Portuguese Crochet Guide: Ponto Torcido (Twisted Stitch) & Advanced Clusters

Portuguese crochet has its own unique terminology and techniques. One of the most distinctive is the Ponto Torcido (Twisted Stitch) — a method of starting a row or creating mid-row motifs using clusters of double crochets worked together and then into the same base.

In this guide, you will learn:

  • The full meaning of Portuguese crochet terms
  • Step-by-step how-to for Ponto Torcido de Início de Carreira (Twisted Stitch for row start)
  • Step-by-step how-to for Ponto Torcido de Meio de Carreira (Twisted Stitch for mid-row)
  • Legend translations for basic stitches
  • How to read Portuguese crochet diagrams

Portuguese Crochet Guide: Ponto Torcido (Twisted Stitch) & Advanced Clusters
Portuguese Crochet Guide: Ponto Torcido (Twisted Stitch) & Advanced Clusters

Why Learn Portuguese Crochet Terms?

BenefitExplanation
Access Brazilian & Portuguese patternsPortugal and Brazil have rich crochet traditions, especially for lace, doilies, and garments
Unique techniquesThe “Ponto Torcido” (Twisted Stitch) is less common in English patterns but creates beautiful textured motifs
Understand European chartsPortuguese symbols follow international standards, but the written terms are distinct
Expand your crochet vocabularyLearning terms in multiple languages makes you a more versatile crocheter

Part 1: Legend (Legenda) — Basic Stitches

Your image begins with a Legenda (legend/key) defining the basic symbols.

Correntinha (corr) — Chain Stitch

AttributeDetail
PortugueseCorrentinha
Abbreviationcorr
EnglishChain stitch
Symbol○ or ellipse

How to Make a Correntinha:

  1. Make a slip knot on your hook.
  2. Yarn over and pull through the loop on your hook.
  3. Repeat to form a chain.

Ponto Baixo (pb) — Single Crochet

AttributeDetail
PortuguesePonto Baixo
Abbreviationpb
EnglishSingle crochet
Symbol✚ or +

How to Make a Ponto Baixo:

  1. Insert hook into the stitch.
  2. Yarn over and pull up a loop (2 loops on hook).
  3. Yarn over and pull through both loops.

Pontos Altos (pa) — Double Crochets

AttributeDetail
PortuguesePontos Altos
Abbreviationpa
EnglishDouble crochet (US) / Treble (UK)

Your image uses “Pontos Altos Fechados Juntos” and “Pontos Altos no Mesmo Ponto Base” — these are the two components of the Ponto Torcido.


Part 2: Ponto Torcido de Início de Carreira

(Twisted Stitch for Beginning of Row)

This is the signature technique in your image. It creates a decorative, textured start to a new row without using a simple turning chain.

PortugueseEnglish Translation
Ponto Torcido de Início de CarreiraTwisted Stitch for beginning of row

The Formula (from your image):

= { [2 Correntinhas (corr) + 3 Pontos Altos Fechados Juntos (3paf)] + [3 Correntinhas (corr) + 3 Pontos Altos no Mesmo Ponto Base (3pampb)] }

Let me break this down step by step.

Component A: 2 Correntinhas + 3 Pontos Altos Fechados Juntos (3paf)

TermMeaning
2 Correntinhas (corr)2 chain stitches
3 Pontos Altos Fechados Juntos (3paf)3 double crochets closed together (3-dc cluster)

How to Make 3 Pontos Altos Fechados Juntos (3-dc cluster):

  1. Yarn over, insert hook into the designated stitch, pull up a loop, yarn over, pull through 2 loops (leave 2 loops on hook — do not complete).
  2. Repeat step 1 two more times into the same stitch (4 loops on hook).
  3. Yarn over and pull through all 4 loops. The 3 double crochets are now “closed together” (fechados juntos).

Component B: 3 Correntinhas + 3 Pontos Altos no Mesmo Ponto Base (3pampb)

TermMeaning
3 Correntinhas (corr)3 chain stitches
3 Pontos Altos no Mesmo Ponto Base (3pampb)3 double crochets in the same base stitch

How to Make 3 Pontos Altos no Mesmo Ponto Base:

  1. Work 1 double crochet into the stitch.
  2. Work a second double crochet into the same stitch.
  3. Work a third double crochet into the same stitch.

These are not closed together — they fan out.

Putting It Together — Ponto Torcido de Início de Carreira

Complete Step-by-Step:

StepAction
1Work 2 chain stitches (2 correntinhas).
2Work 3 double crochets closed together (3paf) into the first stitch or space. This forms a cluster.
3Work 3 chain stitches (3 correntinhas).
4Work 3 double crochets into the same base stitch (3pampb) where you worked the cluster.

Result: A twisted, textured motif that stands up from the row start — hence the name “Ponto Torcido” (Twisted Stitch).

Your image also includes a diagram showing this sequence:

3Carr (3rd row)
2Carr (2nd row)
01-1oCar (1st row)
Base
Início (Beginning)

The twisted stitch creates a scalloped or braided edge along the side of the work.


Part 3: Ponto Torcido de Meio de Carreira

(Twisted Stitch for Middle of Row)

The same concept, but worked in the middle of a row (not at the beginning).

PortugueseEnglish Translation
Ponto Torcido de Meio de CarreiraTwisted Stitch for middle of row

The Formula:

= { 4 Pontos Altos Fechados Juntos (4paf) + 4 Pontos Altos no Mesmo Ponto Base (4pampb) }

ComponentMeaning
4 Pontos Altos Fechados Juntos (4paf)4 double crochets closed together (4-dc cluster)
4 Pontos Altos no Mesmo Ponto Base (4pampb)4 double crochets in the same base stitch

Step-by-Step for Mid-Row Twisted Stitch:

StepAction
1Work 4 double crochets closed together (4paf) into the stitch or space. This is a 4-dc cluster.
2Work 4 double crochets into the same base stitch (4pampb) where you worked the cluster.

Note: Unlike the row-start version, the mid-row version has no chains between the cluster and the fan. The two halves are worked directly one after the other.

Why “Twisted”?

The name “Ponto Torcido” comes from the way the cluster (fechados juntos) and the fan (no mesmo ponto base) are worked into the same base, creating a twisted, braided, or scalloped appearance that stands out from the fabric.


Part 4: Understanding the Diagram (Diagrama)

Your image includes a diagram numbered 1 through 20 across the top:

00000000000000000003
34567891011121314151617181920
ElementMeaning
Row 1 (01-1o Car)Base row / foundation
Row 2 (2Carr)Second row — likely where the twisted stitches begin
Row 3 (3Carr)Third row — completing the pattern
Numbers 3–20Stitch counts or chain counts (likely a multiple of 4, as the pattern says “Múltiplo de 4”)

“Múltiplo de 4” (Multiple of 4)

Your image ends with “Múltiplo de 4” — this means the pattern repeat is a multiple of 4 stitches. When starting your foundation chain, count in multiples of 4 (e.g., 20, 24, 28, 32 chains).


Full Step-by-Step Pattern Using Ponto Torcido

Materials

  • Any yarn (sample uses medium weight)
  • Appropriate crochet hook
  • Stitch markers (helpful for counting multiples of 4)

Foundation

Chain a multiple of 4 stitches (e.g., 20 chains for a small swatch).

Row 1 (Base Row / 01-1o Car)

  • Work 1 double crochet (pa) in the 4th chain from hook.
  • Work 1 double crochet in each chain across.
  • Total stitches = multiple of 4 minus the turning chain.

Row 2 (2Carr) — Begin Ponto Torcido

  • For the start of the row: Work Ponto Torcido de Início de Carreira (2 ch, 3paf cluster, 3 ch, 3pampb fan).
  • For the middle of the row: Work Ponto Torcido de Meio de Carreira (4paf cluster + 4pampb fan) in each multiple-of-4 space.
  • Continue across the row.

Row 3 (3Carr) — Complete the Pattern

  • Work single crochets (pb) or double crochets across, following the diagram to finish the motif.

Final Row

  • Edge with single crochets or picots as desired.

Quick Reference Table: Portuguese to English

PortugueseAbbreviationEnglish
CorrentinhacorrChain stitch
Ponto BaixopbSingle crochet
Ponto AltopaDouble crochet (US)
Pontos Altos Fechados JuntospafDouble crochets closed together (cluster)
Pontos Altos no Mesmo Ponto BasepampbDouble crochets in same base stitch (fan)
Ponto TorcidoTwisted Stitch
Início de CarreiraBeginning of row
Meio de CarreiraMiddle of row
Múltiplo deMultiple of
Carreira / CarrcarrRow
BaseBase / foundation

How to Practice the Ponto Torcido

Small Swatch (Multiple of 4: 16 chains)

Foundation: Chain 16.

Row 1: Dc in 4th ch from hook and in each ch across (14 dc). Chain 3 and turn.

Row 2 (Start): Work Ponto Torcido de Início de Carreira:

  • Ch 2 (counts as first part)
  • Work 3paf (3-dc cluster) into the first stitch
  • Ch 3
  • Work 3pampb (3 dc in same stitch) — into the same stitch as the cluster

Row 2 (Middle): Skip 3 stitches, then work Ponto Torcido de Meio de Carreira:

  • Work 4paf (4-dc cluster) into the next stitch
  • Work 4pampb (4 dc in same stitch) — into the same stitch as the cluster
  • Repeat across to end

Row 3: Chain 3, work 1 dc in each stitch across, or follow your diagram.


Common Mistakes & Fixes

MistakeCauseFix
Cluster won’t closeLoops too tightKeep loops loose until final pull-through
Twisted stitch looks flatForgot the chains between componentsRow start needs 2 ch + 3 ch; mid-row needs no chains
Wrong stitch countNot a multiple of 4Count your foundation chains before starting
Confusing paf vs. pampbSimilar abbreviationspaf = closed together (cluster); pampb = same base (fan)
Row 2 too bulkyYarn too thick for stitch densityUse a lighter weight yarn or larger hook

What to Make with Ponto Torcido

ProjectWhy It Works
ScarvesThe twisted stitch creates a beautiful textured edge
Blanket bordersPonto Torcido makes a scalloped, braided finish
DoiliesPortuguese crochet is famous for lace; this stitch fits perfectly
Pillow coversAdds a dimensional, twisted motif
Cowl necklinesThe stitch stands up nicely around a collar

SEO Blog Post Optimization

Meta TagSuggested Content
TitlePortuguese Crochet Guide: Ponto Torcido (Twisted Stitch) & Advanced Clusters
Meta DescriptionLearn the Portuguese Ponto Torcido (Twisted Stitch) for row starts and mid-row motifs. Includes step-by-step instructions for 3paf, 4paf, 3pampb, and 4pampb.
URL slug/portuguese-crochet-ponto-torcido-guide
KeywordsPonto Torcido, crochet portugues, pontos altos fechados juntos, pontos altos no mesmo ponto base, correntinha, ponto baixo, multiple of 4 crochet
Alt text for imagePortuguese crochet diagram showing Ponto Torcido de Início de Carreira and Ponto Torcido de Meio de Carreira with 3paf, 4paf, 3pampb, 4pampb and multiple of 4 pattern

Final Pro Tip: Reading Portuguese Crochet Diagrams

Portuguese diagrams (like the one in your image) often show:

  • Bottom to top reading direction
  • Right to left for right-handed crocheters
  • Numbers indicating row numbers (1o Car, 2 Carr, 3 Carr)
  • Base (Base) as the foundation chain

The Ponto Torcido is a beautiful, signature Portuguese technique. Once you master it, you will recognize it in traditional Portuguese and Brazilian lace patterns.


Summary: You Can Now Work the Ponto Torcido

TechniqueYou Can Now…
Correntinha (chain)Start any foundation
Ponto Baixo (sc)Work dense fabric
3paf (3-dc cluster)Make textured clusters
3pampb (3 dc in same base)Make small fans
4paf (4-dc cluster)Make larger clusters
4pampb (4 dc in same base)Make larger fans
Ponto Torcido de Início de CarreiraStart rows with a twisted motif
Ponto Torcido de Meio de CarreiraAdd twisted motifs anywhere
Múltiplo de 4Count stitches correctly for repeats

Bookmark this guide and refer back whenever you encounter a Portuguese crochet pattern or the beautiful Ponto Torcido.