Craft-Mart Shares Free Crochet Chicken Pattern Built From Two Granny Squares
Two granny squares are all it takes to stitch up Craft-Mart's free crochet chicken, a "quick, simple, and adorable" amigurumi-style project perfect for any maker's to-do list.

Two granny squares sitting in your stash are worth more than you think. Craft-Mart, a craft blog and resource site focused on quick patterns and tutorials for makers, has published a free pattern titled "Crochet Chicken – Quick Crochet Pattern" that turns exactly that modest starting point into a small amigurumi/ornament-style chicken. For anyone who has ever stared at a pile of leftover yarn and wondered what to do next, this is a strong answer.
What Craft-Mart Is Offering
Craft-Mart has long positioned itself as a resource for makers who want approachable, practical projects, and this pattern fits squarely into that mission. The "Crochet Chicken – Quick Crochet Pattern" is completely free, described by the site as "quick, simple, and adorable," with a single-sentence pitch that doubles as its best selling point: "Create an easy stuffed animal using 2 granny squares." There are no paywalls, no subscriptions, and no hoops to jump through. The free access matters in a craft space where pattern costs can add up quickly.
The Two-Square Construction Method
The genius of this design is its economy of construction. The entire chicken body is built from just two granny squares rather than working a conventional amigurumi from scratch in the round. Granny square chickens are colorful, versatile projects that allow for endless yarn color combinations and can be crocheted using yarn scraps, making them well suited as stashbuster projects. That means the color story of your chicken is entirely up to what you already have on hand, and no two will ever look quite the same.
Once the two squares are complete, you place the wrong sides together and use a yarn needle and a long piece of yarn to sew three sides together, leaving one side open; this creates the body of the chicken. The open side is then squeezed flat so that the top corner touches the bottom corner, creating a pyramid or triangular shape that gives the finished bird its distinctive silhouette. It is a construction logic that is intuitive once you see it: a flat square becomes a three-dimensional form with just a few seams and a squeeze. The result is the amigurumi/ornament-style chicken Craft-Mart describes, small enough to sit in your palm and sturdy enough to hold its shape.
Who This Pattern Is For
Craft-Mart frames this as a quick project aimed at makers looking for a fast, rewarding make. This kind of pattern is perfect for using up scrap yarn or adding a touch of whimsy to your home, and whether you are a beginner or have some experience, it offers a satisfying blend of simplicity and creativity. The granny square is one of crochet's most foundational motifs. Free granny square crochet patterns are popular for a variety of reasons, starting with the fact that they are relatively simple to crochet. If you can work a basic granny square, the construction side of this pattern is already within reach.

You only need basic crochet skills to make something this cute, which makes the Craft-Mart chicken a practical on-ramp for newer makers who want to try their hand at three-dimensional construction without committing to a complex amigurumi pattern from the ground up.
Finishing Details That Make It a Chicken
The granny square body is only the beginning. Once you fold and stitch your squares into a pyramid shape, you add a bit of stuffing, safety eyes, and crochet a tiny beak, comb, and tail to bring the character to life. These small added elements are what push the piece from abstract stuffed pyramid into something recognizably, charmingly chicken-shaped. The embellishments are quick crocheted additions rather than separate sewn pieces, keeping the project consistent with its "quick and simple" promise.
This style of project is also well suited as a craft fair product, since it is quick, easy, and will surely grab attention at markets. Beyond selling, the small finished size makes it a natural candidate for gifting, Easter basket stuffing, desk decor, or even a pincushion. Combining the charm of classic granny squares with a bit of amigurumi spirit, it works equally well as a home decoration, a unique handmade gift, or simply an enjoyable creative session.
Why the Granny Square Format Works So Well Here
There is something clever about choosing the granny square as the building block for a small stuffed animal. Granny squares can be joined with each other to produce all kinds of accessories and objects, but using just two of them as the front and back panels of a stuffed form is an underused trick. The structure is inherently beginner-friendly because granny squares are worked flat, one round at a time, making it easy to monitor your stitch count and catch mistakes before assembly. A yarn with crisp and clear stitch definition can really show off the beautiful stitches in the finished piece, so if you have a sharp cotton or smooth DK weight in your stash, this is a good moment to reach for it.
The Craft-Mart chicken is a reminder that some of the most satisfying projects are also the most stripped-back. Two squares, some stuffing, a beak, and you are done. Head to Craft-Mart's pattern page to grab the free "Crochet Chicken – Quick Crochet Pattern" and put those stash remnants to work.
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