I had not purchased new yarn in a yarn shop in over two months.
I went in to the local yarn shop to buy a soft wool yarn (one skein) to make a hat for my husband.
Noro makes my favorite yarns. The colors are to die for.
I want to make a hat for myself out of a Noro yarn. It cost $20 for one skein (160 meters).
I really, really want a Noro sweater. Today while online I figued out that Noro sells patterns. However to make a sweater with new Noro yarn will cost me $140-$200 in yarn alone.
I feel as if I've been tortured.
Do people really spend over $100 on skeins of yarn to make one sweater?
I think I have been spoiled by the prices of factory made sweaters sold in stores.
Groan.
If you don't know what the Noro yarns look like here is a link to a site selling books of patterns. By clicking on each book you can see numerous photos of projects made with these Noro yarns.
I have been using "World of Nature" Kureyon, I just bought some Iro and Kochoran.
Thursday, October 09, 2008
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2 comments:
Yes, I have spent over $100 on yarn to make one sweater.
More than once. :-)
Sometimes (honestly, most of the time) knitting isn't a money saver, but when you figure out the number of hours of entertainment/challenge/satisfaction/joy you'll get for the dollars invested in those skeins, and a high quality piece of long-lasting knitwear to boot, the cost per hour is very reasonable.
Here's a reasonably good substitute for Noro, at a fraction of the price:
http://www.plymouthyarn.com/index.php?nav=cYarn.yarnDetail&yarnid=000250&searchcollection=000005
Sometimes you can catch Noro on closeout at Webs:
http://yarn.com/webs/0/0/0/0-0-1294/0/25/
According to Franklin at http://www.the-panopticon.blogspot.com,
Another Noro Kureyon knockoff is Kaleidoscope from Elegant Yarns:
http://www.elegantyarn.com/index0.asp?cid=321&loid=Kaleidoscope. Runs ~$8/skein.
Doesn't look like there's a local distributor, but the savings per ball could easily make a shipping charge worthwhile.
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