{"title":"How to Block Crochet (Wet, Spray, and Steam)","canonicalUrl":"https://www.craftingstepbystep.com/crochet/how-to-block-crochet","category":{"slug":"crochet","name":"Crochet"},"creator":{"name":"Crochet With Tiffany","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCtb80P7saiNRY126C_BGA4Q","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BcTNobwoQBU"},"tldr":"Three ways to block your finished crochet. Wet block for wool, spray for granny squares, steam for acrylic. Pins, mats, and timing explained.","totalDurationSeconds":610,"difficulty":"easy","tools":["Foam blocking mats with grid lines","Rust-proof stainless steel T-pins","Measuring tape","Handheld garment steamer (or iron with steam setting)","Spray bottle","Mixing bowl or basin","Clean towel"],"materials":["Your finished crochet piece (granny square, shawl, blanket panel, or any project that needs shaping)","Clean warm water","No-rinse wool wash (optional, for wet blocking)"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Step 1: Understand What Blocking Actually Does","text":"Blocking is taking your finished crochet piece, adding water or steam, then stretching it to the shape you want. It evens out wonky edges, opens up lacy stitch patterns, makes squares actually square, and helps pieces line up cleanly when you sew them together for a blanket.Skip blocking on a washcloth or a dish scrubby. Use it on shawls, granny squares for a blanket, doilies, garments, and anything where the stitch pattern has detail you want to see clearly. The before-and-after on a stack of granny squares is the easiest way to understand the difference, and it is dramatic."},{"number":2,"title":"Step 2: Gather Your Blocking Supplies","text":"You need a flat surface you can pin into. Foam blocking mats with a grid printed on top are the easiest because the grid lets you eyeball straight lines and right angles without measuring. A folded towel on a table also works.Grab rust-proof T-pins (regular dressmaker pins will leave orange marks on damp yarn after a day or two). A measuring tape lets you check that every side is the same length. Then add one tool for whichever method you choose: a bowl of warm water for wet blocking, a clean spray bottle for spray blocking, or a handheld steamer for steam blocking."},{"number":3,"title":"Step 3: Wet Blocking - The Classic Method","text":"Wet blocking is the deepest reset for your fibers, and it is the best choice for wool, cotton, and other natural yarns. Drop your finished piece into a bowl of warm water and let it soak until the fibers are fully saturated. Twenty minutes is plenty for most projects. Some people leave wool shawls in for an hour or two, which is fine.Lift the piece straight out of the water and lay it onto a towel, then roll the towel up and gently press to squeeze out the excess water. Do not wring or twist - that pulls stitches out of shape. Move the damp piece onto your blocking mat. It is ready to pin."},{"number":4,"title":"Step 4: Pin to Shape and Measure","text":"Start with the four corners and pin them where you want the finished edges to land. Use your measuring tape to confirm the diagonals match and that each side is the same length. Once the corners are anchored, add more pins along each edge, spaced about an inch apart, smoothing the fabric flat as you go.The grid lines on a blocking mat make this much faster than eyeballing it. Pin until the whole piece sits flat with clean straight edges. If you over-stretch, the fabric will spring back a little when you let go, so do not yank."},{"number":5,"title":"Step 5: Spray Blocking - The Lazy-Day Method","text":"Spray blocking is great for granny squares and small motifs where you do not want to soak the whole thing. Pin your dry piece to the mat first, working corners and then edges exactly like the wet method.Once it is fully pinned to shape, take a clean spray bottle filled with plain water and mist the entire surface until it is damp. Not soaking - just damp enough to feel cool to the touch. Set it aside to air dry. Spray blocking is the gentlest of the three methods and a good first attempt if you are nervous about water on a finished project."},{"number":6,"title":"Step 6: Steam Blocking - The Fastest Finish","text":"Steam blocking is the fastest method and the only one that actually does anything to acrylic. Pin your dry piece to the mat first. Heat up a handheld garment steamer or an iron with a steam setting.Hold the steamer six to eight inches above the fabric and let the steam fall onto the surface. Never press the iron flat onto the yarn - especially acrylic, which melts and locks into that shape forever. This is called killing the fabric, and while crafters sometimes do it on purpose to make acrylic hold its shape permanently, doing it by accident ruins the piece. Pass the steam slowly across each section until the whole piece is warm and slightly damp, then let it cool down completely before you unpin."},{"number":7,"title":"Step 7: Let It Dry Completely","text":"This is the slowest part of the process and the most tempting one to rush. Walk away and leave the piece pinned in place for twenty-four to forty-eight hours, depending on how humid your room is.Keep it out of direct sunlight so the yarn does not bleach unevenly. Once it feels completely dry to the touch, pull the pins out one by one and lift the piece off the mat. If it springs back to its old shape, the fiber needs another round of blocking or a different method. If it holds the new shape, you are done."},{"number":8,"title":"Step 8: Match the Method to Your Yarn","text":"A few warnings before you start. Stainless steel T-pins matter more than people think - cheaper pins rust against damp yarn and leave permanent orange dots that you cannot wash out. Spend the few extra dollars on rust-proof pins.Wool and cotton block beautifully with any of the three methods and hold their shape for a long time. One hundred percent acrylic does not block in the traditional sense unless you kill the fabric with steam, so do not be surprised if a wet-blocked acrylic project relaxes back to its original shape the first time you wash it. Match your method to your yarn and you will get the result you want."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-29T22:12:35.071Z","published":"2026-05-29T19:07:28.668Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}