Prepare to hyperventilate. The hand-dyed embroidery flosses in the Etsy shop of cymberfloss are going to take your breath away. Go see for yourself!
Many thanks to CraftGossip sewing editor Anne Weaver for sharing this find.
The largest independent craft review site since 2007
Prepare to hyperventilate. The hand-dyed embroidery flosses in the Etsy shop of cymberfloss are going to take your breath away. Go see for yourself!
Many thanks to CraftGossip sewing editor Anne Weaver for sharing this find.
Let me set the scene: It’s 95 degrees with 80% humidity—the kind of weather where even your iced coffee sweats. You’ve been dreaming about this perfect summer top for weeks. The pattern is queued up, your hooks are ready, and you’ve carved out precious AC time to finally start.
Then disaster strikes.
Three rounds in, your hands start sticking to the yarn like Velcro. The supposedly “breathable” cotton feels like you’re crocheting with wet spaghetti. By row 10, your tension is shot because every stitch drags against your damp fingers. And that beautiful drape you imagined? The fabric is now clinging to your hook like it’s begging for mercy.
I speak from experience. Last July, I stubbornly powered through a linen tee in the middle of a heatwave. The result? A warped, misshapen blob that somehow both sagged and constricted at the same time—the sartorial equivalent of a bad sunburn. My Ravelry project page still bears the shameful note: “Frogged after realizing wearer might suffocate.”
But here’s the good news: After that humiliation, I became obsessed with finding the perfect summer yarn. I turned my craft room into a textile lab:
Tested 23 fibers from $2 bargain bin finds to luxury imports
Subjected swatches to brutal “armpit tests” (you’re welcome)
Even crocheted with gloves on during a Florida vacation (do not recommend)
What emerged was a shockingly simple formula for heat-proof crochet:
The right fiber + the right weight + the right hook = summer stitching bliss
Personal Hack: Soak finished items in hair conditioner + cold water for extra softness.
Pro Tip: Throw it in the freezer for 10 minutes before crocheting on extra-hot days.
“I used Coboo for a market bag after reading your advice. Took it to Mexico – zero sweat stains AND it held 6 limes!” – Marisol K. (Texas)
What’s your go-to summer yarn? Any disasters to share?