sofiaviolet: I am cleverly disguised as a responsible adult. (responsible grown-up person)
Sofia Violet Emilie Blackthorne ([personal profile] sofiaviolet) wrote2010-11-21 10:11 pm

Lazyweb, I seek your assistance!

So I mentioned a little while back that I am visiting Cory's parents after Christmas.

I am totally sending them a card, whenever he gets around to giving me an address. I am also going to send a card to his brother Chris and Chris's girlfriend Kajsa (who was one of Ellie's friends in high school, actually).

But I also want to get them gifts! Because I do that! !!!! And this is where I turn to you, oh lazyweb...

Kajsa crochets; I can get her some yarn, y? Or am I projecting my own desire to be gifted with craft supplies? Other people who crochet: what is a reasonable quantity of yarn?

As for the other three, I am completely lost and I doubt Cory will be any kind of help. What kinds of things are reasonable, non-weird (well, non-excessively-weird) gifts for the parents and siblings of one's partner?

I get that this is probably a weird and excessive thing to be doing, but. *hands* I had a Thing about the holiday season as a kid - I tried to get stuff for all my cousins, even the ones I wouldn't be seeing (not make my mom get stuff and put my name in the From: field. Pick it out myself, even if she did give me the money to pay for it). It faded for a while, and then a few years ago, the holiday wishlist meme and the people offering to send out cards brought it out again.
ambersweet: Making it up as I go along. (Mature pink scarf)

[personal profile] ambersweet 2010-11-22 04:14 am (UTC)(link)
Here via network surfing!

I knit and crochet, and I'd say that, unless you know her and what and how she crochets very well, not to buy her yarn. Yarn purchase is a very personal choice. What I would suggest is getting her a gift certificate to her local yarn store, online yarn store of choice, or finding out if she has a wish list somewhere and getting something off of that. Or, if you can't manage that, give her a handmade gift certificate for Yarn of Her Choice, and go on a shopping expedition with her! As for a reasonable amount, it depends on what she's making - two skeins is good for smaller projects, like gloves or socks; 2-3 is good for scarves; the larger the project, the more yarn, obviously.

Okay I will stop yarn rambling at you. ^^
cinco: Spock looking doubtful: "O RLY?" (Default)

[personal profile] cinco 2010-11-22 03:12 pm (UTC)(link)
I was going to suggest a gift certificate to a local yarn store too--I'm much closer to DC than Baltimore so I haven't yet done an exhaustive yarn store crawl there, but this one is my favorite of the few I have visited.

And I agree with [personal profile] ambersweet above--2 skeins is a good plan for crocheters (I knit and crochet; knitting requires about a third less yarn).