How to prevent increase lines in amigurumi by @hookabee

You know those lines that form when increasing or decreasing for multiple rounds in a row? There is a way to prevent them! At the same time, you also won’t get that strong hexagon shape that develops.

Preventing lines when increasing in amigurumi

Why do those lines form? Those lines are the result of having your increases (or decreases) in the same location, stacked on top of each other, from round to round.

Preventing lines when increasing in amigurumi

Typically with amigurumi, when creating a flat circle, you increase by 6 stitches each round. For example:

rnd 1: 6 sc in magic ring (6)
rnd 2: inc in each st around (12)
rnd 3: (inc, 1 sc) 6 times (18)
rnd 4: (inc, 2 sc) 6 times (24)
rnd 5: (inc, 3 sc) 6 times (30)
rnd 6: (inc, 4 sc) 6 times (36)
rnd 7: (inc, 5 sc) 6 times (42)
rnd 8: (inc, 6 sc) 6 times (48)

Preventing lines when increasing in amigurumi

Along with the lines, this also results in your piece forming a strong hexagon shape because of the stacked increases creating angles. Six increases at the same location for multiple rounds creates 6 angles and 6 sides = a hexagon!

If you have made an amigurumi from one of my patterns before you may have noticed that my increase (and decrease) rounds don’t typically look like those above. My patterns are just slightly different in order to prevent those strong lines from forming. I especially like this for my large amis (like Bobby the Bumble bee) which need to increase for numerous rounds (and right on the face!).

It is a very simple formula: when it is a round where there is an even number of single crochet stitches between the increases, split one of these sections of single crochets in half so half the stitches are at the start of the round, and the other half is at the end. This will essentially stagger your increases with each round so they aren’t right on top of each other.

For example – rnd 8: (inc, 6 sc) 6 times (48)

Becomes – rnd 8: 3 sc, (inc, 6 sc) 5 times, inc, 3 sc (48)

See how there is now 3 sc at the beginning and 3 sc at the end, but overall there is still 6 sc between each increase? The other rounds with an odd number of stitches between the increases stay the same. Overall, from rounds 1-8, it would look something like this:

rnd 1: 6 sc in magic ring (6)
rnd 2: inc in each st around (12)
rnd 3: (inc, 1 sc) 6 times (18)
rnd 4: 1 sc, (inc, 2 sc) 5 times, inc, 1 sc (24)
rnd 5: (inc, 3 sc) 6 times (30)
rnd 6: 2 sc, (inc, 4 sc) 5 times, inc, 2 sc (36)
rnd 7: (inc, 5 sc) 6 times (42)
rnd 8: 3 sc, (inc, 6 sc) 5 times, inc, 3 sc (48)

In the end, you get a more circular, rounded shape:

Preventing lines when increasing in amigurumi

I encourage you to try this on any amigurumi pattern you have! It is especially useful when using a yarn with really good stitch definition where the lines are more noticeable, or a large ami where the lines can get long.

7 responses to “How to prevent increase and decrease lines on your amigurumi”

  1. Helen Riddiough Avatar
    Helen Riddiough

    Hi Megan, thanks for this tip!
    I have a similar question that might have the same answer…?

    I am quite new to crochet and have been practising my basic stitches/working in a spiral by making amigurumi balls.
    I notice in ball patterns that the rounds work in blocks, so inc rounds followed by sc rounds followed by dc rounds.
    In a lot of amigurumi patterns (especially heads) I notice a slight variation in pattern, it calls for inc rounds interspersed with sc rounds with fewer sc rounds overall for the depth. So…instead of:

    inc
    inc
    inc
    sc
    sc
    sc
    dc
    dc
    dc

    it becomes

    inc
    inc
    sc
    inc
    sc
    inc
    sc
    sc
    dc
    dc

    etc.

    What difference does this make? I assume it’s to achieve a different kind of shape? I have struggled to find any information on it but i’m very curious, as I like to understand what i’m doing instead of blindly following a pattern.

    1. Megan Barclay Avatar

      Hi Helen! Interesting question! You are absolutely right, the difference is in the shape it creates. When you have more sc rounds between the inc rounds, the piece grows larger more slowly, creating more of a cone shape, rather than a round ball shape. Hope that helps!

      1. helenriddiough Avatar

        It really does help! I have been hunting for an answer on it and you have provided some much needed clarity. Thanks so much!
        PS just downloaded your bumblebee pattern. Can’t wait to give it a whirl, my first one with some chunky yarn 🙂

  2.  Avatar
    Anonymous

    Thanks a lot. Your tutorial is very easy to understand👍

    1. Megan Barclay Avatar

      Thank you for the feedback! I am glad the tutorial was helpful 😀

  3. tilleyb Avatar

    I really love those increase lines on some patterns, but its great to be able to get rid of them when they become too visually distracting!

    1. Megan Barclay Avatar

      I agree! Sometimes they look nice with certain patterns, but sometimes they just get in the way 🙂