Looks like a muppet

I’ve come up with a worry worm pattern I prefer. I don’t really care for the flat head version, so I put the eyes on the end of the spiral, rather than making a separate head. I’ll share the pattern at the bottom, but I had to show you the familiar muppet face that serendipitously showed up on one worm.

Photo description: red crocheted worm with an orange nose and large googly eyes

I really like making these with a variegated yarn that has a medium length color change, because then the worm comes out in two, maybe three colors. Shorter color changes are OK, but not as dramatic. I have been filling waiting time making worry worms as a fundraiser for my chorus, as a gift for donations.

Photo description: box of crocheted worry worms in many colors with a poem, Lone Star Chorus logo and a QR code with the words “Thank you for donating to Lone Star Chorus, please take a worry worm!”

I came up with the poem, there are many varieties out there on the web, but I wanted one with singing. The poem is:

Tell it your worries, it won’t mind,

Sing it a song, it’ll find it devine.

Give it a hug, until you feel healed,

Tell it your troubles, its lips are sealed!

To make them, I use worsted weight yarn scraps or variegated yarn. Acrylic is best for this to avoid any natural fiber allergies. I use a size J hook, but different hook sizes will still make a worm, just in different sizes and densities.

I start with a crochet chain, and weave in the tail as I chain. Before you make a chain stitch, flip the tail between the hook and the working yarn, this will catch the end in the next chain stitch. The end will become the nose. Chain 30.

In the second chain from the hook, make 3 single crochets (or half double crochets if you want a thicker worm). Make three stitches in each chain stitch all the way along. The worm will naturally spiral on its own, but can be encouraged by twisting.

Cut the yarn about 8 inches from the end and pull the last loop out. Thread it on a yarn needle and run the needle under three stitches to form the head. Add a sew-on googly eye, run the needle through three more stitches and add a second eye. Weave in the end.

Worm achieved.