It gets worse. I’ve started spinning. I blame my enabler mother who bought me a wheel. I want to spin everything in sight, then knit it! No time now with the new house.
Yes! The key is to have expensive hobbies that you can justify in your own mind. If you’re married or otherwise attached, it is even more helpful if you can justify these things to your significant other. Or, as previously noted, if your partner has an even *more * expensive hobby.
I guess for me it would have to be clothes and books. I don’t really spend that much on either, because I’m a bargain hunter, but I have lots of clothes and old books. I rarely buy clothes at retail price and I mostly pick up my books at garage sales, Goodwill, and antique shops.
None of my hobbies even touch my husband’s when it comes to cost. Not only is he an avid hunter/shooter, he also has a 125-gallon saltwater aquarium that we lovingly refer to as “the money pit.” He has more collections than you can shake a stick at … coins, stamps, baseball cards, you name it. I think the ADD has something to do with it. He needs to stay busy at all times. Me, I can sit with a book for hours.
My main guitar is a 1999 Les Paul Custom, black, lefty, with Seymour Duncan pickups. It’s been my main guitar since it was new. I usually have at least one other guitar (actually, right now my “other guitar” is a Danelectro bass), but I go through those frequently, buying and selling as the mood strikes.
I actually just sold my big amp recently - Mesa/Boogie Mark III with matching Boogie 4 x 12" cabinet. I’m using the ol’ headphone amp for the time being while I shop for another one. No rush; I’m not in any bands right now.
My main git is also a Les Paul Custom - but it’s a 1973 Reissue of the old '54 Black Beauty, with a P-90 pickup at the bridge and an Alnico “staple” pickup at the neck. These 70’s reissues are starting to really climb in value, which frankly is unfortunate, because they are amazing players.
I also have, as mentioned above, the '57 Les Paul Special. just a beautiful, simple guitar that sounds, well, special.
Then I have Japanese Les Paul replica for a humbucker guitar and a new Parts-o-Tele I built to have a Fender-type guitar in the arsenal. A couple of others, like a nice Taylor acoustic - but I don’t play them nearly as much…
As for amps, I have a Cornford Hellcat (link to main Cornford site - it is a handmade, two channel amp from the UK) and a Bruno Tweedy 18 (link to website - it’s a handmade replica of the old Fender Tweed Deluxe). Both are truly wonderful amps.
Beading. As others up-thread have noted for other hobbies, it doesn’t HAVE to be expensive, but if you want to use the best materials (Swarovski crystals in my case), it rapidly becomes so.
Also knitting. I, too, like to use expensive yarns - my husband’s nephew convinced me to try knitting socks - you can use expensive yarn, but you don’t need so much of it. Also the Addi Turbo needles - but once you’ve bought them, you have them forever.
What I want to learn is to weave, using a loom. That will unfortunately have to wait until I have more time, money, and space.
Yeah. The first time I read a knitblog entry about spinning, I made a firm decision that I wouldn’t go there. There’s already more beautiful yarn than I can ever knit up; why on earth would I make more…?
Now I’ve got an itchin’ to knit a Shetland Triangle out of one of the gorgeous silk-blend, worsted-weight yarns Rowan and Debbie Bliss have out right now. Like the one BrooklynTweed did. Except I’d have to buy that yarn.
Waitaminute. Didn’t I buy that yarn already… (scampers off to stash-dive)
Oh, I should mention that the knitting and yarn is not so expensive as the bags.
I don’t need all those bags that they have out to store my knitting, in fact I have some rather cute (and cheap!) totes I picked up or was given to stuff small projects in. But I find myself wanting the bags to carry it in.
I was reminded of this when I glanced at my LYS blog and they mention they just got in a shipment of these totes. It doesn’t help that I can justify them as purses and everyday use.
When did I get girly?
I love the silk too. I bought a beautiful skein of seasilk by Handmaiden awhile ago and only now found a pattern I like to knit out of it… It was kinda neat to stash dive instead of go out and buy the yarn for the pattern.
Books are another one. I go to the library a lot, but as my income has grown so has my book buying. I’ve already been pruning, now I just need to go to the bookstore (to trade in ).
Or rather I did, I left… and went back as soon as I could the following day. I got this yarn in the ocean colourway (scroll sideways). I bought the small skein, not the large (a large makes a shawl, a small makes a scarf) and I started making the pattern on the label but it never got far as I didn’t quite like it. So when I saw the Montego Scarf from the latest Interweave Knits, I practically dove for my stash. So I’ve been knitting the scarf, and it’s not going so fast because I keep getting sidetracked by spreading it over my thigh and stroking it.
Second on the scuba diving. Compressed air was a pretty basic computer. But, go to nitrox, and it’s a new computer. And reg setup.
Then, you want redundancy. And your own tanks, which have to be serviced just like your regulator and inflator/airII. Then you’ll want better, lighter equipment. Or new fins. Or you lost a glove AGAIN. Or your knife is rusty. Or your hose bust at $40 a pop…
Wow. I have a few 25mm figures, but I’ve shied away from painting them–they’re so tiny! 1/8th or so is much easier for me to do, only because I can see them (and because my shaky degenerate hands don’t matter so much…).
We were just cleaning out grandma’s apartment and she had a delicate Hamilton with a wee face with little diamonds. Pop decided to keep it for now even though the guy was willing to buy everything.
I quilt and occasionally cross-stitch and it’s not so bad because I don’t have a huge stash. But I do have fabric I liked at the time but now am not as excited about. I should just shop for today’s project today and then I know I’ll like the fabric. So there’s definitely some overspending there. Anyhoo, good cross-stitch and needlepoint kits are $40 but they last a month or two. And the materials for a good-size quilt are less than $100.
I don’t buy yarn online, precisely because I’d spend so much. Heck, I buy notions online (see bags above, I got one of the Namaste bags) and I have a shopping cart full of items saved and have just barely stopped myself from buying them by the skin of my teeth (though I really need those locking stitch markers, I can’t seem to find them here)…
It saves my money so I can do a big splurge when I actually get to the store, since I can’t walk out without at least some sock yarn and since I’m going on a retreat (with people from my LYS) and paying in installments at the store… I have more excuses to wander in and see what’s new before they put it up on the blog.
And if I would stick with the materials I need for one quilt at a time, it wouldn’t be that bad - maybe $50-60 per quilt.
However, it’s all of that material that I get for my stash ‘because I want it for the future’ that’s gotten me. Right now, I am trying not to dash madly back to the quilt store for some gorgeous Asian material that’s roughly $5.99 a 1/2 yard because I might want to do an Asian-themed quilt in the future. Because I’d want a bunch of 'em.