My guy and I went out to walk a park in Lady Lake near the Villages, and ended up stopping by a very neat Goodwill we'd never before visited. This one had a lot of brand-new merchandise that had been donated, and also bags and bags of yarn in their bins section. I invested in four bags of the latter. I ended up with fourteen skeins of basically new, clean, odorless yarn. Here's some advice from a seasoned thrifter: try to hit brick and mortar stores in wealthy retirement areas. These people donate nice things. What caught my eye at first were these three matching skeins of Red Heart variegated yarn. The color, Monet, enchanted me. I also like the colors of these three skeins; the one in the center is self-striping, a kind of yarn I've never before tried, so that should be fun. Each bag cost $4.18, and I also made a rounding-up donation to the thrift store, which made my total $21.00. That's about $1.50 per skein, more than I usually pay for thr...
This small yarn lot was one I purchased at the thrift auction using the buy-it-now option; I needed a couple of specific colors for upcoming projects and it had them all. Plus I counted fifteen, possibly sixteen skeins with a few labels that indicated good quality, so it seemed like a good risk. Since it came from a store in Jacksonville the lot arrived just two days later, which is really speedy. Let's take a look. There were actually seventeen skeins of yarn, and they're clean, odorless and in pretty good condition. The ones with labels tell me I got a bargain -- for example, the two skeins of YarnBee Effortless Super Bulky in Biscotti in the center there retail for $8.99 each. The two Bernat Baby Coordinates skeins in pink/white and blue/white are discontinued, and run about $25.00 per skein according to Google. For these reasons I'm quite happy giving the yarn a resale price of $5.00 a skein, or $85.00 for the total value. I paid $7.99 for the lot, or...