Lacy Tasseled Bookmarks

These three are the bookmarks I'd reach for when I want to gift something that feels a little more special. They all lean on open lace stitches and finish with a soft tassel, so they look delicate tucked into a hardcover but still hold up beautifully through everyday reading.

Slim blue variegated crochet bookmark with triangular pointed ends and an openwork chain space pattern down the center
Free Pattern

Just One More Page Bookmark

Amber Bliss Calderón named this one after the phrase every reader knows by heart, and honestly it's the perfect title. The clever pointed ends and that little ladder of chain spaces down the middle give it so much character for such a small project.

It uses sport weight yarn on a 4 mm hook and finishes at about 9 by 1¾ inches. Works up in under an hour, sips just a tiny bit of yarn, and the gender neutral design makes it a lovely gift for any reader.

Honey gold crochet bookmark with a textured V stitch body topped with a wooden bead and a generous yarn tassel
Free Pattern

Mark My Words Bookmark

Danielle of A Knotty Habit Designs put this one together with a soft V stitch body and a wooden bead anchoring the tassel, and the result is so pretty. The honey gold version pictured here has that warm, library nook feeling I always want from a handmade bookmark.

It's worked in fingering weight yarn on a 3.5 mm hook using about 20 yards total, which makes it a wonderful little scrap project. The tassel wraps around a piece of cardboard 35 times for that full fluffy finish.

Three slim lacy crochet bookmarks in peach, mauve, and golden yellow laid side by side, each finished with a matching tassel
Free Pattern

Bruges Lace Bookmark

Olena at GoldenLucyCrafts designed this one around a traditional Bruges lace technique that mimics ribbon work with a crochet hook. I love how it looks in the trio of soft pastels here, those slip stitched arches between the chain spaces give it that gorgeous heirloom feel.

It's worked in size 10 cotton thread on a tiny 1.8 mm hook and finishes at about 10 inches long. Definitely a slower, more intentional project than the others in this section, but the finished piece is the kind of thing you'd happily tuck into a Mother's Day card.

Corner Page Bookmarks

If you've ever lost your place because a strip bookmark slipped out, this style is going to be your favorite. Corner bookmarks slide right over the top of the page and stay put, and they double as a little piece of art peeking out of the book.

Dusty mauve crochet triangle corner bookmark worked in a fan shell stitch with a picot edged hypotenuse
Free Pattern

Lotte Lace Corner Bookmark

Veronika Cromwell of Blue Star Crochet built this one around two triangular lace pieces worked corner to corner and seamed together. The picot edging along the diagonal is such a sweet detail, and I love how the dusty mauve version reads almost like a tiny shawl for your book.

It uses 4 ply mercerized cotton on a 3 mm hook, sipping just 30 to 40 meters total. Veronika recommends a quick spritz of spray starch when you're done so it holds that crisp corner over the page.

Pumpkin orange crochet corner bookmark shaped like a smiling monster with googly eyes and a row of white pointed teeth along the bottom edge
Free Pattern

Happy Monster Bookmark

Jennifer Renaud of A Crocheted Simplicity made this little pumpkin orange monster as a classroom Valentine's gift, and it's the sweetest. The googly eyes and pointed white teeth give it so much personality, and I have to imagine any kid would be thrilled to get one tucked into a new book.

It uses just scraps of worsted weight cotton in two colors on G and H hooks. The two triangles can be joined with either a slip stitch or whip stitch depending on what finish you like, and the whole project takes well under an hour.

Statement Strip Bookmarks

These last two go a little bolder. One leans on a chunky textured stitch that flies off the hook, and the other introduces tapestry colorwork so you can play with motifs. Both still finish quickly, but they make a stronger impression than your average bookmark.

Emerald green crochet bookmark with a lacy chain space stitch pattern and a matching tassel attached to one end
Free Pattern

Stuck Between the Pages Bookmark

Dayna Perry at This Pixie Creates worked this one in two strands held together, which gives the fabric so much weight and that lovely lacy texture you see in the emerald version. It feels substantial in your hand, which I always appreciate in a bookmark.

It's made with worsted cotton on an 8 mm hook and finishes at about 2.25 by 7.75 inches. The tassel can attach to the side or the top center depending on the look you want, and it works up in well under an hour.

Crochet bookmark in red and white tapestry crochet featuring a column of outlined hearts with red fringe at both ends
Free Pattern

Heart & Leaf Bookmarks

Raine of HandmadebyRaine designed these as a friendly introduction to tapestry crochet, and the red and white heart version is so striking. She also offers a coordinating leaf motif if you want to make a matching pair, and the fringe at both ends gives them that finished, gift ready look.

They're worked in size 3 cotton thread on a 2 mm hook in single crochet, with two colors carried through the rows. One small ball of each color is more than enough, and Raine recommends a quick starch block at the end so the bookmarks hold their crisp shape.