Hi — we're a one-person editorial (with a lot of caffeine and a steadily growing yarn drawer) curating daily roundups of free crochet patterns from across the web. We started Crochet Gallery because we love crochet and we hate scrolling past fifty tutorials that don't quite tell you whether the pattern is free, whether you can finish it on a Saturday, or who made it in the first place.

What we do

Every morning we publish up to ten new edits — themed roundups of free crochet patterns. Granny squares, amigurumi, blankets, wearables, slow-Sunday projects, weekend wins. Each pattern in an edit links straight to its original maker; we never republish the instructions.

Why we built it

Three reasons, in honest order:

  • To make finding free patterns less of a chore. Pattern hunting on Pinterest is a part-time job. We do it so you don't have to.
  • To send traffic to the makers we love. Every pattern card on this site is a one-tap doorway to the original creator's page.
  • Because slow afternoons should have good crochet. Genuinely. It's the whole reason.

How we curate

  1. We scout patterns by hand from public sources — Pinterest seeds, designer blogs, free-pattern roundups, and reader submissions.
  2. We read every pattern before it ships, tag it (granny square, amigurumi, blanket, etc.), and pair it with similar pieces.
  3. Roundups only include patterns that are truly free — no paywall, no required purchase. An email-gate from the creator is fine.
  4. Every pattern links to the original creator. We're a doorway, not a destination.

Who's behind the hook

Crochet Gallery is run by a small team (mostly one stubborn maker) based out of a sunny corner of North Africa. We answer email, we love feedback, and we will absolutely take pattern suggestions. Hook us up.

Not just a feed

We don't do infinite scroll. We don't recommend you ten more posts after every paragraph. We publish ten things in the morning and we trust that's enough. If you want them delivered weekly instead, subscribe to The Saturday Edit.

"A roundup should feel like a friend handing you a folded list, not an algorithm spitting search results."