Wednesday, April 9, 2014

Old is new is old

Most mornings I read the free on-line headlines in the newspaper that was once my daily newspaper, The Otago Daily Times, as I like to keep up with what is happening 'at home'.
 
This morning's smaller headline spread a smile on my face.  From the article I gleaned that knitting is making a comeback in Otago where I hasten to add, wool is the most suitable fibre for winter wear.  In my 'mother' days I knitted; kept five children in knitted jerseys, and when the need arose knitted for myself and my husband.  Knitting was what I did at night with one eye on the television; knitting occupied any spare moment during the day, and a wool shop was a goldmine. 
 
Upon my departure to Australia and needing to keep the number of 'things' I brought with me, taking into account where I might live and how much space I may have, and just how much of my decades of accumulation were important enough to transport. High on the list, in fact very high on my list, were knitting needles. 
 
 Over the years my collection of knitting needles had grown ... bamboo ones [wasn't too keen on them as the action of knitting split the bamboo leaving me feeling as though I had swallowed a fly]; plastic needles that bent like palm trees in a storm, steel needles that pierced the eardrums as they click-clacked against each other.  My Mother did not like knitting, though she did through necessity; her reason being the click clack, click clack.  My favourite needles were, and still are, plastic coated steel lined.  Soft gentle click clacking, and they come in pretty colours.
 
I have a collection of knitting wool that needs getting into ... unfortunately the temperature in Australia is much warmer than South Otago and the need for woollen garments less.  I do still knit, mainly for new arrivals though a cardigan half completed in a bag will be finished and worn ... next year perhaps?
 
 The newspaper article reminded me of the hours I had spent knitting as I pondered upon the thought that knitting is almost a pastime of the past.  Perhaps knitting will show a resurgence, and once again women will pick up the needles, knit something they can wear, and feel rather pleased with the result.
 
Oh ... it isn't just women who knit.  My bachelor uncle who was a keen cricketer and bowler [indoor and out] knitted jumpers for the cooler days when he played sport.  It was he who showed me a great way to cast on, a method I use to this day.

Deep down I hope knitting, and other skills from last century, will once again be taken up, and fashion is once again dictated by those who put time and effort and their own particular stamp on a design.

4 comments:

  1. Woohoo! Here I am on your other blog. So true what you say about knitting. I am about to make knitted knockers. Yep, just what you are thinking. I plan to blog about it soon.

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  2. I have never liked knitting. Crochet hooks were always in my hand,especially when I was getting paid for producing "team color " scarves.I like the fact that these days people are starting to produce beautiful cardigans and jumpers again. At my Quilt group yesterday, most of the ladies were knitting during the meeting..(?) BTW I once knitted a beautiful jumper for my DH only to have moths eat big holes in it one Summer.

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  3. my mother had those needles. she came from germany and liked knitting. i tried to knit but could not finnish anything.so sorry about it.

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  4. As you know I'm a knitter, so I really enjoyed this, Shirley. Knitting's revival has already happened in the northern hemisphere. After decades when fewer and fewer people knitted and yarn shops closed by the hundred, there's been a real resurgence of interest in knitting on both sides of the Atlantic over the past few years. New yarn shops and websites, new knitting magazines internet forums and literally thousands of knitting blogs show that many young as well as older women are rediscovering the joy of knitting. I do hope this happens in Australia too.

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