I decided to try to make the shoes the model is wearing in the picture with the seahorse bathing suit. It's a flat with net at the toe and laces. I ordered thin espadrille soles (
https://diegos.com/collections/espadrilles-soles/products/traditional-espadrilles-soles?variant=39627609473201), a palm thimble, needle, and 4mm ivory cord from Diego's. The pictures of making them look basically like the cork shoes I've made.
I ordered sagebrush cotton in sizes 3 and 10, and a tiny crochet hook from Knit Picks. The same color as the suit. Normally I don't want to match things, but there are patterns for matched sets of other things, so why not? I also found a book of knit and crocheted shoes. (
https://www.etsy.com/listing/57721702/stunning-1930s-knitted-and-crochet-shoes) I'm not planning on using the patterns, but proof that it was done!
The shoes are a mesh pattern so I looked up mesh stitches, and it looks within my crochet capabilities. Chain, single or double crochet (I found patterns using each. I like the double crochet one more, but single would be easier), keep going, next row, do the single or double crochet in the middle of the last row's single or double crochet. I think if I make the pattern in cloth, I can just make a mesh the right size.
Maybe if it works I can make that cute bathing beret. More likely I'll run from crochet, as usual. Counting is hard for me. I can count knitting because the loops are right there, but it's so hard to see the stitches in crochet to count them. To be fair, counting rows and stitches below the needle is also hard in knitting. Thankfully you rarely have to do that.