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You ''could'' tackle this without any prior experience of knitting as there are instructions which go right back to the basics, but I think you would be better having got the odd scarf or pair of mittens under your belt first. The patterns are not particularly complex and are well explained but some of the pieces are quite small and fiddly and most are knitted - of necessity - to produce a tighter fabric than most accomplished knitters will be used to. You don't want stuffing poking out between the stitches, now do you? The equipment you need is fairly limited and most people who've done any knitting before are likely to have it already.
The yarns used are wool and wool mixes with no particular brand being specified. Cotton yarns and 100% acrylics give less good results. Colours are specified - and used in the patterns - but there's nothing to stop you using other colours if that's what you've got. As a child I remember how I loved to have a change of clothes for my dolls - absolute luxury - and whilst some of the clothing forms part of the body there are a ''lot'' of pieces which can be replicated in other colours. The clothes are stylish too, with some adornment. No child is going to feel short-changed here.
Some of the characters can be used in more than one story - wolf appears in ''Red Riding Hood'' and ''The Three Little Pigs'', but there's no reason why just about all the characters can't be used to populate other stories. Characters with small buttons or other small attachments shouldn't be given to children under 36 months - but that's probably about the age at which these characters are going to come into their own. Eyes are embroidered on.

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