Förmedling av mönsterförlagor för stickning och virkning

schema:name "Förmedling av mönsterförlagor för stickning och virkning"
schema:creator Bäckström, Hanna
schema:author Bäckström, Hanna
schema:about cultuurgeschiedenis
boekwetenschap
handwerken
kostuumkunde
breipatronen
breiwerk
haakpatronen
haken
mode
modetijdschriften
naaldwerk
patronen
textiel
textieltechnieken
patroonboeken
Zweden
<na0391beb2c5f44c3af6724eeda67dda7b1>
<na0391beb2c5f44c3af6724eeda67dda7b2>
<na0391beb2c5f44c3af6724eeda67dda7b3>
schema:abstract ""In the 1840s, the first manuals for knitting and crochet were published in Swedish. In small booklets with colorful paper covers, patterns and instructions were conveyed for making various decorative objects, such as stockings in silk or colorful wool yarn, decorated with pearls or collars, children's clothes and lace in thin white cotton yarn. In the prefaces to the manuals, knitting and crochet are highlighted as the most beautiful of all ladies' handicrafts, both for the benefit and for the pleasure of the trend-conscious and diligent middle- and upper-class woman. By the middle of the 1850s, the publication of manuals for knitting and crochet was declining, and patterns for all kinds of textile handicrafts became a regular feature in fashion magazines. Large posters in thin paper were filled with pattern drawings with cutting patterns and pictures of the latest clothing fashion. Differences between these methods of publication raise questions about how the transmission of patterns and instructions for knitting and crochet changed over time, and what these changes meant for the practice of these handicrafts. The author examines how pattern models and instructions for knitting and crochet were designed and distributed in printed publications during the middle of the 19th century, a period when new publication genres were introduced on the Swedish market. In addition to giving a detailed picture of the first patterns for knitting and crochet published in Swedish, comparisons are made with similar publications in Germany and the United Kingdom, and a large number of manuals that have not received attention in previous research are highlighted and placed in a cultural and media historical context"--Provided by publisher."@en
""This thesis explores the publication, design, dissemination and use of patterns for knitting and crochet in Sweden in the mid-nineteenth century. It investigates why the mediation of patterns for knitting and crochet changed during this period and what these changes reveal about the handicraft skills of the target group and the social context for which the patterns were produced. Manuals and fashion journals containing patterns for knitting and crochet issued in Swedish between 1840 and 1865 are both the research object and the main sources; to situate them within a transnational context, they are compared with British and German counterparts. Through object-based study of extant manuals and fashion journals and quantitative analysis of bibliographic data, the development of different ways of giving instructions and presenting patterns is explored. A discourse analysis of the prefaces and other texts that frame the handicraft patterns reveals how the publishers used contemporary attitudes towards knitting and crochet to make the patterns appeal to a certain target group. Furthermore, a selection of patterns is tested in practice, thus examining how information is transferred and which skills were expected of the end user. In the design of the publications, knitting and crochet are feminised, popularised and commodified. By linking these needlecrafts to the ideals and social practices of urban culture, the publishers transformed the patterns into modern consumer articles for fashion-conscious and respectable middle-class women. A gradual development of new ways to transfer knowledge through words and images was facilitated by the technical developments within book printing. Frequent misprints and the omission of key instructions demonstrate that a fundamental understanding of knitting and crochet was expected of the target group, in addition to tenacity and creativity. The different ways of mediating patterns for knitting and crochet that developed in the nineteenth century were formed through an interplay between practices and innovations within book printing, translation customs, the organisation of the market, shifting fashions in handicrafts and changing perceptions of the target group’s habits and taste"--English abstract on title-page verso."@en
schema:identifier <na0391beb2c5f44c3af6724eeda67dda7b4>
schema:inLanguage "eng"
"swe"
schema:subjectOf <na0391beb2c5f44c3af6724eeda67dda7b5>
schema:temporalCoverage "1840-1865"
schema:workExample Förmedling av mönsterförlagor för stickning och virkning: medierna, marknaden och målgruppen i Sverige vid 1800-talets mitt

schema:about
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schema:alternateName "Knitting"

schema:about
<na0391beb2c5f44c3af6724eeda67dda7b3>

schema:alternateName "Fashion--Periodicals"

schema:subjectOf
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schema:text Text in Swedish; with an abstract in English.
schema:additionalType <http://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/mnotetype/lang>

schema:about
<na0391beb2c5f44c3af6724eeda67dda7b1>

schema:alternateName "Crocheting"

schema:identifier
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schema:propertyID "NL-AmRIJ"
schema:value "315439"

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