Few dog breeds translate into crochet quite as joyfully as the Corgi, with its oversized ears, low-slung body, and famously fluffy butt making every handmade version instantly recognizable and irresistibly cute.
Crocheters, Corgi lovers, and Pinterest scrollers are completely obsessed with amigurumi Corgis because they sit at the perfect intersection of recognizable breed features and endlessly customizable design — from classic fawn and white to fantasy rainbow colorways.
This article rounds up six inspiring Corgi amigurumi crochet pattern ideas across a range of styles, sizes, and skill levels. Let’s dive in.
BEFORE YOU SCROLL PAST
Most Popular This Week: 👇
👉 Free Cocker Spaniel Crochet Pattern Beginner Friendly
👉 Border Collie Crochet Pattern Ideas
Why Corgi Amigurumi Makes a Great Crochet Project
The Corgi’s bold features are tailor-made for amigurumi construction at every skill level.
- Instantly recognizable silhouette: The oversized ears and low body mean even a beginner version reads clearly as a Corgi without advanced shaping.
- Strong color contrast: The classic fawn-over-white pattern gives crocheters an easy, satisfying color placement challenge that looks impressive with minimal technique.
- Massive gift market: Corgi owners are famously devoted to their breed, making handmade Corgis one of the most reliably well-received handmade gifts.
- Highly Pinterest-friendly: The Corgi’s adorable proportions photograph beautifully against simple backgrounds, driving strong pin saves and pattern clicks.
- Endlessly customizable: Coat color swaps, size changes, and pose variations mean one base pattern can produce dozens of meaningfully different finished pieces.
6 Corgi Amigurumi Crochet Pattern Ideas Designs We Love
Every design below is a distinct approach to the Corgi in amigurumi form — from first-project-friendly to detailed portrait pieces.
Design 1: Classic Seated Fawn and White Pembroke Corgi
Quick Stats: Difficulty ⭐ | Worsted Weight (#4) | US G/6 (4.0mm) | 6–8 hrs | Approx. 6 in. tall seated
Best For: First-time amigurumi makers who want a beginner-friendly project with a breed-accurate result.
BEFORE YOU SCROLL PAST
Wait — Don't Miss These! 👇
👉 Poodle Crochet Pattern Step By Step Instructions
👉 Free Black Cat Amigurumi Crochet Pattern
Description: This is the foundational Corgi amigurumi — a seated pose with the classic Pembroke fawn-over-white colorway, large upright triangular ears, and a plump, rounded body with stubby front legs. The color blocking is clean and graphic, making the breed silhouette readable from across a room.
⭐ What We Love: The clean white chest and muzzle contrast against the fawn body creates that instantly recognizable Corgi look with just two yarn colors.
💡 Pro Tip: Stuff the ears with a small amount of fiberfill before closing to help them hold their wide triangular shape permanently.
Get Free Patterns Every Week!
Get new patterns, videos & tutorials free in your inbox
🔒 No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.
BEFORE YOU SCROLL PAST
Before You Go: 👇
👉 Chunky Crochet Cat Cave Pattern Free Cat Pod Bed Tutorial
Design 2: Fluffy Textured Corgi with Brushed Coat Detail
Tagline: Every bit as fluffy as the real thing.
Quick Stats: Difficulty ⭐⭐ | Worsted Weight (#4) + Brushed Mohair Held Together | US G/6 (4.0mm) | 8–10 hrs | Approx. 6 in. tall seated
Best For: Intermediate crocheters who want a tactile, lifelike finish that stands out in craft fair displays.
Description: This design uses a strand of Lion Brand Basic Stitch Anti-Pilling held together with a thin mohair blend to create a brushed, fur-like texture across the back, haunches, and ear edges — mimicking the Corgi’s real double coat without any loopy or cut-pile techniques. The muzzle and chest are worked in smooth yarn only, keeping the color contrast crisp against the textured body.
⭐ What We Love: The mohair halo effect on the haunches recreates the Corgi’s famously fluffy butt in a way that smooth yarn alone simply cannot.
💡 Pro Tip: Brush the finished back section lightly with a fine pet slicker brush in short downward strokes to separate the mohair fibers and maximize the fluffy effect.
Design 3: Corgi Puppy in a Sleepy Curled Pose
Quick Stats: Difficulty ⭐⭐ | DK Weight (#3) | US E/4 (3.5mm) | 5–7 hrs | Approx. 4 in. across curled
Best For: Gift-makers and Etsy sellers looking for a display piece with high emotional impact and strong social media appeal.
Description: This design reimagines the Corgi as a sleepy puppy curled into a tight round shape with its head resting on its haunches, embroidered closed eyes replacing safety eyes entirely, and oversized ears flopped softly to the side rather than standing upright. The smaller DK weight scale makes the proportions even more exaggeratedly puppy-like, with a rounder head and shorter, chubbier limbs.
⭐ What We Love: The closed-eye embroidery and side-flopped ears completely transform the mood from alert to melting-cute without changing the base pattern construction.
💡 Pro Tip: Work the body in one continuous piece rather than assembling separately to keep the curled shape seamless and rounded rather than angular at the join.
Design 4: Sable Corgi Amigurumi with Multicolor Shading
Quick Stats: Difficulty ⭐⭐ | Worsted Weight (#4) | US G/6 (4.0mm) | 9–12 hrs | Approx. 6.5 in. tall seated
Best For: Intermediate crocheters who want to explore color shading and create a more portrait-realistic finished piece.
Description: This design uses three yarn colors — Lion Brand Pound of Love in “Espresso” for ear tips and back saddle, Caron Simply Soft in “Buff” for the mid-body fawn tone, and Lion Brand Pound of Love in “Antique White” for the chest, muzzle, and paw tips — worked in color-change rounds to approximate the shading seen on real sable Pembroke Corgis. The result is a significantly more portrait-realistic finish than a standard two-color version.
⭐ What We Love: The dark ear tips against the lighter fawn head immediately reads as a specific Corgi coloring rather than a generic dog, which makes this version especially meaningful as a custom pet gift.
💡 Pro Tip: Plan all color change rounds on a printed stitch diagram before starting so every transition point is pre-marked and the shading gradient stays symmetrical across both sides.
Design 5: Mini Corgi Keychain Amigurumi
Quick Stats: Difficulty ⭐ | Fingering Weight (#1) | US B/1 (2.25mm) | 2–3 hrs | Approx. 2 in. tall
Best For: Crafters who want a fast, scrap-yarn-friendly project that makes an ideal stocking stuffer, bag charm, or zipper pull.
Description: This miniature design reduces the Corgi to its most essential breed-defining features — the triangular ears, white muzzle blaze, and stubby body — at a scale small enough to attach to a keychain ring through the top of the head. Because of the tiny scale, embroidered eyes replace safety eyes entirely and the tail is a single yarn knot rather than a crocheted piece.
⭐ What We Love: The project uses under 15 yards of each color, making it the perfect use for fingering weight yarn leftovers that are otherwise too small for any other project.
💡 Pro Tip: Insert the split ring keychain hardware through the top two loops of the head before fastening off rather than sewing it on afterward, which creates a much more secure attachment point.
Design 6: Custom Portrait Corgi with Personalized Markings
Quick Stats: Difficulty ⭐⭐⭐ | Worsted Weight (#4) | US G/6 (4.0mm) | 12–16 hrs | Approx. 7 in. tall seated
Best For: Advanced crocheters, Etsy sellers offering custom commissions, and anyone making a memorial or keepsake piece for a Corgi owner.
Description: This design uses a reference photo of a specific real-life Corgi to guide all yarn color choices, custom markings, and ear pigmentation details — including asymmetric pied patches, individual facial blazes, and spot placement on the back and haunches worked in surface slip stitch after the main body is finished. It is the most technically demanding version but produces a finished piece that Corgi owners describe as “uncanny” in resemblance to their actual dog.
⭐ What We Love: Surface slip stitch is the key technique that makes truly custom markings possible without reconstructing the base pattern for each individual commission.
💡 Pro Tip: Custom portrait Corgi amigurumi at this level of detail sell consistently for $65–$120 on Etsy, and offering a two-photo proof stage before finishing dramatically reduces revision requests and increases five-star reviews.
At A Glance — All 6 Designs Compared
Here is a quick side-by-side summary to help choose the right starting point.
| Design Name | Difficulty | Time to Make | Finished Size | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Classic Seated Fawn and White Pembroke | ⭐ | 6–8 hrs | ~6 in. seated | Beginners, first amigurumi |
| Fluffy Textured Brushed Coat | ⭐⭐ | 8–10 hrs | ~6 in. seated | Craft fair display, tactile gifts |
| Sleepy Puppy Curled Pose | ⭐⭐ | 5–7 hrs | ~4 in. across | Emotional gifts, social media content |
| Sable Multicolor Shaded Corgi | ⭐⭐ | 9–12 hrs | ~6.5 in. seated | Custom pet gifts, color enthusiasts |
| Mini Keychain Amigurumi | ⭐ | 2–3 hrs | ~2 in. tall | Scrap yarn, stocking stuffers, impulse buys |
| Custom Portrait with Personalized Markings | ⭐⭐⭐ | 12–16 hrs | ~7 in. seated | Etsy commissions, memorials, keepsakes |
What You Will Need
Most Corgi amigurumi designs share the same core supplies with minor adjustments for scale or texture.
Yarn & Colors
- Main coat color (fawn): Caron Simply Soft in “Buff” — a warm, accurate fawn tone with excellent stitch definition at worsted weight.
- White chest and muzzle: Lion Brand Pound of Love in “Antique White” — slightly warmer than stark white, which reads more natural against fawn on a finished piece.
- Dark saddle or ear tips (sable versions): Lion Brand Pound of Love in “Espresso” — deep enough to contrast clearly without pulling attention away from the face.
- Texture layer (brushed versions): Loops & Threads Impeccable held with a thin mohair such as Lion Brand Go For Faux — available at Michaels for a budget-friendly fluffy effect.
- Keychain version: Any fingering weight (#1) yarn in the same color family — Cascade 220 Fingering or Red Heart Soft in mini skein sizes work well for under 15 yards per color.
Tools & Notions
- US G/6 (4.0mm) crochet hook for worsted weight versions
- US E/4 (3.5mm) hook for DK weight puppy version
- US B/1 (2.25mm) hook for keychain version
- Polyester fiberfill
- 12mm black safety eyes (worsted versions) or black embroidery floss (keychain and child-safe versions)
- Tapestry needle
- Stitch markers
- Scissors
- Straight pins for assembly
- Split ring keychain hardware (keychain version only)
- Fine pet slicker brush (brushed texture version only)
🛒 Supply Tip: Joann, Michaels, and Hobby Lobby all carry Lion Brand Pound of Love and Caron Simply Soft in the exact fawn, white, and brown shades needed for every Corgi colorway listed here.
How To Customize Your Corgi Amigurumi
The Corgi comes in a surprisingly wide range of official and popular coat colorways, and every one is achievable with a simple yarn swap.
Matching a Real-Life Coat Color
The four most common Pembroke Welsh Corgi colorways each have a near-perfect worsted weight match: fawn (Caron Simply Soft “Buff”), red (Red Heart Soft “Paprika”), sable (Lion Brand “Espresso” over “Buff”), and black-and-tan (Lion Brand “Black” with Caron “Gold”). For pied or parti-color Corgis, plan white body sections first and add colored patches in surface slip stitch after the base piece is complete.
Personalizing for a Specific Dog
Reference a clear, well-lit photo of the actual dog and match yarn color in natural light at the craft store rather than under fluorescent store lighting. Note the exact placement of any blaze, saddle, or white sock markings before starting and mark those round numbers on a printed stitch diagram.
💡 Customization Tip: For the most accurate custom portrait result, always photograph the reference dog from directly in front, directly from the side, and from above before starting — three angles cover every detail needed for full-body amigurumi construction.
Tips For Making Corgi Amigurumi Successfully
The Corgi’s distinctive proportions and large ears present a small set of specific construction challenges worth knowing before starting.
Getting the Ears Right
- Bold label — Shaping: Work the ear rounds at firm tension throughout — any looseness causes the wide triangular shape to round out rather than maintaining the Corgi’s distinctive pointed ear profile.
- Bold label — Support: A small pinch of fiberfill inside each ear before closing the base helps hold the triangular shape permanently without the ear collapsing at the tip.
- Bold label — Placement: Position the ears toward the outer edges of the skull rather than centered on top — Corgi ears sit far apart and slightly to the sides, which is the placement most beginners get wrong.
Nailing the Low-Slung Body Proportions
- Bold label — Body length: The Corgi body should finish noticeably longer than it is tall — use a stitch counter and resist the urge to close the body opening early, as short bodies lose the breed’s defining rectangular silhouette.
- Bold label — Leg length: Keep front and back legs deliberately short; Corgi legs are one of the shortest relative to body size of any breed, and legs that are even two rounds too long immediately make the piece read as a generic dog.
- Bold label — Assembly angle: Attach the head very slightly forward of center on the body rather than straight on top — this subtle forward tilt recreates the Corgi’s alert, low-to-the-ground posture.
Achieving Clean Color Blocking
- Bold label — Color joins: Always join a new yarn color at the start of a round rather than mid-round — mid-round joins create a visible diagonal line across the color block that photographs poorly.
- Bold label — Carrying yarn: On the brushed texture version, carry the contrast white yarn loosely inside the work rather than cutting and rejoining for every chest section to reduce finishing time significantly.
- Bold label — Weaving in ends: Use a tapestry needle to weave ends at least 2 inches in two direction changes per tail — Corgi color-block designs have more yarn tails than single-color amigurumi and every unsecured end risks unraveling at a color boundary.
💡 Section Tip: Count stitches at the end of every single round without exception — the Corgi’s ear shaping rounds are particularly easy to miscount and one missed decrease changes the entire ear profile.
Can I Sell Items Made From These Patterns?
Selling finished Corgi amigurumi is fully possible and can be quite profitable — but the rules depend on the specific pattern used.
- Free patterns: Most free Corgi amigurumi patterns explicitly allow selling finished handmade items in small quantities; always read the individual pattern’s terms of use before listing.
- Paid patterns: Paid patterns from designers on Etsy or Ravelry typically include a finished-goods selling license, but the pattern file itself cannot be resold or redistributed.
- Original designs: Any Corgi amigurumi made from a self-designed or significantly modified pattern can be sold freely with no licensing restrictions.
Finished Corgi amigurumi in worsted weight at the standard 6-inch size sell consistently for $28–$55 on Etsy and at craft fairs. Custom portrait commissions matching a buyer’s real Corgi regularly command $65–$120 depending on complexity and added personalization details.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the best yarn for Corgi amigurumi?
Lion Brand Pound of Love and Caron Simply Soft are the top choices for Corgi amigurumi — both are widely available at US craft stores, come in the exact fawn and white shades needed, and hold firm amigurumi tension beautifully.
Which design is best for a complete beginner?
The Classic Seated Fawn and White Pembroke design is the ideal starting point — it uses only single crochet and basic increases and decreases with no shaping or texture techniques.
How long does a Corgi amigurumi take to finish?
Most worsted weight Corgi amigurumi designs take 6–10 hours across two or three sittings; the keychain mini version can be completed in a single 2–3 hour session.
What is the most common mistake with Corgi amigurumi?
The most common mistake is placing the ears too close together at the center of the skull — Corgi ears sit wide apart and well to the sides, and centering them produces a generic dog rather than a recognizable Corgi.
Do Corgi amigurumi need safety eyes or can I embroider the eyes?
Either works well — 12mm black safety eyes are fastest and most durable for adult display pieces, but fully embroidered eyes in black satin stitch are required for any item going to a child under three.
Final Thoughts
The Corgi is one of those amigurumi subjects where the finished piece is genuinely thrilling to look at — the enormous triangular ears and stubby legs create an unmistakable silhouette that no other breed can claim, and getting that right in yarn is deeply satisfying.
Whether starting with the beginner-friendly classic seated version or taking on a full custom portrait commission, there is a design here that matches every skill level and every reason to make one.
Share finished pieces on Pinterest using a clean white or linen background shot taken at eye level — that simple setup consistently drives the highest save rates for handmade dog amigurumi and brings new crocheters back to the pattern again and again. Happy crocheting! 🐾