

sc2tog to close, tie off and hide the end of the yarn within the body.

Sewing the horse’s head to the body

image showing the horse's body and head attached

I like to position my crochet toys so that their chins are sloping downwards, but you can go with whatever you think looks best. Position the head to your satisfaction, then holding it in place with your non-dominant hand, use your dominant hand to weave in and out between the head and body securing each stitch together.

Crocheting the mane

image showing the horse's mane chains

Your horse’s mane is going to be made up of chains, using the cream yarn.

Ch21, slst into 1st loop

*ch21, slst into 2nd loop of that chain
*repeat for as long as you want your horse’s mane to reach down the back!

image showing the amigurumi horse's mane being sewn on

Attach the chains with your yarn needle, sewing them directly onto the location you’d like them to sit. Remember horse’s manes run in a line down the neck, not spread out.

Amigurumi horse legs

image showing the horse's legs

Begin the legs at the hooves, using your 3.5mm crochet hook and cream yarn.

Round 1

Make a magic circle of eight stitches (8)

Round 2

2sc x 8 (16)

Round 3

(1sc, 2sc) x 8 (24)

Round 4

(1sc x 2, 2sc) x 8 (32)

Round 5

BLO (1sc x 2, sc2tog) x 8 (24)

Round 6

1sc x 24

Round 7

(1sc, sc2tog) x 8 (16)

Round 8

1sc x 16

cc brown

Round 9

(1sc, 2sc) x 8 (24)

Round 10 – 32

1sc x 24

Round 33

(1sc, sc2tog) x 8 (16)

Stuff up to round 26, leave the rest empty.

Round

sc2tog to close

Attaching the legs

image showing the crochet horse's arms being sewn on

Sew your legs on around the edge of the empty section of each limb. Arms should sit about round 16, legs should sit either side of the base of the body section.

Crocheting the hoof feathering

image showing the horse's tail fur being crocheted

To give the effect of feathering around your amigurumi horse’s hooves, create a series of looped chains in the same manner that you did for the mane. However, for this section you’ll need loops that are eight chains long, with a one chain gap between, and each leg will need 9 chain loops to fit around the foot.

Use a tapestry needle to sew the chain loops around each hoof as though they were tiny bracelets!

Crochet the horse’s tail

image showing the horse's tail stub

Your horse’s short tail section will be worked in brown yarn with the 3.5mm crochet hook.

Round 1

Make a magic circle of six stitches (6)

Round 2

2sc x 8 (16)

Round 3 – 15

1sc x 16

Slst and tie off, leave a long tail for sewing. Fill to the top, then place against your horse at the back, and sew it tightly in place.

The tail fur

Your horse’s tail is going to be made in the same way as the mane and hoof hair, using long looped chains in cream yarn. I sewed these onto the tail stub winding around in the same style as the rounds were crocheted. Vary the chain loop lengths between 20 and 30 stitches each.

*The products linked in this pattern were carefully selected by Lucy Kate Crochet. If you decide to purchase using the links provided, we may earn a small commission on that sale. This is at no extra cost to you.

photo of a crochet horse
photo of a crocheted horse

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