Provenance: The St John & Judy Stimson treen & folkart collection Pembroke (formerly the Museum of the Home, Westgate Street, Pembroke).

Left to Right

A. a carved ash goose-wing style knitting sheath with simple notch-carved decoration.

Northern Britain, late 19th century

11” long / 28cm long

£170

B. a carved and turned walnut ‘goose-wing’ type knitting sheath.

Northern England mid 19th century.

13” long / 33cm long

£300 sold

C. a fine chip carved sycamore goose-wing knitting-sheath with brass ferrule.

Northern England 19th century

9” long / 22.8cm long

£325

D. An 18th / early 19th century curved ‘goose-wing’ ash knitting sheath or knitting stick,  lovely untouched colour.

Northern England

8¾” long / 22.3cm long

£170

As is the case with most rural communities, knitting has been a general pursuit among the peasant folk of Wales. A traveler in Wales in 1797: “Kniiting… is the general lesuire work of both sexes, in Wales…and it cannot fail of giving strangers a high Odesa of the industry of the people to see the men and women going to market with burdens on their heads, while their hands are employed in working the fleeces of their own sheep into articles of dress”

The use of the stick “sheath” was to support a needle to work from during the process of knitting and for this purpose it had a hole in the end to receive the needle.”

The majority are of wood, and in many of these are the home-made gifts of young men to their sweethearts; such may be decorated with chip-carving, and bear initials and dates.

From the Guide to the collection of Welsh Bygones, Iorweth Peate – National Museum of Wales 1927

See also:

Knitting Sticks & Sheaths – A History by Dr Ian McFeeters, Bleasdales Ltd 2016

Treen and other Wooden Bygones by Edward H Pinto, London 1968

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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