Opal with play of fire, is considered a gemstone. Common opal is not. I am quite sure you can buy it in large pieces for very little money, and could easily arrange a shipment from a mine.
That material is practice grade for teaching or testing methods. One step above common. Wet, so it looks like it has more fire than it does, that material is 20 an ounce or less, retail, last i purchased any. Been a while. Even if you go and purchase some better material for around 4 a gram, you would still be talking about spending little money.
The knapping is interesting. Someone taking their time to set things up, could get thinning flakes with pressure pretty easy.
For common opal in large pieces, you would likely have to order a drum or crate, and wait for the long slow shipping thing. I likely have a pound or so around, but little of it will be suitable for busting up knapping.
I once bought some large dark garnet at the show at the Indiana fair grounds, and a local knapper worked little bird points out of those too, but he said each flake was a fight. There is quite a bit of that material out there that is simply too dark for faceted use in anything larger than tiny stones, and it is pretty cheap also. Knapped thin, the material is beautiful.