Ultimate Yardage Estimator

The comprehensive calculator for fiber artists. Adjusts for stitch complexity (cables, lace), craft type (knit/crochet), and custom dimensions.

Width
Length
Total Estimate
0
yards
0
meters
Knitting Buffer Included

How to Use This Calculator

Follow these steps to get the most accurate estimate.

1

Select Your Craft

Toggle between Knitting and Crochet. Crochet stitches typically consume about 25% more yarn than knitting stitches.

2

Choose Template

Choose a Project Template (like "Scarf") to auto-fill industry-standard sizes, or edit the Width and Length fields manually.

3

Select Yarn Weight

Select the exact weight, from Cobweb to Jumbo. Thinner yarns require thousands more stitches, increasing yardage.

4

Adjust for Texture (Crucial!)

Select your Stitch Pattern. Cables or Colorwork make fabric twice as thick, needing 40-50% more yarn.

5

Check the Buffer

We recommend keeping the 10% Safety Buffer checked for gauge swatches and tail ends.

Mastering the Math

Why this tool is more accurate than your average yarn calculator.

The "Crochet Tax"

Knitting creates a flat fabric using loops, while crochet creates fabric using knots. Knots inherently use more fiber. If you select Crochet Mode, we automatically add ~25% more yardage to your estimate to ensure you don't run out halfway through your blanket.

The "Texture Trap"

A cabled sweater is thick, dense, and heavy. A lace shawl is airy and light. If a calculator treats them the same, it fails.

Example: A standard 60" scarf might need 400 yards. But if you add heavy Cables, you are overlapping fabric, requiring 40% more yarn. Our "Stitch Complexity" field handles this math for you.

Dimensions vs. Templates

The "Project Template" gives you a quick industry standard size (e.g., a 60-inch scarf). However, you aren't limited to that. By editing the Width and Length fields directly, the calculator updates the surface area in real-time. This is perfect for custom-fit garments or resizing blankets.

Yarn Weight Physics

Think of yarn as paint. Super Bulky yarn is like a wide roller—it covers surface area very quickly (fewer yards needed). Lace Weight is like a fine-point pen—it takes thousands of tiny stitches to cover the same area (more yards needed). We use a "Coverage Factor" coefficient for each of the 10 yarn weights to ensure precision.