West Side Rag
  • TOP NEWS
  • OPEN/CLOSED
  • FOOD
  • SCHOOLS
  • OUTDOORS
  • REAL ESTATE
  • ART & CULTURE
  • POLITICS
  • COLUMNS
  • CRIME
  • HISTORY
  • ABSURDITY
  • ABOUT US
    • OUR STORY
    • CONTRIBUTORS
    • CONTACT
    • GET WSR FREE IN YOUR INBOX
    • SEND US TIPS AND IDEAS
West Side Rag
No Result
View All Result
SUPPORT THE RAG
No Result
View All Result

Favorite WSR Stories

  • Upper West Side Dog Owners: Please Pick Up After Your Dogs!
  • From Shuls to Weed Shops, Mahjong Is Clicking On the Upper West Side
  • Upper West Side Pizza Slice Named Best in the World
Get WSR FREE in your inbox
SUPPORT THE RAG

After 20 Years, Upper West Side Yarn Store is a Worldwide ‘Destination’

January 22, 2026 | 8:29 AM - Updated on January 28, 2026 | 3:56 PM
in NEWS
23
Photograph courtesy of Chin family

By Carol Tannenhauser

Winter is knitting season. And the crowd at Knitty City, the Upper West Side’s local yarn store, shows it. The small shop, on West 79th Street just west of Amsterdam, is jam packed nearly any time you enter it these days. The chaos is cheery and warm.

This month, Knitty City celebrated its 20th anniversary on the Upper West Side. In those years it has grown into a worldwide “destination” store, according to Arvin Chin, 77, husband and partner of its founder, the late Pearl Chin.

Arvin points to maps of the United States and the world mounted on a wall, with hundreds of pins in them marking places customers have come from to visit Knitty City. At the same time, with its after-hour classes and events, and offerings of yarns dyed locally in New York, the store remains a community hub and haven. 

Pearl Chin. Photograph by Zac Chin.

Pearl’s presence still permeates the shop though she died five years ago of cancer.

“She had symptoms in June of 2020, a cough. They kept testing her for COVID, but she didn’t have it. The diagnosis came in August, treatment in September, and by October she was gone,” Arvin recalls. He says it took him four years to accept her loss. “I definitely still feel her presence in the store. It was all inspired by her,” he says.

Pearl and Arvin’s son Zac is now running Knitty City, fulfilling Pearl’s hope that it would be a family business. She had grown up working in her family’s grocery store in Houston, Texas, and wanted the same experience for her own family. “She did a lot of arts and crafts when the children were young,” Arvin recalls. “She was very talented, making things. She did origami for a long time and had a wholesale business. Then, in 2005, she decided to go into retail business and wanted to open a yarn store. She had started knitting when she was pregnant with our first child and really enjoyed it. So she told me that’s what she wanted to do and she just needed a little money to help start it. I gave her the money and she gave me 49%. It was always her business. She was the boss.”

Arvin, spinning yarn into balls. Photograph by Carol Tannenhauser.

A retired anesthesiologist and medical corps lieutenant colonel, deployed in 2003 to Iraq and Afghanistan, Arvin jokingly says he does “whatever no one else wants to” around the store, which includes bringing packages to the post office daily for deliveries and manning the wooden machine that rolls skeins of yarn into balls, a service Pearl wanted Knitty City to provide.

“Pearl’s goal was to educate people about how to knit and become better knitters, to inspire them to enjoy knitting and crochet,” Arvin says. “I think we’ve done a pretty good job of that, especially with beginning knitters. The older ones have their direction. The younger ones need to be inspired to continue knitting and getting joy and satisfaction from it. I think that’s what Pearl would want. And so, if I can further her goals, I’ll do it. That’s my goal at Knitty City, to continue her legacy.

“Hopefully there’ll be knitters around for the next generation that we will continue to support however we can,” he adds.

Arvin and Zac beside a yarn rendering of Pearl. Courtesy of Chin family

Officially, Knitty City is open from noon to 6 p.m., but the storefront rarely locks up before 8. After hours there are classes, as well as men’s knitting nights on three Thursdays a month and a book club on the fourth. (Both were started by Pearl.) Arvin says some of the men are “fantastic” knitters. He himself knits, having been taught as a child by his older sisters, but says he’s “not great.” Scarves are his speed.

I went to Knitty City to interview the men in the Thursday night men’s knitting group, but they barely looked up from their knitting to make eye contact. After I watched for awhile, one man softened a little and explained, “We take knitting seriously.” Arvin says the men “value their privacy.” I could hear them talking about how sleeves would be attached to the body of a sweater, or how a scarf could be finished. I didn’t want to interrupt, violate what was clearly treasured time for them.

“There are at least two types of knitters, sort of like two types of travelers,” Arvin says. “One traveler enjoys traveling to the destination and the other traveler enjoys being at the destination. It’s like that with knitting. Do you enjoy knitting or do you enjoy finishing the product? I’m the latter. But I think the best knitters are actually people who enjoy the voyage.

“Pearl was the former,” he concludes. “She was one who enjoyed the process.”

Subscribe to West Side Rag’s FREE email newsletter here. And you can Support the Rag here.

Share this article:
SUPPORT THE RAG
Leave a comment

Please limit comments to 150 words and keep them civil and relevant to the article at hand. Comments are closed after six days. Our primary goal is to create a safe and respectful space where a broad spectrum of voices can be heard. We welcome diverse viewpoints and encourage readers to engage critically with one another’s ideas, but never at the expense of civility. Disagreement is expected—even encouraged—but it must be expressed with care and consideration. Comments that take cheap shots, escalate conflict, or veer into ideological warfare detract from the constructive spirit we aim to cultivate. A detailed statement on comments and WSR policy can be read here.

guest

guest

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

23 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Carmella Ombrella
Carmella Ombrella
23 days ago

Thank you so much for this story, Carol. I miss Pearl’s warm presence at Knitty City but the store has retained its identity as a resource for creativity and a place for knitters (also crocheters!) to revel in color, texture and design. Unlike some yarn stores that shall remain nameless here, Knitty City welcomes everybody from rank beginners to dedicated experts. Those who haven’t yet experienced The Joy of Knitting can catch a clue by checking out the ‘yarn bombed’ tree outside the store, a masterpiece of design and technique.

16
Reply
AnnieNYC
AnnieNYC
23 days ago

I love knitting, and have from childhood, when we all learned to crochet and knit and needlepoint and sew. Life skills, yes, but more than that. A grounding way to create and be with others in quietude. I am so glad for this story. Here’s to doing things with your own two hands (or feet, or chin, if you are so inclined) and to creating communities of creativity and support. Always, but perhaps especially in these times of click-to-get-everything and where the process of making something from scratch (or yarn, in this case), is often lost to rushing and swiping and fast fashion.

8
Reply
Dena Davis
Dena Davis
23 days ago

People might enjoy knowing the name for that wooden yarn-winding implement: an umbrella swift.

16
Reply
Jamie
Jamie
23 days ago

I’m so glad they’re open and thriving, especially after the loss of Pearl and the impact of Covid. The knitting table in the back was always helpful and Pearl and her family always welcome and knowledgeable. Thank you for this important part of the fabric of the Upper West Side

14
Reply
Marie
Marie
23 days ago

Wonderful story.
I lived on the UWS 33yrs. I am not familiar with Knitty city, but will certainly stop in on my next visit!
These are the beautiful family owned businesses that made NYC & UWS unique. I am hopeful Knitty City will thrive for another 20 yrs!

6
Reply
Lily
Lily
23 days ago

Going to Knitty City is like going to a candy store, so many yarn candies that I want! What an incredible choice of yarn, it is overwhelming!!!!!!!! Truly a wonderful yarn store.!!

8
Reply
Peggy Farber
Peggy Farber
23 days ago

Lovely article about a store I treasure.

6
Reply
Ingrid Wright
Ingrid Wright
23 days ago

Knitty City is my local! I began knitting there 12 years ago and was fortunate to know and love Pearl. The shop was my savior at a difficult time in my life / not only did I learn a new craft I made lasting friendships of all types of people. Thank you Knitty City for all you have given me.

10
Reply
Sophie
Sophie
23 days ago

Best store ever! I can always find an excuse to come and end up spending over an hour perusing yarn, and it is always the highlight of my day. The staff is so knowledgeable, helpful, and kind. I love Knitty City!!!

6
Reply
Dora Oh
Dora Oh
23 days ago

Pearl was truly an exceptional person and made a great impact on the yarn community in New York and beyond. One of those rare folks who spread joy and warmth effortlessly. We started out as yarn buddies but went on t o become friends and would go to films (fashion related ones!) and museums often. Her passing was shocking and I miss her. The shop will always carry her vibe – thanks to Zac and Arvind for keeping the dream alive!

15
Reply
Carmella Ombrella
Carmella Ombrella
22 days ago
Reply to  Dora Oh

May I be presumptuous and ask if you are the Dora O. who is the author of those wonderful crochet books? No need to answer if you want to remain anonymous.

1
Reply
ecm
ecm
23 days ago

Somehow, after all this time, I had managed to know only of The Yarn Company (née The Thread Company; late 1979–Feb./Mar. 2016), but Knitty City sounds terrific.

0
Reply
DenaliBoy
DenaliBoy
22 days ago

Very very nice story. I hope it stays in the family for a long time

7
Reply
Norah Greenstein
Norah Greenstein
22 days ago

Pearl was always an inspiration. She was talented, knowledgeable and always helpful about any aspect of knitting. I tell everyone I know who’s a knitter about Knitty City. Although there are other knitting stores around, no place feels as welcoming as Knitty City.

3
Reply
EricaC
EricaC
22 days ago

It is a wonderful, wonderful store. I moved downtown, and hoped to find a place that had the same combination of warmth and abundant beautiful yarn, but I haven’t – so I still make the trek uptown just for this place.

4
Reply
Betsy
Betsy
22 days ago

Knitty City is a treasure and Pearl was its genius! Not only her warm welcoming charm and enthusiasm… she was a convener. A community organizer – whether for trips to the Sheep and Wool Festival upstate or to movie night. But also to the DC protest against Trump on his first innaguration. She organized not only buses, but classes to teach people to knit or crochet the iconic pink “Pussyhats” for the march.

I was in a few days before the protest and looked over to see Cecile Richards, an UWS neighbor, sitting patiently with a teacher wrestling her pink yarn into submission! Pearl was beaming with pride that she was there.
Pearl was so much more than a store owner. She was a civic leader and a catalyst for good. She is missed.

6
Reply
Dora Oh
Dora Oh
22 days ago
Reply to  Betsy

Yes!

1
Reply
Wijmlet
Wijmlet
22 days ago

Lovely story! Congrats, KC.

4
Reply
Kiki
Kiki
22 days ago

Lovely story

0
Reply
DogParent
DogParent
21 days ago

Carol… every piece you write moves me. You have such an ability to see (and write about) humans beautifully.

2
Reply
Jane S.
Jane S.
21 days ago

Interesting story, Carol! Enjoyed reading it.

0
Reply
Gisele Nimic
Gisele Nimic
20 days ago

Just was, at Knitty City for the first time. Great store! So many yarns to choose from.

0
Reply
30 years here
30 years here
19 days ago

My go-to LYS! It is the UWS’ honor to have Knitty City here. It’s become a cliche to say brands have to inspire and develop their communities but Zac and Arvin make it look easy and organic.

1
Reply

YOU MIGHT LIKE...

COLUMNS

Miniature Metropolis: A Giant’s Glance at the Upper West Side

February 14, 2026 | 10:13 AM
2 UWS Buildings Named Among ‘Most Distressed’ in New York City
NEWS

2 UWS Buildings Named Among ‘Most Distressed’ in New York City

February 13, 2026 | 12:42 PM
Previous Post

West Side Canvas: Levain’s Grumeau de Bonte (Lump of Goodness)

Next Post

Man Robbed at Knifepoint on Upper West Side: Police

this week's events image
Next Post
A New York Police Department vehicle.

Man Robbed at Knifepoint on Upper West Side: Police

5 Upper West Side Landlords Named Among 100 Worst in New York City

5 Upper West Side Landlords Named Among 100 Worst in New York City

WSR Cartoon: More Caffeine for the Upper West Side

WSR Cartoon: More Caffeine for the Upper West Side

  • ABOUT US
  • CONTACT US
  • NEWSLETTER
  • WSR MERCH!
  • ADVERTISE
  • EVENTS
  • PRIVACY POLICY
  • TERMS OF USE
  • SITE MAP
Site design by RLDGROUP

© 2026 West Side Rag | All rights reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • TOP NEWS
  • THIS WEEK’S EVENTS
  • OPEN/CLOSED
  • FOOD
  • SCHOOLS
  • OUTDOORS
  • REAL ESTATE
  • ART & CULTURE
  • POLITICS
  • COLUMNS
  • CRIME
  • HISTORY
  • ABSURDITY
  • ABOUT
    • OUR STORY
    • CONTRIBUTORS
    • CONTACT US
    • GET WSR FREE IN YOUR INBOX
    • SEND US TIPS AND IDEAS
  • WSR SHOP

© 2026 West Side Rag | All rights reserved.