Good News Yarn Hunters
“I’m on a yarn safari,” said a European customer at Rohnda’s Knitting Room recently. And it’s definitely true that crocheters, knitters and other fibre artists tend to make a beeline to indie yarn stores when they’re visiting a city. Good news, yarn-hunters: Thunder Bay has two brand new stores that sell a wide variety of gorgeous, colourful yarn and other fibre stuff to add to your stash.
At Rohnda’s Knitting Room owner Rohnda Gibson was inspired by her mentor Caryll Donaldson, who recently closed Caryll’s Yarns when she retired. “I knit with Caryll at her knitting nights every week for 20 years,” says Rohnda, a thoroughly expert knitter who’s been knitting all her life after watching her grandmother as a tiny kid. “I love everything about having a yarn shop: touching the yarn, the finished project, helping the customer. I love to solve knitting problems.”
In Rohnda’s bright, orderly store on May Street, across from SilverCity, she offers a variety of classic, budget-friendly yarns like Patons, Bernat, Drops, Sirdar and Galway, as well as luxury brands like Noro, Malabrigo, Kauni and Sulka. She’s looking to add more local yarns to her shelves too, and currently has Roses & Purls. Private and beginner lessons take place at the long table in the middle of the shop, and a local group of machine knitters is using an adjacent room. Because the store is so new, Rohnda’s working on adding more samples, décor and of course yarn. She’s also accomplished at working with leather and fur, and even has small packages of porcupine quills for sale beside the knitting needles and stitch markers.
Since then, she has added felting supplies and even more yarn. “One of the things I’m most proud of is the local shelves,” she says, showing off a hutch filled with locally made yarn from companies like Firefly Fibre Arts, Mosquito Ridge, Hilltop Oasis Alpacas and Roses & Purls, and pottery yarn bowls from Be Natural. In non-local fibre, there’s a huge assortment of roving by Ashland Bay, and fine yarn brands like Ella Rowe, Cascade, Richard Devries, Spun Right Round, Noro, Diamond Luxury and Malabrigo. There are tons of needles and other supplies too, and notions like faux fur pom poms from Japan.
In the works: classes by visiting and local fibre artists about everything from spinning and dyeing and needle felt sculpture, to crocheting tiny amigurumi critters and knitted lacemaking, plus yoga for knitters events and a sensory workshop led by a Reiki practitioner.
Ready to get your yarn on? Check out these two Thunder Bay fibre stores!