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Acrylic Yarn at JOANN: Complete Guide to Brands, Weights and Buying (2026)

Acrylic yarn is a synthetic yarn fiber made from acrylic polymer a petroleum-based fiber spun into soft, lightweight strands that mimic the feel of natural wool at a fraction of the cost. It is the most purchased yarn type in the world and the biggest seller in the joann yarn department for one simple reason: it works for everything. Blankets, scarves, hats, toys, and beginner projects all use acrylic yarn as the default starting point.

JOANN Fabrics stocked acrylic yarn across the joann yarn aisle in every weight, color, and brand covering house brands Big Twist and Caron alongside national brands Red Heart, Lion Brand, and Bernat as part of the complete joann fabrics crafting ecosystem. After store closures in 2025, searches for acrylic yarn joann and joann acrylic yarn moved online. This guide covers every type, weight, brand, project use, care instruction, and where to buy acrylic yarn now.

Acrylic yarn is made from man-made yarn fiber specifically acrylic polymer fiber derived from petroleum. The fiber is extruded into fine strands, twisted into plied acrylic yarn construction, and wound into skeins for retail sale.

It is not a natural fiber. That is the key difference from wool and cotton. Because it is synthetic, acrylic yarn fiber does not absorb moisture, does not felt in the washing machine, and does not cause wool allergies. It is a hypoallergenic yarn fiber safe for sensitive skin and baby projects.

The yarn twist structure and fiber loft structure of acrylic give it natural warmth insulating yarn properties despite being petroleum-based. Acrylic traps air between fibers creating warmth without weight which is why it became the standard warm insulating yarn for blankets, hats, and winter accessories.

Acrylic yarn joann synthetic fiber skeins in multiple colors worsted weight yarn department
Acrylic yarn joann synthetic fiber skeins

How Acrylic Yarn Is Made

Acrylic yarn is produced through a chemical polymer process. Acrylic polymer is dissolved into a liquid solution and forced through spinnerets tiny nozzle plates with hundreds of small holes to form continuous synthetic fibers. These fibers are stretched to align the polymer chains, then crimped mechanically to create the fiber loft structure responsible for acrylic’s warmth and softness.

After crimping, fibers are cut into staple lengths or kept continuous, then spun into yarn strands before being twisted into plied acrylic yarn. The twisting process creates the yarn twist structure that determines how the finished yarn holds together during knitting and crochet.

Because acrylic yarn fiber is man-made, manufacturers can control thickness, elasticity, softness, and anti-pilling properties more precisely than natural fibers allow. This is why acrylic yarn durability is so consistent across skeins compared to natural fiber variation.

What Is Acrylic Yarn Used For

Acrylic yarn is the most versatile yarn fiber available. It works across more project types than any natural fiber because it is affordable, washable, and available in every weight and color.

Common uses include blanket yarn for large crochet and knit blankets, afghan yarn for traditional granny square afghans, scarf knitting yarn for beginner and intermediate knitters, hat crochet yarn for fitted and slouchy beanie styles, amigurumi yarn for crochet stuffed animals and toy stuffing yarn projects, baby items for machine washable infant projects, and craft yarn projects across school, home decor, and seasonal decoration categories.

Is Acrylic Yarn Good for Blankets

Yes acrylic yarn is the best choice for most blanket projects. It is warm without being heavy, machine washable for easy care after daily use, durable enough to survive years of washing, and affordable enough to buy the large yardage blankets require without a big budget. Worsted weight acrylic yarn is the most common blanket weight. Bulky acrylic yarn and super bulky yarn work for faster thick blankets. The lightweight yarn fiber structure means finished blankets are cozy without feeling heavy on the body.

Types of Acrylic Yarn

Not all acrylic yarn feels or performs the same. The processing method and fiber blend change the result significantly.

Standard acrylic yarn is the most common version affordable, widely available, and consistent. It is the correct choice for everyday projects where durability and washability matter more than luxury feel.

Anti-pilling acrylic yarn is processed to resist the fuzzy pill balls that form on standard acrylic after repeated washing. This is worth the small extra cost for blankets, garments, and items that will be washed frequently. Big Twist Living anti-pilling yarn was one of the most popular anti-pilling options stocked in the joann yarn aisle.

Bulky acrylic yarn is a thicker weight used for fast projects like chunky blankets, thick scarves, and oversized hats. It works up quickly on large hooks and needles.

Brushed acrylic yarn has been processed to create a soft halo effect on the surface similar to mohair but at acrylic pricing. It adds texture and warmth to finished pieces.

Acrylic blend yarn mixes acrylic with wool, cotton, or nylon to add elasticity, breathability, or durability to the base acrylic fiber. Many premium JOANN yarns used acrylic blends rather than 100% acrylic.

Acrylic yarn types including anti-pilling bulky brushed and blend yarn skeins compared
Acrylic yarn types

Acrylic Yarn Weight System and JOANN Shelf Organization

Yarn weight is the most important specification when buying acrylic yarn. Every pattern specifies a weight number and your yarn must match it for gauge and stitch count to work correctly.

Weight Number Gauge per 4 inches Hook Size Needle Size Common Projects
Lace weight 0 32-plus stitches 1.5 to 2.25mm 1.5 to 2.25mm Fine lace, thread work
Fingering weight 1 28 to 32 stitches 2.25 to 3.5mm 2.25 to 3.5mm Socks, fine garments
Sport weight 2 23 to 26 stitches 3.5 to 4.5mm 3.5 to 4.5mm Baby items, light garments
DK weight 3 21 to 24 stitches 4.0 to 4.5mm 4.0 to 4.5mm Light sweaters, accessories
Worsted weight 4 16 to 20 stitches 4.5 to 5.5mm 4.5 to 5.5mm Blankets, hats, scarves
Bulky 5 12 to 15 stitches 5.5 to 8mm 5.5 to 8mm Chunky blankets, thick scarves
Super bulky 6 7 to 11 stitches 8 to 15mm 8 to 15mm Fast blankets, arm knitting

Most acrylic yarn sold at JOANN was worsted weight yarn weight 4 covering blankets, hats, scarves, and beginner garments. Bulky acrylic yarn and super bulky yarn were the second most popular weights for fast chunky projects. JOANN organized the joann yarn aisle by weight as well as by brand worsted weight acrylic occupied the most shelf space, bulky sat in a dedicated section for chunky project buyers, and DK weight yarn was stocked in a smaller section for lighter garment projects.

Skein yardage varied significantly by brand and weight. Standard worsted weight skeins ran 180 to 364 yards per skein. Caron One Pound offered 812 yards per skein at the high end. Budget Big Twist Value ran 180 yards per skein at the low end for worsted. Always buy by yardage not weight when substituting between brands. Yarn dye lot is important for large projects always buy enough skeins from the same dye lot to complete your project in one purchase. Yarn gauge measurement matters most for garment projects always make a gauge swatch before starting anything fitted.

How to Choose the Right Acrylic Yarn

The most common buying mistake with acrylic yarn is choosing by price alone without matching weight and fiber type to the project. Use this decision guide before buying.

 
Project Type Best Weight Best Formula Key Feature Needed
Large blanket Worsted 4 or Bulky 5 Anti-pilling High yardage per skein
Baby blanket Worsted 4 or DK 3 Soft acrylic Hypoallergenic, machine washable
Winter hat Worsted 4 Standard or anti-pilling Stitch definition
Scarf Worsted 4 or Bulky 5 Brushed or standard Warmth and drape
Amigurumi toy Worsted 4 Standard Tight gauge, stiff fabric
Beginner practice Worsted 4 Standard budget Affordable, forgiving
Charity blanket Worsted 4 Budget value Lowest cost per yard
Garment DK 3 or Worsted 4 Soft anti-pilling Softness against skin

Always make the decision in this order. First choose weight based on your pattern number. Second choose fiber type based on how the finished item will be used and washed. Third choose brand based on your budget and yardage requirements. Never reverse this order  buying a color you love in the wrong weight will result in a finished project that does not match your pattern dimensions no matter how well you execute the stitches.

For large blanket and afghan projects, prioritize yardage per skein over price per skein. Caron One Pound at 812 yards per skein has a higher price tag than Big Twist Value at 180 yards per skein  but costs significantly less per yard when buying the full yardage a blanket requires.

What Does Acrylic Yarn Feel Like

Acrylic yarn fiber feels soft to medium in texture depending on quality. Budget acrylic yarn can feel rough and slightly scratchy especially against sensitive skin. Premium anti-pilling acrylic yarn and higher-quality brands like Caron Simply Soft feel significantly softer and more comfortable for wearables and baby items.

Is Acrylic Yarn Scratchy

Budget acrylic can be scratchy yes. The roughness comes from lower-quality fiber processing that leaves the surface less smooth. The fix is to choose a premium or anti-pilling acrylic yarn. Softness increases with fiber quality and price. If you need acrylic for something worn against skin hats, scarves, baby items spend slightly more on a soft-label specifically. Caron Simply Soft and Lion Brand Basic Stitch are the least scratchy widely available acrylic options.

Is Acrylic Yarn Good for Beginners

Yes. Acrylic yarn is the best starting yarn for beginner crochet yarn and knitting acrylic yarn projects for four reasons.

It is affordable so making mistakes costs almost nothing. A skein of worsted weight acrylic costs $3 to $8 cheap enough to practice freely. It is forgiving acrylic yarn elasticity and yarn memory retention mean stitches can be pulled out and reworked without the fiber weakening. It is machine washable which means practice projects survive real-world washing without special care. It is available in every weight and color at every major craft retailer.

Acrylic yarn works with a wide range of crochet hook sizes and knitting needle sizes depending on yarn weight. Worsted weight acrylic typically uses a 5mm crochet hook or 5mm knitting needles. Beginners often use stitch markers to track stitch counts, yarn needles for finishing seams and weaving ends, and yarn bowls to control yarn tension during longer projects. Getting these basic tools alongside your first skein of acrylic makes the learning process significantly easier.

The only beginner limitation is heat acrylic melts under high iron temperatures. Always use low heat or avoid ironing acrylic yarn projects entirely.

Beginner Tips for Using Acrylic Yarn

Knowing acrylic is beginner-friendly is one thing. Knowing how to use it well from the first stitch is what actually prevents frustration.

  • Start with worsted weight — weight 4 is the easiest weight to see your stitches clearly and correct mistakes before they compound across rows
  • Use a 5mm hook or needle for your first worsted weight project — this is the standard size that matches most beginner patterns without needing adjustment
  • Keep yarn tension consistent — hold the yarn the same way every stitch. Loose tension creates uneven stitches that show in the finished piece
  • Use stitch markers every 10 to 20 stitches on large projects — acrylic has enough elasticity that miscounts are easy to miss until rows later
  • Never pull stitches too tight — acrylic has yarn memory retention meaning overtightened stitches stay overtightened permanently and distort the finished fabric
  • Buy one extra skein of your main color in the same dye lot when starting — running out mid-project and finding a different dye lot creates visible color bands in the finished piece
  • Practice on cheap Big Twist Value or Red Heart before using premium yarn — worsted weight budget acrylic behaves identically to premium acrylic for learning purposes
  • Weave in ends as you go rather than leaving them all for the end — acrylic yarn ends that sit loose in a project can unravel if pulled during use

For sewing machine finishing on acrylic yarn garment edges and seams see the joann sewing machines guide.

Common Mistakes to Avoid with Acrylic Yarn

These are the mistakes that ruin acrylic yarn projects before they are finished.

Choosing the wrong weight is the most common mistake. Using a weight 5 bulky yarn on a pattern written for weight 4 worsted produces a finished item that is larger, looser, and completely different from the intended dimensions. Always match the weight number on the yarn label to the weight number in the pattern.

Ignoring dye lots on large projects causes visible color banding. Two skeins of the same color from different dye lots look identical in the store under artificial light and completely different in natural light on a finished blanket. Always buy all skeins for one project in the same dye lot in a single purchase.

Using high heat on acrylic ruins the fiber permanently. Acrylic yarn fiber is petroleum-based and distorts under high dryer heat, direct iron contact, and hot water washing. Always use cool or warm water and low dryer heat. There is no fix for heat-melted acrylic fiber.

Skipping a gauge swatch on garments produces fitted items that do not fit. Acrylic yarn elasticity varies between brands — even two worsted weight 4 yarns from different brands can produce different stitch counts per 4 inches. Always swatch before cutting yarn for a garment.

Buying by price alone without checking yardage gives you less yarn than you expect. A $3 skein with 100 yards costs more per yard than an $8 skein with 400 yards. Always calculate cost per yard before comparing acrylic yarn prices.

Using standard acrylic for items washed frequently without choosing anti-pilling formula produces pilled fabric after a few wash cycles. For blankets, hats, and garments washed regularly, anti-pilling acrylic yarn is worth the small extra cost.

How to Use Acrylic Yarn for Knitting and Crochet

Acrylic yarn behaves slightly differently in knitting versus crochet and knowing the difference prevents the most common project failures with this fiber.

For crochet, acrylic yarn is the most forgiving fiber available. The yarn elasticity absorbs small tension variations between stitches better than cotton or linen. Crochet acrylic yarn produces slightly softer stitch definition than cotton because the fiber has some give — stitches round slightly rather than sitting crisply. This makes acrylic ideal for blankets, hats, and amigurumi where a soft rounded stitch texture is preferable. The yarn splitting issue that plagues cotton crochet is almost nonexistent with plied acrylic yarn because the twisted construction resists hook penetration between strands. Use a smooth metal hook rather than wood or bamboo for the fastest feed speed with acrylic.

For knitting, acrylic yarn elasticity is a significant advantage over natural fibers. The yarn memory retention means stitches bounce back into shape after being worked, which makes tension management easier for beginners than cotton or linen knitting. Knitting acrylic yarn produces a slightly less refined stitch definition than wool but the difference is minimal on most pattern types. Acrylic knitted garments hold their shape well after washing because the synthetic fiber does not relax and grow the way wool does when wet. Use metal or smooth plastic needles rather than bamboo for best feed speed — acrylic grips bamboo slightly and slows down the knitting rhythm on long rows.

Gauge differences between crochet and knitting with the same acrylic yarn are significant. Crochet typically uses 30 to 40 percent more yarn per square inch than knitting at the same weight because crochet stitches use more fiber per stitch. If substituting between a knitting pattern and a crochet pattern using the same yarn, always calculate yardage separately rather than assuming the same skein count will work across both craft types.

Acrylic Yarn vs Cotton Yarn

Feature Acrylic Yarn Cotton Yarn
Fiber type Synthetic petroleum-based Natural plant fiber
Breathability Low High
Warmth High Low to medium
Elasticity High springs back Low no memory
Absorbency None High
Machine washable Yes Yes
Weight when wet Light Heavy
Best for Blankets, cold weather, toys Dishcloths, summer wear, baby
Beginner friendly Yes Medium
Pill resistance Medium anti-pill versions available High

Acrylic is warmer and more elastic than cotton. Cotton is more breathable and better for kitchen and summer applications. Neither is better project type decides which fiber wins. For a full breakdown of cotton yarn behavior and project uses see the cotton yarn joann guide.

Acrylic Yarn vs Wool Yarn

Feature Acrylic Yarn Wool Yarn
Fiber type Synthetic Natural animal fiber
Warmth High Very high
Breathability Low Medium
Elasticity High Very high
Felting risk None High felts in hot water
Allergy risk Very low Medium lanolin sensitivity
Machine washable Yes Usually no
Cost Low to medium Medium to very high
Best for Everyday projects, beginners Premium garments, cold weather

Acrylic is the practical everyday alternative to wool. It matches wool’s warmth closely, costs significantly less, and survives machine washing without felting. The trade-off is that wool has superior elasticity, stitch definition, and natural breathability. For most home crafters and beginners, acrylic delivers 90 percent of wool’s performance at a fraction of the cost.

Acrylic yarn vs cotton yarn vs wool yarn fiber texture comparison skeins side by side
Acrylic yarn vs cotton yarn vs wool yarn

Acrylic Yarn Brands Sold at JOANN

JOANN stocked acrylic yarn across more brands than any other fiber category. Understanding each brand helps find the right current substitute.

Big Twist Value Yarn

Big Twist Value Yarn was JOANN’s most affordable house brand acrylic a basic worsted weight acrylic in dozens of solid colors at the lowest price in the yarn aisle. It was the standard practice yarn and budget blanket yarn for high-volume crafters. Big Twist worsted acrylic yarn joann customers purchased most heavily during weekly 40 to 50 percent off coupon periods when the price per skein dropped below $2. For a full breakdown of all Big Twist yarn lines see the big twist yarn guide.

Caron One Pound

Caron One Pound is a worsted weight 100% acrylic sold in a massive 812-yard one-pound skein the highest yardage per purchase in the standard acrylic category. It was the go-to yarn for large blanket projects, temperature blankets, and any project requiring consistent color across hundreds of yards without dye lot variation.

Caron Simply Soft

Caron Simply Soft is a worsted weight acrylic with a subtle sheen and exceptionally soft hand feel one of the least scratchy standard acrylics in the entire JOANN yarn range. It was one of the most popular purchases for garments, baby items, and any project worn against skin. The no-dye-lot formula allows buying multiple skeins at different times without color matching concerns. For soft acrylic yarn behavior and project comparisons see the caron simply soft yarn guide.

Red Heart Super Saver

Red Heart Super Saver is America’s best-selling acrylic yarn. It is a worsted weight yarn with 364 yards per skein, excellent color range, and proven durability across decades of craft use. It resists yarn splitting during crochet better than most budget acrylics due to its tightly plied acrylic yarn construction. Available in hundreds of solid and variegated colors with consistent quality across the range.

Bernat Super Value

Bernat Super Value is a worsted weight anti-pilling acrylic yarn with 426 yards per skein at a competitive price point. It was stocked as a mid-tier option between cheapest house brands and premium lines. For the full Bernat yarn range and project uses see the bernat blanket yarn guide.

Lion Brand Basic Stitch

Lion Brand Basic Stitch is a soft worsted weight acrylic with minimal scratchiness one of the least scratchy standard acrylics available at any price point. It was stocked as the comfort-focused acrylic option for wearables and baby items where softness against skin matters most.

Acrylic yarn covers more project categories than any other fiber. These are the most popular uses driving acrylic yarn projects and acrylic yarn crochet projects searches online.

  • Crochet blankets the single most purchased acrylic yarn project, using worsted or bulky weight in large yardage skeins
  • Granny square afghans classic acrylic yarn project using small squares joined into large blankets across dozens of colors
  • Knitted scarves the most common beginner knitting acrylic yarn project using straight needles and basic stitch
  • Winter hats fitted and slouchy beanies in worsted weight using circular needles or double-pointed needles
  • Amigurumi yarn animals and stuffed toys using worsted weight with tight gauge to contain stuffing
  • Baby blankets soft anti-pilling acrylic for machine washable infant items
  • Craft decorations pom-poms, garlands, and seasonal decorations using acrylic yarn scraps
  • Charity blankets large volume blanket projects using affordable worsted weight acrylic across community knit and crochet groups

How to Wash Acrylic Yarn Projects

Acrylic yarn washing instructions are simpler than any natural fiber. Machine washable yarn is one of the biggest practical advantages of acrylic over wool.

Yarn Type Washing Drying Notes
Standard acrylic Machine wash cool or warm Tumble dry low Avoid high heat
Anti-pilling acrylic Machine wash cool Tumble dry low Preserves anti-pill coating
Acrylic blend Follow label varies Low heat or air dry Blend component determines care
Bulky acrylic Machine wash cool Air dry flat Tumble dry can distort shape
Brushed acrylic Hand wash gentle Air dry flat Machine wash destroys halo

The most important rule is heat. Acrylic yarn fiber is petroleum-based and melts under high temperatures. Never iron acrylic yarn projects directly. Never put acrylic in a hot dryer. Acrylic yarn shrink risk is low it does not shrink the way wool does but high heat causes permanent distortion and melting of the fiber surface.

Blocking acrylic yarn is possible but different from blocking wool. The most effective method is steam blocking holding a steam iron 2 inches above the surface without touching the fabric to relax and open the stitches. This works well for flattening seams and evening out stitch definition on finished garments.

Acrylic yarn blanket being washed on gentle cool cycle and air dried flat correct care method
Acrylic yarn blanket being washed on gentle cool cycle

Acrylic Yarn Price at JOANN

Brand Weight Yardage Regular Price Coupon Price Cost Per Yard
Big Twist Value Worsted 4 180 yards $2 to $4 $1 to $2 $0.006 to $0.011
Red Heart Super Saver Worsted 4 364 yards $5 to $8 $2.50 to $4 $0.007 to $0.011
Caron Simply Soft Worsted 4 315 yards $6 to $9 $3 to $4.50 $0.010 to $0.014
Caron One Pound Worsted 4 812 yards $10 to $14 $5 to $7 $0.006 to $0.009
Bernat Super Value Worsted 4 426 yards $6 to $9 $3 to $4.50 $0.007 to $0.011
Lion Brand Basic Stitch Worsted 4 185 yards $4 to $7 $2 to $3.50 $0.011 to $0.019

JOANN weekly coupon discounts of 40 to 50 percent off regularly brought Big Twist Value below $2 per skein. Larger skeins such as Caron One Pound consistently delivered the lowest cost per yard when combined with JOANN’s weekly coupon discounts, making them the most economical option for large blanket and afghan projects. Joann yarn sale events in January, May, and October were the best windows for stocking up on large yardage projects. The joann clearance yarn bins offered discontinued colorways at 50 to 70 percent off regular pricing.

Why Acrylic Yarn Was a Core Category at JOANN Fabrics

Acrylic yarn was the single highest-volume yarn category in the joann yarn department because it served every skill level and project type simultaneously. Beginners bought it for practice. Experienced crafters bought it for large affordable projects. Gift makers bought it for machine washable wearables. Charity knitters bought it by the pound for donation blankets.

JOANN organized the joann yarn aisle with acrylic taking the most physical shelf space of any fiber multiple full shelving sections covering every weight from fingering to super bulky. House brands Big Twist and Caron sat at eye level. National brands Red Heart, Bernat, and Lion Brand filled adjacent shelving. The joann weekly coupon system made acrylic the most aggressively discounted yarn category with prices dropping below any competitor during sale weeks.

Seasonal acrylic displays rotated through the yarn aisle during fall and winter with bulky and super bulky weights featured prominently for chunky blanket season. The joann craft supplies crossover was strong acrylic yarn appeared in seasonal holiday craft displays alongside ornament-making supplies, wreath frames, and decorative craft kits. This made the joann yarn department one of the highest foot traffic sections in the store year-round. For the complete joann fabrics yarn and craft ecosystem overview, acrylic yarn represented the broadest and deepest category in the entire yarn section.

JOANN vs Michaels vs Hobby Lobby for Acrylic Yarn

Feature JOANN Historical Michaels Hobby Lobby
House brand acrylic Big Twist, Caron Loops and Threads I Love This Yarn
National brands Red Heart, Lion Brand, Bernat Red Heart, Lion Brand Lion Brand, Yarn Bee
Anti-pilling options Yes Big Twist Living Yes Loops and Threads Yes I Love This Yarn
Weight range Lace to super bulky Worsted dominant Worsted and bulky dominant
Color range Very wide Moderate Moderate
Coupon discount 40 to 50% weekly 20% app coupon 40% weekly
Yardage value Highest with coupon stacking Moderate Moderate
Post-closure access Amazon In-store In-store

Acrylic yarn michaels selection focuses primarily on Loops and Threads house brand and Red Heart with a narrower color range than JOANN carried. Acrylic yarn hobby lobby offers I Love This Yarn as a strong worsted weight house brand comparable to Big Twist in quality and price. Amazon now carries the widest online selection covering all brands and weights.

Acrylic Yarn at JOANN

JOANN stocked acrylic yarn as the largest single category in the joann yarn aisle from its earliest yarn department expansion through to store closures in 2025. The yarn by the skein format allowed customers to compare brands, feel texture differences between anti-pilling and standard versions, and check dye lot numbers before purchasing matching skeins for large projects.

Yarn sale periods drove the highest single-day yarn department traffic of any category. Customers planning large blanket projects would wait for the joann yarn sale to buy 10 to 20 skeins in a single transaction filling entire shopping baskets with matching dye lot worsted weight acrylic at half price. The joann clearance yarn bins at the end of the yarn aisle held discontinued colorways and end-of-line skeins that regular customers checked on every visit.

Where to Buy Acrylic Yarn Now

Amazon carries the widest selection of acrylic yarn by the skein including all national brands across every weight and color. Free shipping thresholds make online acrylic yarn joann alternatives cost-competitive with in-store pricing when buying multiple skeins. Hobby Lobby carries I Love This Yarn as the strongest in-store worsted weight acrylic substitute. Michaels carries Loops and Threads and Red Heart in-store. Many customers who previously used joann fabrics near me to check yarn stock now buy direct through Amazon. For the complete overview of all yarn types previously available see the full joann yarn category guide.

Finished acrylic yarn projects including crochet blanket amigurumi bear knitted scarf and winter hat
Finished acrylic yarn projects

Frequently Asked Questions

A synthetic yarn fiber made from acrylic polymer a petroleum-based man-made fiber spun into lightweight warm strands used for crochet, knitting, and craft projects.

Blankets, scarves, hats, amigurumi toys, baby items, and beginner projects. It is machine washable, affordable, warm, and available in every weight and color making it the most versatile everyday yarn fiber.

Yes. It is warm, lightweight, machine washable, durable, and affordable enough to buy the large yardage blankets require. Worsted weight is the standard blanket weight.

Yes. It is affordable, forgiving, machine washable, and available everywhere. It is the standard recommendation for first crochet and knitting projects.

Budget acrylic can be slightly scratchy. Premium and anti-pilling versions like Caron Simply Soft and Lion Brand Basic Stitch are significantly softer. Choose a soft-label acrylic for anything worn against skin.

 Smooth and medium-soft on most standard versions. Anti-pilling acrylic feels noticeably softer. Brushed acrylic has a fluffy halo texture. Budget acrylic feels firmer and slightly rougher.

Machine wash on cool or warm gentle cycle. Tumble dry on low heat or air dry flat. Never use high heat acrylic yarn fiber melts under high temperature. Never iron directly.

No acrylic does not shrink the way wool does. High heat causes distortion and surface melting but cool and warm machine washing is safe

Acrylic is synthetic, machine washable, and affordable. Wool is natural, usually hand wash only, and more expensive but has superior elasticity and breathability.

Standard acrylic pills after repeated washing. Anti-pilling acrylic yarn is processed to resist this. For items washed frequently, choose an anti-pilling version.

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