My weekly newsletter encourages you to slow down and make more things by hand.
Join here on Substack.
My weekly newsletter encourages you to slow down and make more things by hand.
Join here on Substack.
It's a yarn sale, a yarn drop from your favorite dyer, a festival ... and you are excited about buying new yarn!
You want something special, but not too much. You want all the good feelings that come with squishy new yarn, but you don't want to add excessively to your stash. You already have too many "now what am I going to do with this?" skeins.
Here's my best advice for shopping for new yarn in a way that balances joy, consumption, and budget.
Many folks will suggest that you go to a festival or sale with a list of patterns you want to make and buy yarn based on that list. However, I've found that buying for a pattern gives me a sense of obligation. As in "I now need to knit this specific thing in this specific yarn." I'm much happier when my stash has yarn in sufficient quantities or in well-coordinated sets to give me the perfect option when a (new or older) pattern strikes my fancy.
Here are yarn requirements for three types of comfort knitting projects:
*yardage requirements calculated on StashBot
This is especially helpful if your favorite dyer or sale doesn't have enough matching skeins of a particular color. Use a second, coordinating color to finish the bottom of a sweater and the bottom of sleeves for a super cute colorblock look. Nearly every sweater can be changed to a striped sweater by knitting equal stripes of coordinating colors. This is also a great way to use a POP color in the midst of other more muted colors.
Just buy the same yardage of mohair-silk to go with your fingering weight yarn and knit the shawl at a larger gauge. My advice: if pattern calls for a US size 6 needle (4.0 mm), up-size to a US size 9 (5.5 mm).
Here are 8 seasonal projects I'm loving right now, with yarn weights from lace to bulky ...
Oolong Tank by Aimee Sher
Choose:
3 skeins of 80/20 Sock, Cashmere Blend or Targhee Sock to knit any size
Kittenish Tank by Tina Tse
Tina designed this tank with my Harvest Sport yarn! (Mine is the banner image. I made with a deeper V and deeper armholes.)
3 skeins each of 2 colors (sport-weight) to knit any size.
Note: Tina used two different colors rather than one for the "blue" background, and it gives a gorgeous subtle plaid appearance. You can try the same!
Oracle by Tyne Swedish
4 skeins of one color, or try color-blocking the design with 4 coordinating colors.
Choose Merino DK
Savor shawl by Kavitha Raman
Kavitha designed this shawl with two skeins of my Merino DK!
Choose 2 matching skeins of Merino DK
Building Blocks Drop by Aimee Sher
choose Targhee Sweater
You'll need:
Short sleeves: 6 skeins to knit any size
Long sleeves: 8 skeins to knit any size
-or- choose any fingering weight base + mohair/silk
Short sleeves: 4 skeins of each base
Long sleeves: 5 skeins of each base
If you don't want bust darts, this is a perfect pattern for easy striping! Pick 6 different colors of Targhee Sweater for an adorable short sleeve drop shoulder vest/top
Ursa by Jacqueline Cieslak (links to Ravelry)
choose Harvest Bulky | 8 skeins to knit any size -or-
Targhee Sweater (4 skeins) + Mohair/Silk | (3 skeins)
Photographs used with permission © Tyne Swedish, Aimee Sher, and Tina Tse.
Here's a helpful one-pager that incorporates all my best advice for happy yarn shopping.