Jill Draper Makes Stuff is a truly handmade company. Its hand-dyed yarn is made in many cases from locally sourced wool and spun in the…
Jill Draper Makes Stuff
Posted in Yarn
Directory of knitting and crochet designers, tech editors, yarn dyers, spinning fiber dyers, and accessories. Accessible design, diverse makers, no migraines.
Dyers of Semi-Solid and Tonal yarn
Posted in Yarn
Jill Draper Makes Stuff is a truly handmade company. Its hand-dyed yarn is made in many cases from locally sourced wool and spun in the…
Posted in Yarn
Roshelle is the owner and dyer of Queen’s Yarn Boutique yarns. “I started dyeing yarn because when I went to yarn shops, I could not…
Posted in Yarn
The Crochet Cove, a home-based business in the Washington, D.C., area, specializes in luxury wool and wool blends for the modern crocheter and knitter. “Our…
Posted in Yarn
Emma’s Yarn was started by Emma, a then 15-year-old home-schooled student who was dying yarn for a math lesson about ratios and fell in love…
Posted in Yarn
A Hundred Ravens is a small studio in New Hampshire producing “amazing hand-dyed yarn.” Their definition of amazing holds up: consistent color, stability, no knots,…
Having fallen completely in love with alpacas, Katie Seal, the maker behind Sealy MacWheely yarns, quickly learned to spin and then to dye. In 2018,…
Posted in Yarn
Songbird Yarn & Fibres describes itself, fittingly, as a fledgling indie dyer. “I love mixing my two passions, birds and yarn!” says the Canadian dyer.…
Rehwa Fibers helps Tibetan nomads benefit from the sale and trade of yak fiber. Proceeds help support communities and help families send their children to…
Posted in Yarn
Canadian dyer Rhichard met Robert in the ’80s, and since then, they’ve raised everything from teals to Merino sheep. Today they run Rhichard Devrieze with…
Sally Davies’ Garthenor yarn company helped write the first ever organic standards for woollen yarns. “In 2003, we became the first company in the world…