Textile fragment

العنوان Textile fragment
المؤلف Unknown
تاريخ النشر: 200
مكان النشر Egypt (made) -
الموضوع Clothing Africa
النوع أخرى
اللغة غير محدد
رقمي نعم
مخطوط لا
الأبعاد الفيزيائية Approx. width: 6cm, Approx. length: 3.5cm
المكتبة: Victoria and Albert Museum
معرف أصل المكتبة 1939A-1897
رقم السجل 1939A-1897
موقع المكتبة Middle East Section
التاريخ 200
ملاحظات Before the technique of knitting with two needles evolved, textiles with a very similar structure and texture were created by a technique known as ‘single-needle knitting’. Socks in this technique from the late Roman period were usually worked with the big toe separate, so that they could be worn with sandals. This piece was intended to cover the remaining four toes and was possibly worked to mend a worn sock. It was excavated from Christian burial grounds of the 3rd to 5th centuries AD, found in the present-day city of al-Bahnasa in Egypt. Single-needle knitting used yarn threaded through the eye of a sewing needle worked in the round through a series of loops. It was much more laborious and slower than knitting with two needles, as the yarn could only be worked in short lengths. Extra pieces of yarn had to be spliced on as the ‘knitting’ progressed.
Malzemeler ve teknikler Wool, single-needle knitting Wool Single-Needle Knitting
Fiziksel açıklama The section of a toe sock that would cover the 4 toes separately from the big toe, worked in brown wool in single-needle knitting. Worked in the round with increasing on one side. Gauge is 8 stitches and 14 rows per inch. Possibly worked as a separate piece to mend worn toes in another sock?
Üslup Late Antique
عرض في المصدر Victoria and Albert Museum Victoria and Albert Museum - محرك بحث المخطوطات العثمانية
Victoria and Albert Museum - محرك بحث المخطوطات العثمانية Victoria and Albert Museum

Textile fragment

المؤلف Unknown
تاريخ النشر 200
مكان النشر Egypt (made) -
الموضوع Clothing Africa
النوع أخرى
اللغة غير محدد
رقمي نعم
مخطوط لا
الأبعاد الفيزيائية Approx. width: 6cm, Approx. length: 3.5cm
المكتبة Victoria and Albert Museum
معرف أصل المكتبة 1939A-1897
رقم السجل 1939A-1897
موقع المكتبة Middle East Section
التاريخ 200
ملاحظات Before the technique of knitting with two needles evolved, textiles with a very similar structure and texture were created by a technique known as ‘single-needle knitting’. Socks in this technique from the late Roman period were usually worked with the big toe separate, so that they could be worn with sandals. This piece was intended to cover the remaining four toes and was possibly worked to mend a worn sock. It was excavated from Christian burial grounds of the 3rd to 5th centuries AD, found in the present-day city of al-Bahnasa in Egypt. Single-needle knitting used yarn threaded through the eye of a sewing needle worked in the round through a series of loops. It was much more laborious and slower than knitting with two needles, as the yarn could only be worked in short lengths. Extra pieces of yarn had to be spliced on as the ‘knitting’ progressed.
Malzemeler ve teknikler Wool, single-needle knitting Wool Single-Needle Knitting
Fiziksel açıklama The section of a toe sock that would cover the 4 toes separately from the big toe, worked in brown wool in single-needle knitting. Worked in the round with increasing on one side. Gauge is 8 stitches and 14 rows per inch. Possibly worked as a separate piece to mend worn toes in another sock?
Üslup Late Antique
Victoria and Albert Museum - محرك بحث المخطوطات العثمانية
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