AbstractThe traditional design approaches to fatigue at notches, based on stress level–endurance relationships, are briefly reviewed. It is shown, by considering crack propagation from notches and invoking a change in control mode from notch plasticity to crack-tip plasticity, that a critical stress condition can be obtained which must be exceeded if the crack is to propagate to failure. The traditional techniques are then reinterpreted and explained by this propagation method. An example is given of crack growth from a sharp defect at a weld toe. It is shown that the integration of an elastic fracture mechanics growth law can reproduce stress range–cycles to failure data for this situation. There are, however, complexities of stress analysis and crack shape. A simple treatment of residual stresses affecting the threshold and slow–growth regimes, shows some promise as a technique for accounting for residual stresses.MST/70