A crochet floral motif built from radiating double crochets and delicate chain loops creates a structure that is airy yet structured, like pressed flowers held in lace. String these motifs together and you unlock table runners, curtain borders, bookmarks, collar edgings, bag panels, and heirloom-worthy wall hangings.

The Floral Motif
This crochet floral motif carries the quiet confidence of something made slowly and kept forever. Each motif forms a small medallion, its center dense and warm before opening outward into petal-like arches that catch the light with a whisper of elegance. It is the kind of piece that appeals to makers who love seeing geometry inside organic shapes, where every round reveals a little more of the flower hiding in the yarn. Whether you are brand new to motif work or returning to it after years away, this pattern meets you with patience.
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Bright cobalt blue, as seen in the reference video, gives this crochet floral motif a bold and graphic presence that photographs beautifully against linen, wood, and whitewashed surfaces. If you prefer something softer, imagine it worked in ivory, dusty sage, or warm blush, all of which would shift the mood toward vintage and romantic. The motif is remarkably adaptable, reading modern in saturated tones and heirloom-tender in muted ones.
Materials and Tools
For this crochet floral motif, you will want to reach for a fingering weight or sport weight cotton yarn, which gives the finished lace its clean stitch definition and that satisfying crispness when blocked. A 2mm or 2.5mm steel crochet hook works beautifully with fingering weight thread cotton, keeping the fabric firm without pulling the stitches too tight. Mercerized cotton is the fiber of choice here because it holds its shape, resists pilling, and brings out the sheen that makes lace worth displaying. A yarn needle for weaving in ends is the one small tool you will reach for again and again as you join motifs and finish edges.

Stitch by Stitch
This pattern draws on a small, well-chosen group of stitches that work together to build the floral structure round by round.
BULLET:SC (single crochet) The foundational stitch that anchors the center ring and secures transitions between sections.
BULLET:DC (double crochet) The primary building stitch of each petal cluster, creating height and that characteristic open floral shape.
BULLET:CH (chain stitch) Used to form the arching spaces between petals, giving the motif its lacy, open-work silhouette.
BULLET:SL ST (slip stitch) Works quietly in the background to join rounds and position the hook without adding unwanted height.
Once you settle into the meditative rhythm of chain, DC cluster, slip stitch, join, the pattern begins to move under your hands almost without thought, and that is when crochet feels most like rest.
Construction
Each crochet floral motif is worked individually in the round, beginning with a magic ring or a foundation chain loop that closes into the center. The spokes of DC stitches radiate outward from that center like the face of a flower, and the outer round of chain arches completes the petal effect. Motifs are then joined as you go using slip stitches through the corresponding chain loops, which means no sewing afterward and a satisfyingly seamless result. For beginners, working a few motifs in isolation before attempting the join-as-you-go technique gives confidence and a neat, even finish across the panel.
Wearing Your Floral Motif
A completed strip of crochet floral motifs sewn to the hem of a linen dress or the neckline of a simple white blouse transforms an everyday piece into something worth saving. Lay a finished panel across a bedside table as a dresser scarf, or frame a single motif in an embroidery hoop for a wall piece that feels both modern and nostalgic. Every time you look at the finished object, you will want to cast on the next one immediately.
Blocking and Caring for Your Floral Motif Lace
Cotton lace like this crochet floral motif responds beautifully to wet blocking, which opens the chain spaces and sets the petals into their full, defined shape. Hand wash the finished piece in cool water with a gentle soap, press out the moisture in a clean towel, and then pin each motif to a foam blocking mat, stretching the outer loops gently to their full width. Once dry, the lace holds its shape confidently and rarely needs re-blocking unless it has been washed and bunched. Store flat or rolled loosely in acid-free tissue to keep the fibers from creasing at the joins.
You made something with your hands that will outlast trends, seasons, and careless afternoons, and that is worth every careful stitch. Save this article to your Pinterest boards and share your finished motifs so other makers can find their way here too.
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Tutorial and photos of this floral motif by: Crochet Swan.
