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How to Crochet with Eyelash Yarn – video tutorial

How to Crochet with Eyelash Yarn without Crying, Swearing, or Throwing Away Your Crochet Hooks - video tutorial from Shiny Happy World

I’ve used eyelash yarn on exactly one project before.

The process was so awful that I didn’t pick up my crochet hooks again for a year.

Yes – I hated it that much. The finished result was adorable – but I couldn’t see my stitches while I was working. I couldn’t even find my loop again if my hook fell out!

That project was just using eyelash yarn on the bottom border of a toddler dress – straight crochet with no shaping. The thought of using the stuff to crochet an amigurumi was unthinkable.

Except that I’ve been thinking about it for a few years. 🙂

You see, I had this idea for a little hedgehog. A really cute little hedgehog with soft prickles made of eyelash yarn.

For years I set the idea aside because – eyelash yarn! *shudders*

Counting stitches? Increasing and decreasing? With eyelash yarn?

Nope. Nope. Nope.

But I kept coming back to it and thinking there has to be a way to crochet with this stuff without going crazy.

I looked at all the tutorials. Most of them suggest crocheting it together with a smooth yarn to help you see your stitches, like this. . .

crocheting with eyelash yarn and regular yarn at the same time

That’s what I did on the dress, and while that made the project possible, it wasn’t even a little bit fun.

I think this suggestion works a lot better for knitting, where the knitting needle tells you right where your stitch is.

Some of the tutorials suggested using a bigger hook. I tried that and it was still impossible to see the stitches. The thought of counting rows and doing increases and decreases was not going to happen.

Inconceivably – The Internet was no help.

So I got out some yarns and hooks and started to play.

And I came up with a solution!

At one point I was thinking about Turkey work embroidery (that’s the stitch I used to make the mane on this lion) and how the finished effect is similar to what I was trying to achieve with this yarn. For Turkey work on stuffed animals you make the animal first and then embroider onto the surface.

That’s it!

Instead of crocheting the actual body of the project with the eyelash yarn – where you have to be accurate with your counts and it’s really important to be able to see your stitches – I decided to crochet the body with smooth yarn and then surface crochet the prickles on top of that using eyelash yarn.

It worked!

Not only was it painless – it was fun! And easier and faster than Turkey work embroidery, for what it’s worth. 🙂

Here’s how.

Now you can add furry yarn to any crochet project! Just make the body first in regular yarn and then add the fur later.

And – it works with other specialty yarns too! I used it with a bouclé yarn to make the fuzzy pajamas that Pippa Puppy is wearing.

crocheted dog hugging a crocheted cat

Handy dandy links. . .

  • I tried a few different yarns, and by far my favorite was Lion Brand Fun Fur. My Joann’s had a pretty limited selection of colors, but if you buy online directly from Lion Brand you can get the full range. Look at all the fun colors!
  • That hedgehog I show in the video is a great pattern to start with – very simple and fast to make. Get the pattern here.

You can also use this method to add little accents using eyelash yarn – like Maxwell Monster‘s hairy ears.

green crocheted monster head with hairy ears

I can’t wait to see what you make!

Happy stitching!

Here are handy links to all the posts about yarn. . .

Return to the main table of contents for Let’s Learn to Crochet Amigurumi.

Move on to the lessons for the basic crochet stitches.

Happy stitching!

10 COMMENTS

  1. Karen Maddox SAYS...

    Wendi you are a genius!!

    • Carrie SAYS...

      Love it! Finally can use eyelash yarn! So excited. Thank you, thank you, thank you!

    • Lisa SAYS...

      Thank you so much for sharing this! The project I want to do is done in double crochet. Do you think the fur would be dense enough if I used your method on a DC through the back loop instead of a SC? Hope this makes sense, I don’t crochet too often so my lingo may be off.

      • I think so, but you’ll just need to try it and see. If it seems a little sparse, you can always go back in and add more, crocheting around (or through) the DC “bar.”

  2. Tiffany qindy SAYS...

    Thanq so much. You saved my life. . I looking for this trick always 1 year . And i love eyelash yarn but it makes me crazy too when i crochet. Now i can’t wait for trying again. Btw i’m from indonesia. Nice too meet you. Happy crochet

  3. Sherri Hampton SAYS...

    Wow! Like you, I found eyelash yarn way too frustrating to work with. But I wanted the effect. I was actually shopping online for eyelash yarn (to try using it again) when I found this tutorial. Thanks! This will save my sanity.

  4. Diane Kelley SAYS...

    It’s 2/14 /22. Sadly, Lion Brand has discontinued the eyelash yarn😢
    Like you, I suffered through making a knitted furry fun scarf while saying “nevermore”. Maybe some other yarn brand can be used instead. Thanks for the tutorial. Now what animal can I use leftover Christmas red eyelash yarn for?…..🦊?
    BTW I made a monster quilt and a bird/flower quilt from your Craftsy tutorials. Big hits with my grandson and granddaughter. Even found a “minky” monster printed backing fabric for the grandson’s.

    • Luckily there are a few other companies that make it – and in even more colors than Lion Brand did!

  5. Polly SAYS...

    Thanks for this idea. I have tried to work with this yarn so often and managed to get something out of it but same as you, I couldn’t count or even see the stitches. Now I have some ideas I can try it out on. I love the hedgehog so I am going to try it out. 🌹

  6. Betty Harris SAYS...

    Great video! Any tips to do this on a piece already made without the back loop only ridges?