Category Archives: amigurumi

The Crochet Monster Mash: Building a Random Monster for Halloween

Spooky season is finally here, and I am absolutely giddy! The next three months are my favorite time of year—Halloween, crisp fall weather, and then Christmas. What could be better?

To celebrate October and kick off Vlogtober, I’m starting an exciting new project that I’m calling The Crochet Monster Mash. This is going to be a month-long adventure where I create a completely randomized crochet monster using the amazing book Crochet Monsters by Megan Lap.

The Wheel of Misfortune

Here’s how this works: instead of carefully planning and choosing each element of my monster, I’m leaving it all up to fate—or more specifically, to the Wheel of Misfortune.

Each week throughout October, I’ll spin the wheel to randomly select different components:

  • Body style
  • Yarn type
  • Yarn color
  • Arms, legs, teeth, and other features

The beauty (or chaos) of this approach is that I have absolutely no idea what this creature is going to look like when we’re done!

What We’ve Selected So Far

Week 1 Results:

After spinning the Wheel of Misfortune, here’s what fate has decided for our monster:

Body Style: Open mouth with no teeth – one of seven possible mouth styles from the book. It looks pretty simple to make, which is a great way to start!

Yarn Type: Worsted weight – I had five categories on the wheel (worsted, plush, velvet, blanket, and special), and worsted won out.

Color: Lime green – I’ll admit, I was really hoping for the shocking violet variegated yarn, but lime green is a classic monster color! I’m using a beautiful lime green worsted weight yarn with a size 4 hook.

About the Book

Crochet Monsters is an incredible resource that I’ve checked out from my local library multiple times. It features 35 body patterns that you can mix and match to create thousands of different possibilities. Megan Lap also has another book called Crochet Impkins with a similar customizable concept.

The book includes various body shapes like open mouth, blob, cylinder, egg shape, round, and square—with options for legs or no legs. Then you can add different features like arms, teeth, horns, and more.

Join the Monster Mash!

If you want to crochet along with me, grab a copy of Crochet Monsters and create your own monster! We can share our creations and see how different (or similar) our monsters turn out.

I’ll be posting progress updates throughout the week on Instagram and Shorts, showing the good, the bad, and the ugly parts of bringing this creature to life.

Next Friday, I’ll be back with an update on how the body turned out, and we’ll spin the Wheel of Misfortune again to determine what component we’re making next—maybe arms, legs, teeth, or something else entirely!

The Big Reveal

On Halloween (October 31st), I’ll reveal the completed monster in all its randomized glory. Maybe we’ll even have a naming contest for our creation!

The best part? This monster might end up with a lime green body, worsted weight arms, chenille ears, and fur horns. There’s no telling how this Frankenstein-style creation will turn out, and that’s what makes it so exciting!

Stay tuned, follow along, and let’s see what kind of monster we can create together. After all, it’s alive… IT’S ALIVE!

We’ll do the mash, we’ll do the monster mash…


Follow along: Check back each Friday for new updates, and watch my Instagram and Shorts throughout the week to see the progress as our monster comes to life!

I Transformed a Simple Dog Pattern Into My Corgi’s Adorable Twin (Shocking Results!)

Should you follow a crochet pattern to the letter, or is there room for creative interpretation? That’s the question I found myself pondering while testing Crochet by Genna’s newest Dog Snuggler pattern – and the answer led me on an adorable journey to recreate my own beloved corgi, His Majesty, Roland.

The Spark of Inspiration

When I saw that Genna’s original four-dog pattern included a corgi, I immediately signed up to be a tester. But as I looked at the sweet tangerine and white design, I couldn’t help but wonder: What if I made this look like Roland instead?

My tri-colored redheaded corgi (affectionately known as “the beast”) has been my loyal companion for 14 years, always sitting right beside me during filming. Despite making corgi-themed items before – including a felted miniature Roland years ago – I’d never actually tried to crochet something that truly captured his specific markings and personality.

Making Do With What You Have

The original pattern called for Premier Brand’s Parfait Chunky in tangerine and white – yarn I’d never worked with and didn’t own. Instead, I turned to my stash from what ended up being my final Jo-Ann’s trip: Big Twist Plush in sunflower, coconut (off-white), and black. Perfect for Roland’s tri-color coat!

Pro tip: Sometimes the best projects come from working with what you have rather than shopping for exact pattern matches.

The Challenges of Customization

Color Work Complications

Working with multiple colors while decreasing proved trickier than expected. The yarn started puckering during color changes, and I didn’t achieve quite the right distribution I wanted. Roland’s distinctive markings – including his “mermaid tail” white patch on his back and black facial spots – required some creative problem-solving.

The Toe Bean Dilemma

The pattern called for pink toe beans, but I didn’t have matching pink yarn in the right weight. The Dollar Tree chenille was much lighter (weight 5 vs. 6), so I simplified by making solid coconut-colored feet instead.

Tail Tales

Here’s where I really went off-script: Roland still has his natural tail (unlike many US corgis with docked tails), complete with the Shepherd’s Lantern white tip found on herding breeds. I created my own tail design, starting with four stitches in a magic ring, increasing to eight, then switching to black – though I skipped the brown underside detailing for simplicity’s sake.

What Worked Beautifully

The Big Twist Plush yarn was a delightful discovery. Much thicker and sturdier than velvet yarns, with real heft that made it perfect for this project. I’d compare it to Bernat Blanket – substantial enough that you can really feel the quality.

The sinker eyes I’d purchased the week before (my first time using them instead of safety eyes) were significantly larger than expected, but they gave Roland such personality that I’m completely sold on them.

Pattern Review: Crochet by Genna’s Dog Snuggler

Skill Level: Experienced beginner to intermediate

  • Requires comfort with increases/decreases
  • Involves shaping techniques
  • Back loop only sections
  • Guided/selective decreases

What I Loved:

  • Clear, well-written instructions
  • Minimal sewing (just tail, ears, and head attachment)
  • No-sew snout design
  • Now available in 8 different dog variations!

Perfect For: Crocheters who’ve moved beyond basic projects and are comfortable with shaping techniques.

The Big Reveal

Watch the full video to see Roland himself and his adorable mini-me!

The finished snuggler captures Roland’s essence beautifully – from his satellite ears (which came out more oblong than the pattern’s triangular design, but perfectly matched Roland’s actual ears) to his distinctive facial markings. Even his “fairy kiss” – that little black spot of corgi lore – made it onto the design.

Snugglers 101

For those unfamiliar, a snuggler is essentially an unstuffed plushie – only the head and feet contain stuffing, making it perfect for babies and toddlers. This was my first snuggler, and I can absolutely see the appeal. There’s something irresistibly huggable about the design!

Final Thoughts

Sometimes the best test of a pattern isn’t following it exactly – it’s seeing how well it adapts to your creative vision. Genna’s Dog Snuggler pattern proved flexible enough to accommodate my Roland-inspired modifications while maintaining its structural integrity and adorable factor.

Would I recommend this pattern? Absolutely! Whether you stick to the original designs or venture into customization territory like I did, it’s a rewarding project that results in something truly special.


Want to try this pattern yourself? Check out Crochet by Genna’s Dog Snuggler pattern on Etsy (Note: This is not a sponsored recommendation – just genuine enthusiasm for a great pattern!)

What’s your take on pattern modification? Do you prefer following patterns exactly, or do you love adding your own creative touches? Share your thoughts in the comments below!

Join an Amazing, Magical World of Crochet and Amigurumi

This space began with a single thought: there’s more to crochet than curated Instagram pages and perfect stitches.

If you’ve landed here, you probably already know that. Maybe you’ve frogged a project a time or six. Maybe you’ve squinted at a pattern written like it was transcribed from a fever dream. Or maybe, like me, you love the tactile rhythm of yarn through fingers and the quiet satisfaction of finishing a thing — even if it took three attempts and some muttered unmentionable words along the way.

So I’m here on the blog, to build a space for documenting the messy middle of crochet: pattern design experiments, vintage finds, character-building (sometimes literal), and whatever else winds up in the tangle. It’s part journal, part behind-the-scenes, part resource. Think of it as the companion to my YouTube channel, Hook and Yarn Wizardry, only a little more personal, a little more detailed, and always grounded in the real work of making.

I’m not here to sell hacks, the latest TikTok trend (though I do have one now) or aesthetic perfection. I’m here for the stitches that unravel and get redone — and the stories that come with them.

If that sounds like your kind of thing, stick around. There’s a lot of yarn to untangle — and some unexpected magic along the way.

— Lisa