Long regarded as quintessential womenâs work, this stereotype has made knitting a cover for, or subject of, subversion. It was a format for wartime espionage and a means of transmitting secret messages for generations. The subterfuge entwined with knitting dates back at least as far as the American Revolutionâmaking it perhaps the craftiest craft.
Who would suspect grandmas living near train depots of tracking enemy supply chains with yarn? Or guess that a lady sitting atop a hill with her needles and thread was actually passing along military intelligence? And how could anyone anticipate that brightly colored yarn could become a highly visible political message? Thereâs much more to the story than scarves, hats, and socks. The history of knitting, far from docile, is one crazy yarn.
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[Quartz Daily Obsession]
Knitting
May 05, 2020
The art of tying knots
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Long regarded as quintessential womenâs work, this stereotype has made knitting a cover for, or subject of, subversion. It was a format for wartime espionage and a means of transmitting secret messages for generations. The subterfuge entwined with knitting dates back at least as far as the American Revolutionâmaking it perhaps the craftiest craft.
Who would suspect grandmas living near train depots of tracking enemy supply chains with yarn? Or guess that a lady sitting atop a hill with her needles and thread was actually passing along military intelligence? And how could anyone anticipate that brightly colored yarn could become a highly visible political message? Thereâs much more to the story than scarves, hats, and socks. The history of knitting, far from docile, is one crazy yarn.
ð¦ [Tweet this!](
ð [View this email on the web](
REUTERS/David Gray
By the digits
[3:]( Years of training it took to become a trained apprentice or journeyman in an 18th-century knitting guild
[4.5 kg (10 lbs):]( Wool produced by a sheep annually
[6:]( Sweaters that can be knit from 4.5 kg of sheepâs wool, approximately
[1.2 million kg (2.5 million lbs):]( Clean, raw wool produced globally in 2018
[23%:]( Australiaâs share of global wool production
[339:]( Stockings knit by female pupils at the Ackworth Quaker School in Yorkshire in 1821
[6,300:]( Yards of cotton used to knit a lace babyâs dress that won third prize in the Great Exhibition of 1851 in Britain
[9 million:]( Users on Ravelry, the social network for knitters, as of March 2020
Giphy
Explain it like Iâm 5!
In stitches
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Knitting is tying a series of knots in the right ways to make a piece of fabric out of yarn made from wool, cotton, acrylic, and many other materials. For hand knitting (as opposed to knitting done on industrial knitting machines), two basic stitches are good to know: knit and purl. Knitting every row on regular needles produces whatâs known as [garter stitch]( little bumps of yarn that have a nice stretch to them. Alternating rows of knit and purl create the flat-looking [stockinette stitch]( which you are probably used to seeing in clothing. (If you knit on connected needles, or round needles, called âworking in the round,â then itâs the opposite!)
Combining stitches in different ways is what allows knitters to create patterns and designs on clothes, not to mention the necessary stretchy ribbing at the base of a hat. There are lots of good tutorials online to get started, and free patterns for beginners, such as [this set]( from knitting blog Tin Can Knits.
Quotable
âWhen my hands are busy, my mind stays focused on the here and now.â
â[Jane Brody, âThe Health Benefits of Knitting,â the New York Times](
Membership
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Wikimedia Commons
pop quiz
Which of these are not part of the collection at Londonâs Victoria and Albert Museum?
A 1920s golf jumper from the Shetland IslandsDolly the sheep, the first cloned mammal created from an adult cellGloves designed by Freddie Robins that appear to have freakishly long nailsA hand-knit cardigan inspired by the patterns on decorative china plates
Correct. Dolly is on display at the National Museum of Scotland.
Incorrect.
If your inbox doesnât support this quiz, find the solution at bottom of email.
Origin story
Knitting the resistance together
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In Charles Dickensâ A Tale of Two Cities, Madame Defarge, the wife of a Paris wine shop owner, is characterized by her constant knitting. Defarge is anything but meek and mild. She is a spy and insurgent who knits into shrouds the names of those condemned to the guillotine. The superficial harmless femininity of Madame Defargeâs knitting masks her anger, savvy, and determination, and is exactly what makes her so dangerous.
Many real women throughout history have turned knitting to subversive purposes. [Molly âOld Momâ Rinker]( a spy for the colonies near Philadelphia during the American Revolution, perched on a hilltop and pretended to knit, dropping balls of yarn down the cliff with messages hidden inside for American spies to retrieve.
In World War II, female spies [knit their coded messages]( straight into scarves and hats. Phyllis Latour Doyle, a British secret agent in World War II, used knitting as a cover. Doyle would chat up German soldiers and then encode what they told her in silk yarn. The Belgian resistance conscripted older women who lived near train yards to track enemy travel in their knitting.
Knitting was an especially useful cover in wartime because it was an activity promoted by many governments. A 1943 campaign by the British Ministry of Information, â[Make Do and Mend]( advised housewives on how to darn garments and refresh old clothes in a time of austerity. Women were also encouraged to knit clothing for soldiers in conflicts from the US Civil War to the World Wars. If some of them were also sharing intelligence reports, who would suspect?
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Brief history
[3rd to 5th century:]( A laborious technique called nålbindning is used to make socks, the earliest known example of knitted goods.
[1100-1300:]( North African knitters use double needles to knit goods, including blue and white patterned socks.
[1571:]( The Cappers Act in England decrees that most people over the age of six shall wear âa Cap of Wool knit, thickened and dressed in England, made within this Realmâ on Sundays and holidays, except when traveling.
[1589:]( William Lee invents the first mechanical knitting machine in the English village of Calverton.
[1847:]( Abolitionist newspaper The Liberator declares sewing circles âamong the best means for agitating and keeping alive the question of anti-slavery.â
[1920:]( Suffragist Alice Paul poses sewing a flag like Betsy Ross for the cover of The Suffragist magazine after the passage of the US 19th Amendment gave women the right to vote.
[2005:]( The Wombs on Washington project asks people to knit wombs to support pro-choice legislation on abortion.
[2014:]( A pair of activists form Yarn Mission, a knitting group aimed at fighting racial injustice.
[2017:]( The Pussyhat Project encourages women to knit thousands of pink hats to wear in support of womenâs rights and to protest Donald Trump at the inaugural Womenâs March.
Giphy
Department of Jargon
K2TOG
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Knitting, and reading patterns, has its own shorthand. Here are a few key terms to help you decode the world of knits and purls.
Cast on: to create the first row of stitches for a knitting project
Gauge: the number of stitches per inch or centimeter
Working yarn: the yarn coming off the ball
K2TOG: an abbreviation meaning âknit two stitches togetherâ
P2TOG: an abbreviation meaning âpurl two stitches togetherâ
Hank: a loose ring of yarn twisted on itself to form a shape like a French cruller
Magic loop: a technique that allows for knitting projects of many different circumferences on a single long round needle
Fun fact!
A ladiesâ crochet group in Cloughmills, Northern Ireland, [knit a wool replica of their village]( complete with local shops, houses, and tiny vegetables in gardens.
Million-dollar question
Whatâs the difference between knitting and crocheting?
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Both knitting and crocheting involve using needles or hooks to create a garment or piece of fabric from some sort of thread or yarn, but the [methods are quite different](. Crochet uses only a single hook to pull loops of thread into specific patterns. Hand knitting requires at least two needles (or a pair of connected circular needles) and every stitch is intertwined. Because of this, crocheting tends to create somewhat stiffer and sturdier fabric, while knitted garments have more give but are also more liable to unravel if a mistake has been made, like a stitch not being knitted in correctly, or âdroppedâ in knittersâ parlance.
Watch this!
Yarn bomb dot com
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Yarn bombing is similar to graffitiâa highly visual, artistic form of protest and self-expression. Textile artist Magda Sayeg explains its origins as a way to make political statements or just have fun encasing the urban environment in brightly colored yarn.
This one weird trick!
Art therapy
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Research suggests there are numerous [physical and psychological benefits]( to knitting. Studies have shown that the repetitive act of knitting and sewing can induce a calm state similar to yoga or meditation. Knitting is also thought to lower heart rate and blood pressure and reduce cortisol levels. One study of 60 self-selected participants with chronic pain found that knitting helped to reduce pain by getting people to focus elsewhere.
A 2018 report from UK group Knit for Peace identified [similar physical and mental health benefits]( blood pressure, distraction from chronic pain, slowed onset of dementiaâand also concluded that knitting helped older people to feel more connected to society. âPrescribingâ knitting for age-related conditions could in theory save the National Health Service millions of pounds a year, the report concluded.
Giphy
poll
Have you ever knitted something?
[Click here to vote](
Yes!I start, but never finish.Nope.Iâm on team crochet hook.
ð¬ let's talk!
In yesterdayâs poll about [microwave ovens]( 63% of you said that you are microwave enthusiasts, 20% of you said you donât use them, and 17% of you said you only use them occasionally and begrudgingly. ð§ Ann wrote in to say, âyou didnât mention the microwave ovens that were built into regular ovens in the 1970s. I had one of these hybrids and it was the perfect melding of two technologies: by cooking with the microwave and the regular oven concurrently, you could literally have your cake and eat it too. The microwave decreased cooking times significantly and the regular oven kept the food from losing its texture. I just wish these machines were still on the market. Iâd buy one in a heartbeat.â
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Todayâs email was written by [Ali Griswold]( edited by [Annaliese Griffin]( and produced by [Tori Smith](.
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The correct answer to the quiz is Dolly the sheep, the first cloned mammal created from an adult cell.
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