Historical knitting tidbits from Ava Coleman, Stories In Stitches co-creator.
1. Around 1500 Dutch sailors began trading food for Shetland Island sweaters. They wore them as under garments.
2. Fancy Knitting is done according to special instructions given stitch-by-stitch. However the details of Victorian patterns are usually presented only using foundation techniques like: knitting plain, purling, widening and narrowing.
3. In the early 1800s, dignified Bostonian ladies referred to the knitting they carried, when calling on friends, as “Go abroad knitting work”.
4. The Frugal Housewife, a practical how-to booklet popular in the 1800s, was sized to carry in an apron pocket.
5. Cotton bed caps were knitted not only to keep the head warm, but to protect the bed linens from becoming soiled by dirty hair or Pomade.
6. “Stop being a gossip, tend to your knitting” was first printed in the Ipswich Register in 1837. It was written in response to a complaint submitted to the editor about the poor behavior of a young lady named Hanna.
7. Indispensables are decorative bags, with long strings that can be hung over the back of a chair while a lady is seating herself.
If you like this, you’ll love the Stories In Stitches book series, which is full of knitting, history, and stories! With book 5, we start exploring knitting in the USA during the Civil War period.