Wednesday, February 27, 2008

Much Ado About Mittens


















I had a plan when this winter began. I was going to knit mittens. I was intrigued with mittens. Selbuvotter had caught my eye, and I was fascinated with the intricate designs on the backs and palms of these mini canvases. These mittens really seemed to express personality - Poetry Mittens, Squirrels, abstract designs - and I saw myself making gift mittens, mittens that would be my personal Hallmark card. My messages through my mittens would be as clever as a fortune cookie, or perhaps as abstract as cave paintings, or modern day graffiti.























The text of Selbuvotter described the mating rituals that became attached to the making of these mittens - tokens of affections, signs of friendship, talents at domesticity; Value as a wife and life partner were attached to these mittens. Oy the pressure!

So, I freaked out . . . no mittens!

But, the freak out period passed, and I returned to my Anemoi Mittens. I started these mittens back in October, and returned to them partly out of affection, once again embracing the mitten as an artform, and partly out of necessity - I lost my third pair of gloves this winter, and my hands are cold!


















So, now they're done, so pretty I could put them in a picture frame. And, I've worn my mittens for a day now . . . and you know, they're just not that practical. I reevaluated the mitten.

Why talents as a wife, or a homemaker, or a lover, or a friend, or a sister or a daughter, were ever attached to the ability to make something so impractical is really quite astonishing. You can't do anything with a mitten on - can't juggle your coffee, the newspaper, your files and your keys. Can't change the song on your iPod. Can't drive, probably, although I wouldn't know about that. So, then I started thinking - it can't be the finished product that had value - but the process.




















And looking at my bemittened hand, I became more enamored with my mittens.
























There was a time, and a place, and a prevailing attitude that had such a respect for the process of knitting, and the act of creating, that courtships would rise and fall, marriages would be decided, and friendships would be sealed. A sonnett - where design, tension, color were valued as much as rhyme, meter, and metaphor.

Which brings it all back to me - my mittens will not be hallmark cards, or tokens of affection - only another knitter could read the love, affection, loyalty, commitment knit into every stitch in this day and age. And, since I'm not gifting mittens to all of my fellow knitters (sorry my dear Rosie's friends!), I'm just going to have to make them for myself, and my mitten art will decorate the world, but perhaps not speak to it in a way that asks for acceptance, or love, or appreciation, or conveys the same. Judge not my mittens! But, you can tell me they're pretty though!

15 comments:

Anonymous said...

They are art and they match your eyes. Beautiful.

Anonymous said...

the mittens are beautiful!

Anonymous said...

They are indeed beautiful mittens!

Anonymous said...

Anemoi! I love them!! And, I am taking Terri's Selbuvotter class on Saturday. There is Mitten Knitten in my future!

Anonymous said...

Beautiful, intricate, impressive.

Mariss said...

Perhaps at a different time, mittens were more useful, since people did not posess ipods and travel coffee mugs ;)

I really enjoyed your post and the musings. The mittens are gorgeous-don't worry, we can all knit our own damn pairs!

Lisa said...

Beautiful! Muffy's hands are measured the yarn picked out, wound and ready to be cast on. Hope they turn out as fab as your's.

Liz K. said...

Of course you know this, but perhaps when the mittens were originally knitted, they were more practical. I mean, no one 100 years ago was juggling keys or trying to change the songs on their iPods. But perhaps they were just ceremonial items as well, tokens or talismans of a ritual in a cold climate.

In any case, they are lovely. I reject the idea that things have to be practical to be valued.

Bridget said...

I think they are beautiful. There are plenty of practical things in the world, we all deserve things that are just pretty.

Gauss said...

They are very pretty!

Karin said...

I love these mittens. I so want to make a pair of these as I have this book. One of these days.....

Karin

Emily said...

I'm with Liz K on all counts - 1) were more practical 2) lovely and 3) who gives a whether they're practical! They're cool!

Macoco said...

The mittens are just beautiful. You did such a great job with them. I know that they're not as practical - but I have to say that I'm a big fan of the mittens. I like all my fingers keeping each other warm while I wait for the train. ;)

Pinneguri said...

From the time before car keys and iPod ;)

Ruth said...

It must be your fault! I've been trying to get up the courage to knit mittens all winter, due partly to your heart-felt post about them from October (plus they looked so pretty) but every pattern I come accross I just can't visualize how they work. But your finished ones look so lovely, I think mittens may be a summer project. I shall have to dive in...