Then don’t, you should be able to just twist your hook and crochet as normal in each stitch after twisting the hook, that’s how I learned, working backwards wacked my (dyslexic) brain out before I saw the hack of spinning the hook then crocheting as normal and it became easy
Any time, once you get the tension down (cause twisting the hook changes it) it makes the stitch seem just as easy as not going backwards since you don’t have to anymore, after I saw the hack all I had to do was work on the tension with the twisted yarn oh my gosh the hook and blow all done, what seemed so had became much easier. I’m glad I was able to share the tip with you too
Okay who is this person and where can I find them that shows you how to do a stitch without a video, the amount of times I need to know how to do a stitch without a video is surprisingly a lot, I’d love to know who this person is
Genuine question, but why is it weird to like learning something complicated? It challenges your brain which is good for brain health, (I like learning complex medical stuff), I genuinely don’t understand why it would be weird to want to challenge yourself, and your abilities, it’s how you learn and get better isn’t it?
I’m the same way. I like to challenge myself. Plus, most stitches are just made up of really simple stitches put together to make something more complex. I am always trying new stitches and using them in my patterns. I love when my testers finish and say they learned something new from my pattern especially when they say it wasn’t as hard as they thought it would be.
I just went back to YouTube the other day when I thought the Solomon knot was the hardest, but now that I have more experience I actually know it isn’t the hardest anymore by a long shot