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Best Plastic Canvas Patterns for Beginners: 15 Easy Projects to Start With

plastic canvas patterns

Mary Maxim |

Introduction to Plastic Canvas Patterns

Plastic canvas is one of the most forgiving crafts you can try. The rigid grid makes counting easy, mistakes pull out without damage, and most projects finish in a few hours rather than weeks.

We've organized 15 beginner-friendly patterns by how you'll actually learn: start with complete kits that include everything, move to free patterns once you know what supplies to buy, then tackle bigger projects when you're ready. Each entry covers what you'll make, what skills you'll pick up, and links to get started.

New to plastic canvas entirely? Start with our complete beginner's guide to plastic canvas to learn about canvas counts, supplies, and basic techniques before diving into patterns.

Patterns 1-7: Complete Kits to Start With

Kits are the best way to begin. They include pre-cut canvas, the right yarn colors, a needle, and instructions—no guessing about supplies, no separate shopping trips. Focus on learning the stitches instead of wondering if you bought the right materials.

Pattern 1: Christmas Treat Baskets

Three small baskets shaped like a snowman, Santa, and penguin. Simple box construction with basic tent stitch throughout. Fill them with candy or use as holiday decorations.

Pattern 2: Gingerbread Treat Baskets

Six gingerbread-shaped baskets for holiday treats or party favors. The repetition builds muscle memory—your sixth basket will look cleaner than your first.

Pattern 3: Little Bunnies Baskets

Six tiny bunny baskets for Easter eggs or small gifts. Quick to finish and easy to give away—kids love them.

Pattern 4: Spring Bunny Tissue Box Cover

A bunny-themed tissue box cover for Easter or year-round use. Rectangular construction with minimal shaping—a good first tissue box project.

Pattern 5: Butterfly Tissue Box Cover

Colorful butterfly design on all four sides. The bright pattern hides small inconsistencies, making it forgiving for beginners.

Pattern 6: Merry & Bright Tissue Box Cover

Festive holiday lettering and Christmas colors. A good gift project—practical and seasonal.

Pattern 7: Gnome for the Holidays Ensemble

A set with a wall hanging, tissue box cover, and coasters—all matching gnome theme. Make one piece or all three.

Patterns 8-12: Free Patterns to Practice

Once you've finished a kit or two, you understand canvas counts, yarn weights, and how the stitches work. Now you can buy supplies yourself and save money with free patterns. These cost nothing to download—you just need canvas sheets and yarn.

Pattern 8: Quick & Easy Coasters

Four simple coasters using tent stitch and overcast edges. Small, flat, and fast. Good for practicing consistent tension.

Pattern 9: Eye Glass Cases

Practical cases that make good gifts. Small enough to finish quickly, useful enough that people actually want them.

Pattern 10: Seashell Welcome Sign

Beach-themed wall sign with lettering. Good practice for reading pattern charts and placing colors accurately.

Pattern 11: Frankie Candy Cups

Frankenstein-themed cups for Halloween candy. Small and seasonal—make a few for yourself or a batch for a party.

Pattern 12: Holiday Angel

A 10-inch angel for Christmas decorating. Looks more complex than it is—still uses basic stitches throughout.


Patterns 13-15: Bigger Projects When You're Ready

These take more time but create impressive results. Save them for after you've built confidence with smaller projects.

Pattern 13: Ghost House Wall Hanging

A Halloween wall hanging with a haunted house scene. Larger canvas, more colors, but still basic stitches.

Pattern 14: Cardinal Window Frame

A wall hanging designed to look like a window with a cardinal outside. The frame construction adds complexity, but the result looks professional.

  • Kit includes pre-cut canvas and frame pieces

  • Skills: piece assembly, joining, working from charts

  • Cardinal Window Frame Kit

Pattern 15: Winterland Window Frame

Similar to the cardinal frame but with a winter snowman scene. Another step up in ambition with equally impressive results.

Choosing Your First Project

If you've never touched plastic canvas: Start with Pattern 1 (Christmas Treat Baskets) or Pattern 3 (Little Bunnies). Kits with multiple small items let you practice and improve across repetitions.

If you want something useful immediately: Pattern 4-6 (tissue box covers) create functional household items.

If you're watching your budget: Patterns 8-12 are free downloads. Buy a few sheets of 7-count canvas and some worsted weight yarn, and you're set for under $10.

If you've done a few projects and want a challenge: Patterns 14-15 (window frames) take longer but produce wall-worthy results.

Browse the full plastic canvas collection or start with the plastic canvas stitches tutorial if you need technique help.