I’ve mentioned that I’ve made several new yarn purchases recently, and I may even have blogged about these previously. I wasn't keeping them secret, just hadn't had th
First, Classic Elite Inca Alpaca, bought from a favorite EBay seller who had not only one of the colors I wanted, but the same dye-lot as yarn I’d purchased at least 10 years ago! It was meant to be, and I'm glad to now have a sweater-worth of this luscious fiber.

Second, here’s yarn and pattern for a felted hat. Joan and I are trying to knit on Sunday afternoons, and will be opening that up to other knitters this month. We’ve decided to knit FiberTrends felted hats as a “group” project. Hers is shades of purples and blues. Mine is sunny colors, and the mohair is from stash.

Third, here’s the yarn purchased at ArtFibers. It’s Kyoto, which is a blend of 69% silk, 25% kid mohair and 6% extrafine wool, in the most amazing shades of olive, gold and brass. It really isn’t a colorway because it isn’t dyed with multiple colors. The various fibers take the single color differently, accounting for the variations seen here. (This photo shows the colors best, above and below the label. All the other photos were too red or too yellow - this is close to true.)

Fourth is the yarn for the Auburn Mist sweater (I think that's the right name) in the Summer Knitters. It’s a Crystal Palace Kid Merino in a lovely shade of espresso. It should be an excellent substitute for the yarn called for in the pattern.

This is Bamboozle from Crystal Palace, a new-to-me sock yarn that’s similar to Cascade Fixation. It’s stretchy and I absolutely cannot resist red yarn, especially when it's mostly bamboo.

This is Silk Garden Lite. A scarf pattern swept blog-land late last winter or in the early spring, and I had no interest in it then. My local yarn store started carrying Noro, and suddenly I had to have the yarn. Now if I can only find the pattern again...

And from a garage sale, with no idea what to do with it: 2 skeins of Elann Super Kydd, in black. For a buck, it can marinate in stash for a while.

While I have strayed from the straight-and-narrow path of Knit from Your Stash in 2007, I don’t feel the least bit guilty about it. I’ve been discriminating in my purchases, and haven’t been buying every yarn I’ve seen or wanted. Oddly enough, knitting from my stash has been fun and liberating! Shopping my stash is fun, and so is creating with yarn that’s not made any longer.