Knitting for Beginners · Tools & Gear
Knitting Tools You Shouldn’t Buy (Waste of Money)
Before you spend another dollar at the craft store, read this. Some beginner “essentials” are anything but.
The knitting tool market loves beginners. Walk into any craft store and you’ll find entire sections of gadgets, kits, and accessories marketed as must-haves for new knitters. Most of them are not.
The truth is, you need very little to start knitting — and buying the wrong tools early on clutters your space, drains your budget, and sometimes actively makes learning harder. Here’s exactly what to skip and what’s genuinely worth your money.
Just Starting Out?
Before buying any tools, start with the simplest beginner project — a scarf that needs almost nothing to make.
Free step-by-step pattern, no experience needed.
→ See the Easy Scarf Pattern for BeginnersTools You Do NOT Need (Yet)
These products are real, they exist, and experienced knitters sometimes use them — but as a beginner, they will either confuse you, go unused, or solve problems you don’t have yet.
Interchangeable Needle Sets
A full set of interchangeable circular needles costs $80–200+. Beautiful — but you don’t need circular needles for your first 3–4 projects. Start with one pair of straight needles in US size 8.
Yarn Swift & Ball Winder
These wind skeins into neat cakes. Useful eventually — but most beginner yarn comes pre-wound in balls or skeins you can knit straight from. A $60 combo you won’t touch for months.
Beginner Knitting Kits
Those all-in-one starter kits look great but usually include low-quality needles, scratchy yarn, and a pattern that’s harder than advertised. Buy your tools individually — you’ll spend less and get better quality.
Knitting Looms
Marketed aggressively as “easier than real knitting.” They’re a completely different skill — learning on a loom teaches you nothing about needle knitting and means starting over when you switch.
Blocking Mats & Wires
Blocking is a finishing technique that matters a lot — for lace, garments, and anything that needs shaping. For your first scarf or dishcloth? A damp towel and a flat surface work perfectly fine.
Fancy Needle Cases
Instagram loves a beautiful needle roll. But when you own one pair of straight needles, a rubber band works just as well. Buy the case when you actually have needles to fill it.
The pattern: Most “beginner essentials” are actually intermediate tools. They solve problems that beginners don’t have yet — and create decision fatigue before you’ve even cast on your first row.
What You Actually Need (The Real List)
Here’s the complete, honest starter kit — and the approximate cost of doing it right without overspending.
One pair of straight needles, US size 7 or 8
Bamboo or wood needles are ideal for beginners because they have a natural grip that keeps yarn from sliding off. A single pair costs $5–10 and is genuinely all you need to start. Avoid metal needles until you’re more comfortable — they’re slippery.
One or two skeins of smooth worsted yarn
Medium color, smooth texture, weight 4. Lion Brand, Caron, or Red Heart — all around $4–7 per skein. This is where your budget should go, not on gadgets.
A tapestry needle
For weaving in ends when you finish a project. Comes in packs of three for about $2. You already own everything else you need — scissors are in your kitchen drawer.
Total Starter Budget
One pair of bamboo needles ($8) + two skeins of yarn ($10) + tapestry needles ($2) = $20 total. That’s genuinely everything you need to knit your first scarf from start to finish.
The Rule
Don’t buy a tool until you feel the problem it solves. Need is the best guide. When you find yourself wishing you could wind your yarn faster, buy a winder. When you start circular projects, buy circular needles. Let your knitting tell you what it needs.
You’re Ready
With just needles and yarn, you can start your first project today. Here’s the perfect beginner pattern.
Simple, satisfying, and completely free.
→ Get the Free Scarf PatternLess Is More — Especially at the Start
The best knitters in the world started with two sticks and a ball of yarn. The tools that matter most aren’t sold in stores — they’re the patience to practice, the curiosity to learn, and the willingness to make mistakes without giving up.
Spend $20, cast on, and see what happens. The gadgets can wait. 🧶