I think it’s so obnoxious when I go into a little shop and nothing has a price tag. I hate it with the white hot passion of a thousand suns. Are you seriously gonna make me ask you about the price of every little thing I might consider purchasing? Or would you prefer that I bring a bunch of stuff to the register and then decide if I actually want it as you ring it up? And it honestly doesn’t matter if I can afford it (although the lack of clearly labeled prices are particularly rude to people who maybe can’t). No matter how much money I have I will never feel good about getting ripped off so the asking price will always be a factor.

I was recently in a local needlepoint supply store where they had nothing labeled. Needlepoint supplies vary wildly in price. You can get thread for a dollar or for $20. Canvases can cost 5 bucks or hundreds. From their website I saw that this store had needle minders (little decorative magnets to hold your needle when you take a break, they usually look like enamel pins but with magnets instead of the pin and clasp). Well they had $7 needle minders and $75 needle minders. So someone will wander in and see a cute 1 inch Snoopy magnet, think it’s a cute impulse purchase and then get hit with $75 + tax and have to either smile and go along with it or have to back out. It’s just a piss poor customer experience.

  • SpaceNoodle@lemmy.world
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    5 days ago

    Shit, I guess they really are Seattle’s only needlepoint shop, which must be why they feel they’re able to get away with that shit.

    • xtr0n@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      5 days ago

      I think they’re the only Seattle shop with high end needlepoint fibers and hand painted canvases. You can definitely get Anchor or DMC and various notions at Stitches or Acorn Street but the silk and merino fiber (thread? Floss?) is pretty niche. But I don’t want to totally beat on them cuz even if they have some annoying properties, they are still a small local business trying to foster local crafting and fiber arts.

      I’ve sewn, knitted, crocheted, cross stitched and embroidered on and off my whole life and only just recently learned that needle point was its own separate thing and as I poke around it feels like a weird elitist corner of the fiber world. I saw someone comment once that they would love to get into it but it’s so expensive and I was confused because DMC floss is like 75 cents a skein and needles are like a few bucks. But some needlepoint stuff is like crazy expensive. Like I saw a series of videos on TickTock where people were making needlepoint brick covers, which is some kind of traditional thing where you encase a brick in needlepoint and then use it as a doorstop, and I thought it looked cute and fun and thought I might try it but when I looked up brick cover patterns they were like $150!!! Like WTF. You still have to get all the thread and stitch it. But I guess the canvases are often hand painted so there is a lot of labor. But still.

      • smh@slrpnk.net
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        4 days ago

        My local needlepoint/yarn store felt so snobby. I went in because I’d picked up cross-stitch and thought maybe they’d have something in that area. Nope. Totally different, wouldn’t even give me the time of day or explain the differences.

        Anyways, joke’s on them. I’m an accomplished knitter with an expensive yarn habit and never went back. A year later the store closed. Rumor has it the owner retired, but I know the truth /conspiracy

        • xtr0n@sh.itjust.worksOP
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          4 days ago

          I think there might be cross stitch beef because I saw this thing on TicTok where needle point people were arguing that stitch counting is theft?!? Overall it seems like needlepoint might be kinda low on the DIY scale for a crafting community. Like most people seem to only work from pre purchased hand painted canvases and they don’t sew so they send the completed needlework out for “finishing”.

          • smh@slrpnk.net
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            4 days ago

            Stitch counting is theft? That sounds ridiculous to me, someone who only does counted cross stitch (patterns printed onto the canvas or aids stress me because sometimes they can show through, or maybe there’s a judgement call on if a stich is to the left or right. Plus, counting is fun and it’s what I’m used to from knitting.)

            Is the argument that you could make multiple copies of a object from one pattern? I do that in sewing, and knitting, why not in embroidery?

            • xtr0n@sh.itjust.worksOP
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              4 days ago

              Absolutely bananas. I can see if you copy someone’s original design and then try to sell it as their own work but I can’t wrap my head around the entitlement in that community.

              • smh@slrpnk.net
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                4 days ago

                Top right one isn’t even a complicated pattern from what I see, just a basic geometric one with some words on top. If I can chart it out myself I shouldn’t need to hunt someone down to sell me a canvas with it printed on it.

                Maybe there’s nuance I’m not getting, but… Like, sure, don’t copy a painted canvas to avoid buying it if it’s something unique, but a geometric background I drew in middle school?

                • xtr0n@sh.itjust.worksOP
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                  4 days ago

                  That one is wild. I guess that design is used by some high end fashion house and someone ripped it off and made a pattern that they sell and now they’re big mad that someone else made their own version for their own personal use. Some people just want to make their lives into soap operas. I’ll just hang with the crochet chicks. Those hookers are fun!