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Knock Your Socks Off Socks

Nov 3, 2015 - 3 min read

Knock Your Socks Off Socks Primary Image

Patsy Zawistoski explores how eco-friendly materials like banana plants can create great fiber for spinning

Knock Your Socks Off Socks


Sarah Read's amazing re-creation of the vintage socks shown below. The colors used are approximations of what the original colors would have been.

Somehow, all the crocheted items of all the women in my family have ended up with me. I have scores of doilies, furlongs of lace edgings, baby booties, dresser scarves, bodices, beaded reticules. I thought I had seen it all. Then the Amazing Tapestry Crochet Socks turned up. They came to PieceWork via one of our favorite contributors and advisors, Susan Strawn, who received them from a friend, who got them from where? It's a mystery.

In fact, this pair of socks is so laden with layers of mystery, it's hard to know where to begin. The gauge? At least 15 stitches to the inch. The tool to accomplish that? Teeny. The yarn? It must be cotton, but the red color on the toes and heels has rubbed off with wear. The yarn didn't take the dye, in other words. The motifs? Roses, diamonds, zigzags, stripes, inscrutable humanoids perhaps female, one lone pyramid. In the middle of the sole. These don't suggest answers, only questions.


Intricately crocheted socks Susan Strawn received from a friend. There was no information on the colorwork socks, leaving them with their maker, place of origin, and date unknown.

Their shape looks vaguely Eastern European, but they could be almost anything. The real question is, how did a mortal human create them? How was it possible? We found out by persuading one of the talented young editors of Interweave Crochet, Sarah Read, to try to reproduce them. And she did. Our jaws dropped when Sarah brought in the results of her trials, errors, errors, trials, and late nights with a tiny hook.  (Full disclosure: she only made one.) Sarah tells the story of her Herculean task: what she learned, what she speculated, what simply floored her, in the brand-new issue of Crochet Traditions.

This issue of PieceWork's Crochet Traditions has many, many other stories—poignant, intriguing, surprising, nostalgic, with techniques and projects galore. But it's those Tapestry Socks that stick in my mind.

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