A couple of people have written to me saying they also have problems with yarn labels. Here in the US, they're not very standardized - especially compared to labels made for the European market. Here are some examples.
First, here's a label for Harlekin, a yarn imported from Germany:
You can see not only a recommended needle size, but also a rough consumption guide for how much yarn it might take to make several different garments for average size men, women and children. Note the little square shape with numbers above, below and aside it - that's the gauge square, and shows how many stitches and rows the maker recommends for this yarn. It also has complete care instructions. This is pretty much the Cadillac standard of yarn labels in terms of the amount of information on it.
By contrast, here's a label for a US yarn, made by a small producer (to be fair, it's an old label, and current ones from the same maker might have more info on them):
You'll see that this label has yardage, but no gauge info; and wash directions are rudimentary at best.
Most yarns fall somwhere between these two. Here's one that's typical:
No little gauge square, but the info is there in prose. Good care information. Yardage and skein weight are also there.
There is a move afoot led by the Craft Yarn Council (mostly made up of mass-market yarn distributors and makers, plus some magazine publishers) to standardize on a new set of yarn descriptors for weight, and for those descriptors to appear on future yarn labels.
You might see markings like these:
While there is considerable weight behind implementaton of these symbols, frankly I think they are not worth the paper they're printed on. The effort is a laudable one - to simplify the system of yarn designations, removing confusion from terms like worsted, DK, sport and the rest. But what they do is substitute a set of imprecise descriptors for the admittedly arcane but specific existing terms.
Here's the chart of what each symbol means:
Gr. 1
Gr. 2
Gr. 3
Gr. 4
Gr. 5
Gr. 6
(source: Craft Yarn Council's http://www.yarnstandards.com/weight.html)
For example, you'll note that the old standard of DK - a pretty precise designation meaning 5.5 stitches per inch is now lumped into a broader guideline that covers everything from 21-24 spi. That's a TREMENDOUS difference, as true sport weight yarns cannot be successfully substituted for the heavier DKs. But magazines are printing patterns as being made from a Group 3 yarn. The way this symbol is so prominently featured leads beginners to believe that ANY Group 3 yarn can be used.
"Oh" you say, "they can't be that naiive." Well they are. I'm not a yarn shop owner, but just in my visits to my LYS I've seen a good half dozen projects ruined by exactly this error. My heart really goes out to the folks who buy yarns sight-unseen on line, or people who shop in crafts stores for their knitting supplies. Neither venue offers hands-on help or the sanity check of dealing with another knitter face to face. Who knows how many people are abandoning projects (and knitting) in disgust because they picked out yarn with only the symbols for guidance and have been disappointed.
My advice? If you're a designer or yarn maker, try resist the pressure to use this ill-conceived system. If you're a knitter - ignore it. Look at the gauge listed (provided there is a gauge listed) NOT the yarn group. If you're doing substitutions, plan on swatching. Lots. Start with the maker's recommended gauge. Some yarns may perform well over a range of gauges, but not every yarn is guaranteed to achieve the full range of gauges listed in its newly assigned group.
June P [gobills@comcast.net]
Stephanie [stephaniepearl@sympatico.ca]
lisa [dariaknits@earthlink.net]Ahh. But "Bulky" does mean something to me, and it doesn't mean 6-11 stitches per inch/Group 6. It means something heavier than Aran (18 stitches per inch), but not a superbulky (12 stitches per inch or fewer). I'd probably look for something that knit at 14-15 stitches per 4 inches if someone told me "Bulky." There's too much variation between 6 stitches/4 inches and 11 stitches/4 inches for true codification. Both the grade groups and the labels used to describe them are too inclusive under the new system. My problem isn't in the fact that categories are established, it's that they overlay poorly on the old system, are too inclusive lumping yarns of many weights together, and codify the "gauge creep" pheonomenon that has been foisted on the knitting public by mass-market yarn makers over the past ten years.As to swatching - yes, if people bothered to do it there would be less of a problem. But new knitters (and even many experienced ones) don't bother. The way the system is being used in popular magazines gives a false impression of universality and leads people to make otherwise avoidable mistakes. And no. Not everyone knitting is smart enough to realize this. There's a bell curve of both ability and intelligence in every group. You may be in the pointy end of enlightenment, but there's a whole belly of the bell curve behind you, followed by some legitimately challenged (and some truly appaling willful ignorance) in the pointy end that trails the pack. I believe this system is confusing enough to perturb the belly, not just the trailing pointy end of our community.So I repeat - ignore these misleading new groupsings. Go by real gauge and swatch.
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