![]() Flip your scarf inside out and thread both tails onto your darning needle. Step 16.) Tie your two tail ends together. Stitch the two end braids together with whip stitches. Fold your scarf so the ends meet and the side with the visible stitching is facing outward. Step 15.) Thread your darning needle with the tail. Pull the tail through the loop on your hook. 14) Leave yourself a tail of yarn that is twice the width of your scarf and cut. Step 13.) Repeat steps 4 through 12 until your reach your desired length. Step 12.) Repeat this for all 30 stitches. ![]() Place your hook through the second back stitch of your v’s and pull your working strand through it. Step 11.) Turn your work so the backside is facing you and you can see the v’s on the top of the stitching. Pull this loop onto your knitting needle. Step 10.) Make sure you have thirty stitches along the top of your chain and pull your working loop from the last stitch on your single crochet stitch. You should have six circles all together. Step 9.) Repeat steps 7 and 8 until all your sets of five loops are done. Step 8.) Place your hook underneath the next five loops and pick up your working yarn to make two loops and pull your working yarn through those two loops to secure the two pieces together. Step 7.) Slide your finger through the hole of the stitch and make a single crochet stitch over the loops. Twist your set of loops that you just secured with the chain stitch. Step 6.) Slide your five loops off of the needle. 5.) Then take your hook and place it underneath five of your loops and pull your working strand through the five loops. Step 4.) Then pull one of the strands of yarn to the back of the needle, this will be your working strand. If you don’t get thirty loops it won’t come out right. This is important because the broomstick lace stitch works in multiples of five.
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