Farasha A line skirt by Moon Chain

Farasha A line skirt

Crochet
May 2025
DK (11 wpi) ?
10 stitches and 10 rows = 4 inches
in no gauge made to measure
3.0 mm
3.5 mm (E)
4.0 mm (G)
4.5 mm
1094 - 3281 yards (1000 - 3000 m)
size inclusive
US
English
This pattern is available for AU$17.00 AUD buy it now

Farasha, meaning butterfly, I wanted so badly to come up with an all over butterfly lace design. I wanted a cottage core skirt covered in them!
This skirt was directly inspired by a knit blanket I made and out on myself as if it were a skirt (photo is on my ig), after a lot of brainstorming Farasha was finally designed and i must say that I do love it.

I designed 3 styles of this skirt and each are sold as separate paterns.
I am biased to flowy midi skirts, so this is my favourite of the 3

I recommend a sturdy light (sport/dk) weight yarn for this skirt.
I used drops belle for the drape and cotton/viscose/linen blend, I find this yarn doesn’t over stretch when blocked. I do not recommend using a yarn that grows a lot, as with a skirt, there is a lot of fabric and we don’t want it growing or being heavy.
A lot of testers used 100% cotton, some acrylic, polyester blends, just be sure it is light weight :)

The length is customisable of course, but with the A line, I do recommend at least knee length, as it looks best as a knee, midi or maxi

All my testers really loved the way it looks and said it fits them perfectly.
It is based off of your measurement, we only take 1 measurement for this skirt.

The pattern contains photos, well written instructions and charts.

My patterns are size inclusive, they are to fit Women of all shapes and sizes because 1 size does not fit most! My patterns are written in a way where the crocheter must measure themselves or the person intended for, this is to ensue the most perfect fitting top for YOUR body.
The pattern has been tested by many women before publishing.

The pattern is written in English, in US terms.
Recommended Yarn Weight:
Sport/Weight 2
DK/Weight 3

The skill level is intermediate.
When I’m learning a new stitch I find Youtube is the best source.
It is written in US terms, some spelling is according to Australian spelling.

Tester catalogue shows photos and details of yarns used for each size