Want to make your socks rock? This fabulous 75/20/5 superwash merino, nylon, and silver stellina will make any project pop. Don’t let socks have all the fun, try this soft yet strong in mittens , hats, scarfs, shawls or your next cardigan.

This Merino Wool is luscious next to skin soft and the fibers are very strong so your finished piece will last a long time with normal wear. This is great yarn for socks, mittens, hats, shawls or cardigan that will may you feel so so extra.

This is the same 4 ply yarn as Diva Sock. It’s a 75/25 Springy Superwash Merino, with Nylon into a fabulous skein of yarn. Merino Wool is luscious next to skin soft and the fibers are very strong so your finished piece will last a long time with normal wear. This is great yarn for socks heals and toes, mittens, hats, or color work on your shawls or cardigan that will may you feel so so extra. 92 yards per 20/g skein

Yak Yeah blends 20% Yak fibers with 70% Superwash Merino and 10% Nylon. The darker Yak fiber lends depth to the dye, giving rich bright jewell like tones. This one never stays in stock long - grab all you can.

Super Shawl is a 6-Ply yarn, originally introduced as a heavy-lace hand knitting yarn and used widely for shawls. It is spun from springy superwash merino and a generous yardage and skein weight. These skeins are heavier at 150 grams and are perfect for fine gauge garments, shawls, baby clothes, hats, gloves.

Diamond Diva is a lovely blend of 80%/20% in our springy superwash merino with silk, a special combination of 2-ply fibers for a luxurious knitting or crochet project. The drape of our superwash merino, with silk to create a new line -- the Diamond Diva. With 50% more yarn on the skein, this is perfect for knitting shawls and fine gauge knitting. This is luxury you deserve.

This 4 ply yarn blends 75/25 Springy Superwash Merino, with Nylon into some fabulous yarn. Merino Wool is luscious next to skin soft and the fibers are very strong so your finished piece will last a long time with normal wear. This is great yarn for socks, and the double blank is meant for knitting directly off the blank, two socks at a time. Do not try to unravel the blanks into two separate balls.