"Beautiful colors! Do you ever use cashmere or anything more pricey like that? I've been wanting to improve my skills so I can try something more 'rich', if you know what I mean."
I love this question because it's something I've thought a lot about. I
have "promoted" myself from cheap acrylic yarn to mostly wool and wool
blend yarns. One day I definitely would like to knit with richer yarns,
but truthfully I have a hard time spending the money. It is not cheap
to knit, unfortunately.
Because I am relatively new to knitting and am expanding my skills all the time by trying new techniques and more challenging projects, I am hesitant to pay big bucks for yarn on a project that may be a wadder. However, my confidence is growing as I have more and more successful results. And so, yes, I think about buying nicer yarns. It's the money issue that holds me back.
Right now I have set, self-imposed, limits on my yarn buying. I only buy yarn for a project that I will be starting right away (or soon) for a specific, intentional project. I don't buy yarn for a stash. Well, one exception--I do buy sock yarn. But as anybody who knits socks will tell you, sock yarn does not count toward stash. Sock yarn buying is open game, anytime, anywhere, whenever a skein catches my fancy. (I've informed my husband about this rule, and he just shakes his head laughingly as he hands over the money to pay. Such a nice husband I have!)
For my budget, I do tend to buy most of my yarn from Knit Picks. The yarn is less expensive than the "rich" name brand yarns, but it still is not cheap. I dream of a day when some generous yarn company or yarn hoarder will bequest a bounty of yarn to me--piles and piles of beautiful, luscious, quality yarn.
Because I am relatively new to knitting and am expanding my skills all the time by trying new techniques and more challenging projects, I am hesitant to pay big bucks for yarn on a project that may be a wadder. However, my confidence is growing as I have more and more successful results. And so, yes, I think about buying nicer yarns. It's the money issue that holds me back.
Right now I have set, self-imposed, limits on my yarn buying. I only buy yarn for a project that I will be starting right away (or soon) for a specific, intentional project. I don't buy yarn for a stash. Well, one exception--I do buy sock yarn. But as anybody who knits socks will tell you, sock yarn does not count toward stash. Sock yarn buying is open game, anytime, anywhere, whenever a skein catches my fancy. (I've informed my husband about this rule, and he just shakes his head laughingly as he hands over the money to pay. Such a nice husband I have!)
For my budget, I do tend to buy most of my yarn from Knit Picks. The yarn is less expensive than the "rich" name brand yarns, but it still is not cheap. I dream of a day when some generous yarn company or yarn hoarder will bequest a bounty of yarn to me--piles and piles of beautiful, luscious, quality yarn.
The parallels are the same when it comes to sewing. For those of you
who sew, you know that better quality fabric costs more than poorly-made
fabric. I read somewhere recently, "Life's Too Short to Knit with
Cheap Yarn." Let's add, "Life's Too Short to Sew with Cheap Fabric" to
the mantra.
A screen shot of my Ravelry page:
I started knitting 6 years ago in 2006, and it's encouraging to see my progress.
I started knitting 6 years ago in 2006, and it's encouraging to see my progress.