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hedgehog Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Oct-06-10 02:15 PM
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History of crochet
Every source I've ever read indicates that the earliest documented crochet is found in a group of Irish convents using crochet to make imitation lace to raise money for victims of the Famine, c 1848. It boggles my mind that crochet didn't exist before then. I can understand it being ignored as a woman's craft not worth mentioning. However, while archeologists have found some pretty old surviving samples of knit fabrics, I've never heard of any ancient crochet being found. Anyone have any other information on this?
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NanceGreggs Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Oct-15-10 03:19 PM
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1. From my go-to source ...
"The Step-by-Step Book of Needlecraft":

Early samples of crochet have been found in China, Turkey, Africa and Europe - as well as the US and South America. (unfortunately, no dates were given).

Early samples have two distinctly different appearances; worked with very fine yarn to make a form of lace, and worked with thicker yarns to make denser fabrics.

The denser type of crochet was the more well-known of the two. The Chinese used it to make sculptured, 3-dimensional dolls. Africans used it to make caps for their tribal chieftains. Turks used it for hats as well, as did the Scots - who also used dense crochet work to make heavy cloaks, particularly for shepherds. Hence it became known as "shepherd's knitting".

Crocheted afghans seem to have originated with early US pioneers. As wool was often in short supply, worn knitted garments were pulled apart and whatever lengths of yarn were salvageable were then reworked into crocheted "granny squares" to create quilts - in much the same way scraps of fabric were used to make sewn quilts.

Fine lace crochet originated in Italy in the 16th Century, done by nuns for altar pieces and vestments. This type of crochet became known as "nun's lace". The technique spread to Ireland and Spain, where it was also worked by nuns for church use.

It wasn't until the early 19th Century that crochet began being used for garments and household use. Its popularity may largely have stemmed from the work of a French emigre (Eleanor Branchardiere) who, after settling in Ireland, studied the crochet work of nuns in a Dublin convent, and developed their craft by inventing stitches and techniques of her own - publicizing her work in her self-published magazine, "The Needle".

Another factor which influenced the development of the craft was the setting up of a home industry in Carrickmacross to help impoverished people, which was organized by a Mrs. Gray Porter in the first half of the 19th Century, and a similar industry was set up in Clones by a Mrs. Hand. The work in these two areas quickly flourished, and is still carried on today. The fine lace created in these two areas are very distinctive, and are still known as Carrickmacross lace and Clones lace.

I hope that answers your question. I'm an avid knitter and crocheter. I'm currently crocheted myself a fall coat out of "granny squares"! Having TONS of small balls of yarn left over from various projects over the years, I decided that rather than toss them out, I'd make use of them in this way.

I'm almost finished, and have enjoyed this project more than anything I've done in recent years. I mixed colours (vivids with muted tones) and textures (silks, linens, angora, wool, cotton, hemp - you name it, it's in there!)

I edged each square in a rather expensive black-with-metallic-gold yarn - but as the rest of the materials used were already-purchased scraps, it was the only financial investment I had to make in the project.

Happy crocheting!!!
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hedgehog Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Oct-15-10 07:13 PM
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2. Now that makes a lot more sense than the invented around 1848 I've
always come across! Thanks!

:hi:
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NanceGreggs Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Oct-15-10 07:32 PM
Response to Reply #2
3. Happy to oblige ...
I think the "invented around 1848" meme originated with the dawn of the widespread use of crochet in household items and garments, as opposed to its use strictly for church-related items.

As I stated earlier, the source I used did not give any years (or even a century) for the "finds" of crochet work uncovered over the years in various places around the world. I, too, am curious as to where the art was originally started/developed - along with the how and why of it.

I only venture into this forum on occasion - wish it were more popular, as I love exchanging ideas for new projects with fellow knitters/crocheters!

:hi:
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