
Knitting Neighbors:
Harvard neighbors group shows knitting is not just for grandma anymore
By Beth Potier, Harvard University Gazette Staff
From National Public Radio to pierced teenagers in the yarn store,
everyone knows that knitting is suddenly cool. It's the "new yoga," says one
magazine article; it's part of a post-Sept. 11 trend toward cocooning, say psychologists.
In the basement of Harvard's Loeb House, seven women surrounded by
plump skeins of yarn and half-finished sweaters shake their heads in disbelief. "I'm
amazed to find myself part of something that's hot," says Diana Stewart, who recently
returned to knitting after a 60-year hiatus.
Stewart, former co-master of Lowell House, and her fellow knitters are
members of Harvard Neighbors' newly formed knitting group. While no one admits that they
were drawn to the group by knitting's newfound hipness, they're not surprised that the
centuries-old craft is gaining in popularity.
"Other people take Prozac, then there are those of us who just
knit," says Jennifer Kotilaine, associate secretary to the University and leader of
the knitting group. Between bites of her lunch, Kotilaine surveys a bear-sized pullover
she's knitting for her husband. He's so tall, she says, that she needs to purchase more
heathery gray wool to lengthen the sweater's arms.
At the other end of the spectrum, Lillian DeBacker and Carolina Carbó
show off small yellow squares; both are new knitters practicing their stitches before
graduating to a real project. Ina Luch pieces together a tiny cardigan she knit from yarn
scraps donated to the group; in turn, she plans to give the sweater away, possibly to a
local children's hospital.
From teaching newcomers to sharing yarn and swapping patterns, a spirit
of generosity runs through knitters. The group plans to take on a charitable project -
perhaps knitting newborn hats for a hospital - once all members master the basics of knit
and purl.
Stewart witnessed knitters' generosity firsthand when a group she was involved with,
the Women's Commission on Refugee Women and Children, collected 32 tons of yarn from
knitters around the country for women in the former Yugoslavia several years ago. The yarn
was needed not so much so women could create garments to sell, says Stewart, but because
trauma experts found that knitting encouraged women to talk to each other about the horror
of war, thus healing their emotional scars.
On the peaceful edge of Harvard Yard, Harvard Neighbors' knitting group similarly
connects its members with conversation and camaraderie. For Luch and Carbó, from Germany
and Argentina, respectively, it's a low-key way to brush up their English skills. They,
along with DeBacker, are all wives of recently transplanted researchers; the casual gossip
and friendly chatter of the knitter's group helps them find their way in the Harvard
community.
New friends, English lessons, handmade sweaters ... try getting all
that from yoga class.
Other Articles: (click on title to read entire article)
The Yarn's Flying as More Women Discover the Joys of Knitting
By Cecelia Goodnow, SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER REPORTER
"Cast
off your fusty notions about this venerable fiber art. Knitting has a new look and a new
edge, thanks in part to high-style designs and rich, textural yarns that didn't exist a
generation ago..."
New Generation Strikes up an Interest in Knitting
by Deborah Deasy, Pittsburgh Tribune-Review
"Baby
boomers shunned it, but their kids call it hip. It seems trendy types everywhere are
learning to knit...."
Knitting has
Made a Grand Return
by Chris Casson Madden, The Cincinnati Post, Online Edition
"A new generation has
discovered what older adults have known for years: These crafts are great stress
relievers. It's also the reason major media have embraced these crafts, touting crochet
and knitting as 'the new yoga'..."
|