Crochet Symbols & Knots Quick Reference: Basic Stitches, Slip Knot & Magic Knot

The full meaning, step-by-step instructions, and practical applications for every symbol on this concise crochet reference chart — from basic stitches to specialty knots like the slip knot (as a bead placeholder) and the magic knot (adjustable knot).

Crochet Symbols & Knots Quick Reference: Basic Stitches, Slip Knot & Magic Knot
Crochet Symbols & Knots Quick Reference: Basic Stitches, Slip Knot & Magic Knot

Crochet Symbols & Knots Quick Reference: Basic Stitches, Slip Knot & Magic Knot

Introduction: Your At-a-Glance Crochet Guide

Crochet patterns use visual symbols to represent stitches. This quick reference chart covers the most essential basic stitches (chain, slip stitch, single crochet, half double crochet, double crochet, treble crochet) plus two important knots: the slip knot (which can also represent a bead in some patterns) and the magic knot (adjustable knot for starting in the round).

In this guide, you will learn:

  • The full meaning of every symbol on the chart
  • Step-by-step how-to for each stitch and knot
  • When and why to use each technique
  • How a slip knot symbol can also represent a bead

Why Keep a Crochet Symbol Quick Reference?

BenefitExplanation
Read patterns fasterNo need to look up abbreviations repeatedly
Universal languageSymbols work across English, Japanese, Russian, and European patterns
Learn new stitches easilyVisual symbols show you the stitch structure
Compact referenceOne small chart holds 8 essential techniques

Part 1: Basic Crochet Stitches

1. Chain (ch)

AttributeDetail
Symbol○ (open oval / circle)
Abbreviationch
EnglishChain stitch
UseFoundation of most projects; creates spaces in lace

How to Make a Chain Stitch:

  1. Make a slip knot and place it on your hook.
  2. Yarn over (bring the yarn over the hook from back to front).
  3. Pull the yarn through the loop on your hook.
  4. One chain is complete. Repeat to make more chains.

Best for: Starting rows, turning chains, creating chain spaces in lace patterns.


2. Slip Stitch (sl st)

AttributeDetail
Symbol• (solid dot)
Abbreviationsl st
EnglishSlip stitch
HeightNone (flat)
UseJoining rounds, moving across stitches invisibly

How to Make a Slip Stitch:

  1. Insert your hook into the designated stitch.
  2. Yarn over.
  3. Pull the yarn through both the stitch and the loop already on your hook.
  4. One loop remains on your hook. Slip stitch complete.

Best for: Joining a chain into a ring, moving yarn across a row without adding height, seaming, creating flat edges.


3. Single Crochet (sc)

AttributeDetail
Symbol✚ or + (cross)
Abbreviationsc
Height1 chain (shortest stitch)
Fabric feelDense, firm, tight

How to Make a Single Crochet:

  1. Insert your hook into the stitch.
  2. Yarn over and pull up a loop (2 loops on hook).
  3. Yarn over again.
  4. Pull through both loops on your hook. Single crochet complete.

Best for: Amigurumi, washcloths, sturdy bags, dense blankets.


4. Half Double Crochet (hdc)

AttributeDetail
Symbol┬ (T shape)
Abbreviationhdc
Height2 chains (medium height)
Fabric feelSoft, moderate drape

How to Make a Half Double Crochet:

  1. Yarn over before inserting your hook.
  2. Insert hook into the stitch.
  3. Yarn over and pull up a loop (3 loops on hook).
  4. Yarn over again.
  5. Pull through all 3 loops on your hook. Half double crochet complete.

Key difference from single crochet: You yarn over before inserting the hook.

Best for: Baby blankets, beanies, scarves, soft drape fabrics.


5. Double Crochet (dc)

AttributeDetail
Symbol┴ (T with one crossbar)
Abbreviationdc
Height3 chains (tall)
Fabric feelOpen, airy, good drape

How to Make a Double Crochet:

  1. Yarn over and insert hook into the stitch.
  2. Yarn over and pull up a loop (3 loops on hook).
  3. Yarn over and pull through 2 loops (2 loops remain).
  4. Yarn over and pull through the last 2 loops. Double crochet complete.

Best for: Granny squares, sweaters, blankets, shawls.


6. Treble Crochet (tr)

AttributeDetail
Symbol┴ with two crossbars
Abbreviationtr
Height4 chains (very tall)
Fabric feelLoose, lacy, lightweight

How to Make a Treble Crochet:

  1. Yarn over twice before inserting your hook.
  2. Insert hook into the stitch.
  3. Yarn over and pull up a loop (4 loops on hook).
  4. (Yarn over, pull through 2 loops) — repeat 3 times until 1 loop remains.

Best for: Lace shawls, openwork designs, lightweight summer garments.


Part 2: Specialty Knots

7. Slip Knot (sl knot) / Bead

AttributeDetail
SymbolSmall solid circle (often identical to slip stitch symbol — context determines meaning)
EnglishSlip knot OR bead
Use (as slip knot)The very first loop on your hook to start crocheting
Use (as bead)In bead crochet patterns, this symbol represents placing a bead onto the cord

How to Make a Slip Knot:

  1. Make a loop with your yarn (cross the working end over the tail).
  2. Pull the working end through the loop from underneath.
  3. Place the resulting loop on your hook.
  4. Pull both ends gently to tighten.

How to Use the Bead Symbol:

  • In bead crochet patterns, the same ● symbol may indicate that you slide a bead onto your cord before making the next stitch.
  • The bead sits inside or next to the stitch.

How to Crochet with a Bead (using slip knot symbol):

  1. Thread a bead onto your cord before starting.
  2. When you reach the ● symbol in the diagram, slide the bead down to your hook.
  3. Complete the stitch (usually a single crochet or slip stitch) to lock the bead in place.

Important: Context tells you whether ● means “slip stitch,” “slip knot,” or “bead.” In your chart, it is labeled as “slip knot / bead.”


8. Magic Knot (Adjustable Knot)

AttributeDetail
SymbolSpiral or loop with a crossed tail
EnglishMagic knot / adjustable knot / magic ring
AbbreviationMR (magic ring) or adjustable loop
UseStarting crochet in the round with a completely closable center hole

How to Make a Magic Knot (Magic Ring):

  1. Wrap the yarn around your fingers to form an X or a spiral.
  2. Insert your hook under the first strand, over the second strand, and pull up a loop.
  3. Chain 1 (for single crochet) or chain 3 (for double crochet) to set your starting height.
  4. Work your first round of stitches into the ring (not into a chain).
  5. Pull the tail end to close the ring completely. The hole disappears.

Magic Knot vs. Chain Loop Start:

FeatureMagic RingChain Loop (ch 4, sl st to join)
Center holeCompletely closableLeaves a permanent hole
Best forAmigurumi, hats, coastersMotifs that want a hole (certain doilies)
DifficultySlightly harderVery easy

Best for: Amigurumi (stuffed toys), hats, coasters, circular motifs, mandalas.


Part 3: Quick Reference Table (All Symbols)

SymbolStitch / KnotAbbreviationHeightDifficulty
Chainch1 chainVery easy
Slip stitchsl stNoneVery easy
• (as knot)Slip knotVery easy
• (as bead)Bead placementEasy
Single crochetsc1 chainEasy
Half double crochethdc2 chainsEasy
Double crochetdc3 chainsEasy
┴┴Treble crochettr4 chainsMedium
⭕ with spiralMagic knot / magic ringMRMedium

Part 4: Understanding Symbol Context

The same symbol can mean different things depending on the pattern. Here is how to tell them apart:

SymbolAs a stitchAs a knotAs a bead
Slip stitch (worked into fabric)Slip knot (starting loop)Place a bead here
How to tellLook for it within a row of stitchesLook for it at the very beginning of the patternLook for bead notation in materials

Part 5: Common Mistakes & Fixes

MistakeCauseFix
Confusing slip stitch (•) with chain (○)Similar symbolsSlip stitch is solid dot; chain is open circle
Magic ring comes undoneDid not pull tail after first roundWork at least 6 stitches, then pull tail firmly
Bead falls offDid not lock with a stitchAlways complete a stitch (sc or sl st) after sliding bead into place
Slip knot too tightPulled too hard before placing on hookKeep the loop loose enough to slide on the hook
Treble crochet looks like double crochetForgot the second yarn overAlways yarn over twice at the start of treble

Part 6: What to Make with These Stitches & Knots

Stitch / KnotProject Idea
ChainFoundation for any project
Slip stitchJoining granny squares, closing hat tops
Single crochetAmigurumi animals, sturdy bags
Half double crochetSoft baby blankets, beanies
Double crochetGranny square blankets, sweaters
Treble crochetLacy shawls, lightweight scarves
Slip knotStarting any crochet project
Magic ringHats, amigurumi, coasters, mandalas
Bead (using • symbol)Beaded bracelets, necklaces, earrings

Part 7: Reading a Pattern with Beads (Using the Bead Symbol)

When you see a ● symbol in a bead crochet pattern:

  1. Pre-thread all beads onto your cord before starting (check the pattern for how many).
  2. Work to the ● symbol in the diagram or written instructions.
  3. Slide one bead down the cord until it rests against your hook.
  4. Complete the stitch (usually a single crochet or slip stitch). The bead will be locked into place on the front of the work.

Example beaded single crochet:

  • Insert hook into stitch.
  • Slide bead down to the hook.
  • Yarn over and pull up a loop (bead is now on the loop).
  • Yarn over and pull through both loops.

SEO Blog Post Optimization

Meta TagSuggested Content
TitleCrochet Symbols & Knots Quick Reference: Basic Stitches, Slip Knot & Magic Knot
Meta DescriptionFree printable quick reference for crochet symbols: chain, slip stitch, single crochet, half double crochet, double crochet, treble crochet, slip knot/bead, and magic knot.
URL slug/crochet-symbols-knots-quick-reference
Keywordscrochet symbols chart, slip knot symbol, magic knot crochet, bead crochet symbol, chain stitch symbol, single crochet symbol, half double crochet symbol
Alt text for imageCrochet symbols quick reference chart showing chain (○), slip stitch (•), single crochet (✚), half double crochet (┬), double crochet (┴), treble crochet (┴┴), slip knot/bead (•), and magic knot (spiral)

Final Pro Tip: Make Your Own Flash Cards

Copy the symbols onto small cards:

  • Front: Draw the symbol
  • Back: Write the stitch name and how-to summary

Practice for 5 minutes a day. Within a week, you will recognize every symbol instantly.


Summary: You Can Now Read 8 Essential Crochet Symbols

SymbolYou Can Now…
Make a chain foundation
Work a slip stitch (or make a slip knot, or place a bead)
Work a single crochet
Work a half double crochet
Work a double crochet
┴┴Work a treble crochet
⭕ (spiral)Make a magic ring for no-hole starts
• (as bead)Add beads to your crochet

Bookmark this guide and keep it next to your workspace. You now have a complete quick reference for basic crochet symbols and specialty knots.