Such a job title might be seamstress skilled in handwork.
To join knittted squares together to make a blanket, there are several things you can do. One way is to sew the squares together. You could choose any sewing stitch, as long as it is use to join material. Another way to join the squares together is to crochet around your squares and then do a crochet slip stitch with both squares held together across your crocheted row.
Crochet is a process of creating fabric from yarn, thread, or other material strands using a crochet hook. You can make quite a few things such as baby booties, scarves, gloves, etc.
Generally in crochet, you don't have "dropped" stitches, that is a knitting term for stitches which have been skipped (accidentally), or which have actually dropped off the needle when you weren't looking.To pick up a knitted dropped stitch, you knit to where the "hole" is in your current row, then using a crochet hook, hook each stitch to the row above. (see the videos I have attached as links to this question).In crochet, there are no "dropped" stitches, there are stitches that you missed or skipped. If you realize that you have managed to skip over a stitch, there are a couple things you can do.One would be to decide if having skipped over the stitch are you okay with just leaving it skipped? If so, continue with your project, figuring that if the stitch is skipped, it just shows that it was hand-made, because of the boo-boo's.If you can, you might think about adding a stitch to the current row that you are on. You do that with an "increase." Increase by having the base of two stitches come out of one stitch from the row below, this will increase the current row by one.If you really think that you need to go back and re-work from the skipped stitch, then you can go ahead and frog back (rippit, rippit--get it?), to the skipped stitch and go on with your pattern from there.
If you are referring to crochet, pronounced crow-shay, where you use a crochet hook and yarn to make things, that is something that has to be learned, and cannot be taught over the internet. You would need to find someone who knows how, and have them show you. There are different types of crochet stitches, and it is not something you can learn without a person to show you.
crochet is relaxing to some Mexicans and is also a part of there culture.
Some machines offer a serger stitch; check the manual to see if yours does. The stitch is basically just a zigzag stitch, so it's like a real serging stitch's pathetic, more time consuming cousin. I use it for simple things if I have to, but my advice would be not to rely on it for any large project.
Crochet, draw, read, do charity work, etc.
It involves a person's ability to put together things heard with things seen
a tacking stitch is a type of stitch you would you when sewing things together.A tacking stitch is a rough stitch used to hold two pieces of material roughly together while they are being properly stitched.
To do the right things before it get worse
ehow and Instructables are two great resources on how to create and do certain things. They offer a multitude of pages on how to stitch a handmade marionette puppet with detailed instructions.
Slipping is passing a stitch from the left needle to the right one without doing anything else to it. Unless the pattern states otherwise put the right needle in the stitch as if you were purling when you transfer it. (Slipped stitch edges help your project to lie flat, you see them a lot for things like scarves.)