Carol writes: <<Second drawback, trying to figure out what quantity of each yarn would be suitable. Short of putting up a kit with yarn and pattern all together, which I definitely would not get into, how much yarn? Hat or scarf amount? What pattern? How big, how long? A sweater's worth? What kind of pattern? What size? And so it went.>>
I put a page on my website that might help with that... <http://www.hjsstudio.com/spin.html> You might point out, if you or someone else tries that again, that people can certainly use handspun as an accent, it doesn't have to be a whole garment. Which brings it into a more reasonable range, price-wise, for the consumer, as well as taking care of the problem of there not being a large enough run of one type of yarn for whole projects. Essentially, handspun yarn is, or at least can be, fiber art on a small, intimate, personal scale--accessible to all, not just the super rich. Holly To stop mail temporarily mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] with the message: set nomail To restore send: set mail
