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This isn’t exactly an additional stitch, it’s a different way to work your stitches. By going into the front or back loops only, you get a different look in your finished crochet stitches.
Front Loop
The front loop is the part of the “V” that is closest to you when your work is facing you. It is in the front. When you are crocheting, you insert your hook into only the loop closest to you, not both. It gives a completely different look to the front and back of your work. My swatch shows you how working every row (bottom 6 rows) in front loop only looks. It also show how working a row of front loop on the right side, and back loop on the wrong side looks (top 6 rows).
Back Loop
The back loop is the part of the top “V” that is farthest away from you when your work is facing you. It is in the back. When you are crocheting, you insert your hook into only the loop farthest to you, not both. This also gives a different look to the front and the back of your work. My swatch shows both crocheting in the back loops only for 6 rows (bottom) and alternating back loop (right side) and front loop (wrong side) for 6 rows (top).
An extended single crochet is just a little bit taller than the single crochet. It is still just as easy, with just one more step. (You do need to increase your turning chain to a chain 2, it’s almost twice as tall as the single crochet.)
Insert your hook into the “hole” (or back loop of foundation row). Yarn over. Pull loop through. (Two (2) loops on hook) Yarn over and pull through one loop only. Yarn over again and pull through both loops. Extended single crochet made. (English term is a extended double crochet (exdc).)
The double treble is a little taller than a treble crochet. The difference is you wrap three (3) times around the hook first and do an additional yarn over, pull through two (2).
For the double treble crochet, you yarn over the hook three (3) times, first (yarn over, yarn over, yarn over). Then insert your hook (three (3) loops already on) into the “hole” (or back loop of foundation row). Yarn over again. Pull loop through. You will now have five (5) loops on your hook. Yarn over and pull through two (2) loops. Yarn over and pull through two (2) loops again. Yarn over and pull through two (2) loops again. Yarn over and pull through both remaining loops. Double treble crochet made. (English term is treble (triple) treble (trtr or ttr).)
The popcorn stitch is sometimes referred to as a bobble stitch (and visa versa). These crochet stitches are made up of several double crochet (or taller) stitches grouped together that form “bumps” in your work. The pattern will usually specify how many of which stitch will equal their “popcorn” stitch.
Since I can never really follow “rules”; the way I do my popcorn stitch is the way some books refer to a bobble stitch. I usually use 5 unfinished double crochet stitches and connect them all at the end and do a chain stitch to lock them in place.
(An “unfinished” stitch simply means you do not do the final yarn over and pull through. You leave the “open” stitch loop(s) on your hook and move onto the next one.)
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