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Understanding Yarn Labels

Yarn labels are brimming with valuable information that will help you pick the right yarn for your project, or alternatively, the right project for your yarn. Here are the typical pieces of information you will find on a yarn label.

Typical US yarn label from the brand Lily. Notice that the weight classification is given in two different ways: The yarn weight symbol from the Craft Yarn Council, and with the common descriptor “worsted”. 4 strands of yarn were spun together to form the yarn, hence the 4-ply (note that in the UK, weight classification is related to the number of plies, and they do not correspond to the US ones). The gauge information is given as a little pictogram of a square with needles in the middle.

Color & Dye-lot

Examples of non-US yarn labels – Malabrigo from Peru, and Katia from Spain. The Malabrigo label is very manimalistic with only the most necessary information. There’s no weight classification, so you will have to remember or look up which weight class typically has 4.5-5.5 sts. per inch (it’s worsted). There’s also no care symbols, so you will have to look up how to care for superwash merino wool, and finally there’s no dye-lot because it’s hand-dyed. The Katia label is similar to the US label above except it lags a weight classification, and it has one really cool extra feature – a pictogram of a sweater with a number, indicating how many skeins you will need to knit a typical sweater.

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