The Cost of Materials

Anneliese Fox
3 min readMay 26, 2023

The woes of the cost of materials in an affluent society

Ninja-styled cookies with writing themes cooling on a rack.
Well, it definitely cost more to buy the kit to make these darlings than it would if I had bought them baked, but then, would I have actually ever found Ninja Writer cookies? Photo by author.

As a maker, I sometimes wish for the good old days. Not because they were necessarily better, mostly they weren’t. Not because I am now old, though by some calendars I guess that I am.

Let me start by way of an example.

I’ve been looking at a website with some cotton yarn for sale that looks really nice. It’s on sale for $15 a hank (25% off). The colors are nice, the yarn looks like it would be fun to use. Yet, it feels a little pricey. One of the sample projects they show it with is a hand towel.

I like hand knit towels. I like making and using them. It makes it easier for the hubby to know which is the hand towel and which is for dishes (some of you may ascertain how huge this is).

The project, in other words, seemed very attractive to me. Until I figured that to make one hand towel, I’d need three balls of yarn. So, $45 in materials to make one, small, hand towel. I had to stop and catch my breath.

Once upon a time, my mother made most of my clothes. Yes, she liked to sew, but at the time lots of people (mostly women) sewed. It could be more economical than buying ready-to-wear. There were at least three convenient fabric stores that sold just the fabric and notions required for sewing. There wasn’t a lot of anything…

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Anneliese Fox
Anneliese Fox

Written by Anneliese Fox

Writer of speculative fiction, programmer, artist in wood and clay, owner of Fox Computer Systems. My almost weekly blog follows what interests me at the moment

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