
Why My Crochet Has Holes: Holes Between Stitches for Beginners
Quick Recognition
You’ve spent hours working on a beautiful new project, but as you hold it up to the light, you notice something unsettling. Instead of the solid, cozy fabric shown in the pattern photo, your work looks like a fishing net. There are visible gaps—small windows of empty space—between every single stitch. You wonder, “Is it supposed to look like this? Did I miss a loop?” At Dailyhandmade, we call this the “Gappy Phase.” While some crochet is intentionally “holy” (like lace), accidental crochet holes between stitches for beginners are usually a sign that your tools and your technique aren’t quite in sync yet.
Direct Answer
The primary reason for crochet holes between stitches for beginners is a combination of loose tension and a mismatched hook-to-yarn ratio. If your hook is too large for the thickness of your yarn, the loops it creates will be wider than the yarn can fill, leaving empty spaces. Furthermore, if you aren’t pulling the yarn consistently tight against the “throat” of the hook, the stitches won’t sit flush against each other. In the framework, we treat these holes as a technical “symptom” that can be cured by tightening your grip or downsizing your tool.
Intentional Lace vs. Accidental Holes
Before you panic and frog your work, use this table to determine if your holes are actually a “mistake” or just part of the craft:
| Fabric Style | How it Looks | Is it a Mistake? | The Dailyhandmade Verdict |
| Lace / Mesh | Uniform, geometric “windows.” | No. | Intentional design choice for summer wear. |
| Solid Fabric | Compact, no visible gaps. | Yes (if gaps appear). | Usually caused by the “Hook Too Big” trap. |
| Amigurumi | Tight, brick-like texture. | Critical Error. | Holes in toys allow stuffing to leak out. |
| Double Crochet | Tall stitches with minor gaps. | Maybe. | Double crochet is naturally “airier” than single crochet. |
The 3 “Symptom” Checks for Beginners
In the technical world of Why My Crochet Fabric Has Holes, we audit your “holey” fabric using these three diagnostic steps:
1. The “Light Test”
Hold your work up against a window or a lamp. If you see distinct beams of light passing through the center of your stitches, your hook is likely too big Crochet Hook Too Big Causes Holes? Finding Your Perfect Match. Solid crochet should block most light, creating a dense shadow.
2. The “Staircase” Edge
Look at the very edges of your rows. Are the holes significantly larger there than in the middle? This usually indicates that your turning chains are too loose or that you are accidentally skipping the very first stitch of the row.
3. The “Floppy” Fabric Feel
Does your crochet feel like a wet noodle? If the fabric has no “body” or structure, your stitches are too loose. Tension that is too relaxed fails to pull the neighboring stitches together, creating those unwanted gaps.
Dailyhandmade Expert Rescue Signal
The “V” Audit: Look closely at the top of your row. Every stitch should look like a neat, tight “V”. If that “V” looks stretched out or elongated, you are likely pulling too much yarn through during your “Yarn Over.” In Common Crochet Mistakes (and Fixes), we teach you to “hug the hook”—keep the yarn snug against the plastic or metal of the hook to ensure every loop is exactly the same size.
What To Expect Next
You’ve diagnosed the symptom: you definitely have accidental holes. But is the culprit sitting right in your hand? In our next chapter, we dive into the most common mechanical error: Why a crochet hook that is too big causes holes.
Return Path
Understanding crochet holes between stitches for beginners is the first step in mastering Why My Crochet Fabric Has Holes. To continue your rescue mission, explore these related guides:
- Crochet hook too big causes holes
- Loose tension causes holes in crochet
- Double crochet big gaps: How to fix them
- Master Guide: Common Crochet Mistakes (and Fixes)
I have a relevant follow-up question for you: When you look at your work, do the holes appear everywhere, or do they only seem to show up when you’re doing “tall” stitches like the double crochet?
