A few weeks ago, I got notice that a bunch of yarn that was backordered was on its way to me. I've been waiting and waiting and planning, and it still hasn't arrived.
I called and it turns out that it won't be shipped...and they haven't refunded my money. I've spent several hours trying to rectify the situation, and it's pissing me off more and more. I'm itching to knit more alpaca socks, but I'm tired of making them in blue!
I'd like to make a black pair, definitely, and maybe I'll start on a green pair for my brother for the holidays. I'm craving alpaca and I can't have it. I'm even shunning a lovely yak blend that I was itching to use.
I usually read while I knit; and, last night, as I was finishing up another pair of Simple Luxury Alpaca socks for my shop, I glanced upon a post detailing the number of stitches (estimated) that someone had knit into a sweater. As I read, I thought of all of the people who've asked 'why are these socks so expensive?', 'why are they so much more special than a machine made, $15 pair?', or other similar questions, and realized I've never actually written anything the minute details of what's in a pair of socks.
For the following example, I'm going to use numbers from a large pair of socks from my Simple Luxury line. Many people glance at them and consider only the design. They're not very flashy, compared to many of my tabi and carry a heftier price tag; and, though they're made of higher-end fibers, that's not the only justification for the price.
What is then? Well, each sock is made up of over seventeen thousand stitches. Yes, that's 17.000 with 3 0's. Each one of those stitches is slipped from needle to needle by hand, not whirled around the gears of a machine. A pair of socks has over 34.000 stitches -- about twice what a proportionally- sized sweater (on larger needles with larger yarn, of course) uses.
As for yarn, these socks take a little over 1/4 of a mile of yarn.