Record number
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GP87
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Identification
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Simple name
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gansey pattern
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Full name
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diamonds & zigzag & triple moss stitch & vertical & indigenous
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Other name
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Sheringham meshes, arrows and chevrons gansey
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Named collection
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Classified name
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4.151.721
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System
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SHIC
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Brief description
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Gansey pattern, fine Sheringham meshes, lightning and triple moss stitch gansey, 1960s or 1970s, possibly knittd by Lizzie Mason
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Association
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Nature
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wearer
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Person
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fisherman :
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Place
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& Sheringham & Norfolk
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Activity
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fishing
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Date
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1960 = 1979
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Production
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Method
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hand knitted
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Person
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knitter :
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Note3
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Mother of Mrs Jane Rayner
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Date
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1960 = 1979
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Place
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& Sheringham & Norfolk
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Technical data
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12.5 spi
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Note3
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tension
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Note
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Preproduction
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Simple name
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gansey
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Full name
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Reference number
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Note
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Loaned to Propagansey exhibition 2022, per Deb Gillanders.
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Photography
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Person
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photographer : Gillanders, Deb
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IMG-20220920-WAD0000.jpg
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Institution3
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IMG-20220920-WAD0001.jpg
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Institution3
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IMG-20220920-WAD0007.jpg
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Institution3
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IMG-20220920-WAD0008.jpg
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Institution3
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IMG-20220920-WAD0011.jpg
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Institution3
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Type
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digitised image
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Research
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Result
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pattern chart
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Person
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charted by : Warren, Martin
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Person
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swatch knitted by :
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Date
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Documentation
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GP87.jpg
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Reference number
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GP87_chart.pdf
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Reproduction
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Type
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sampler
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Corporate body
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for :
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Person
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knitted by :
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Date requested
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Dimensions
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Documentation group
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Documentation
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Link
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shering.html
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Recorder
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Warren, Martin : 29.11.2022
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Documentation group
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Reference
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Note3
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Notes
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Who was the fisherman who owned this gansey and who might the knitter have been? We do not know the name of the first owner at the present time but I might speculate as to the knitter. By 1970, around the time this gansey was knitted, the
craft was dying out. There were fewer ganseys being knitted and few active knitters. Ann West was one, knitting for her husband Lennie ~Teapot~ West. Edie Middleton might still have been knitting. Another I have heard of was Lizzie Mason, a
jolly lady who appeared in a local newspaper article but which I don~t have a copy of (can anybody help me here?). If my memory serves me correctly, the late Roger Chamberlain, A dry, witty Shannock, bank worker and writer, once told me that
while Lizzie made good ganseys, she didn't knit in the conventional way, that is, in the round but sewed up the seams afterwards. I believe she knitted Roger a gansey, which he wore when we sailed together around the Hebrides with Jim and
Brenda Hare from Cromer. I should have paid more attention. A few hints in the photographs above from Deb Gillanders suggest that there aren~t any false seams up the sides but sewn seams that draw the knitted fabric into a downfold. The
sleeves too appear to be attached to the body by sewing rather than being picked up and knitted down. Likewise, the join at the centre of the shoulder strap doesn~t produce a ridge on the outside with the usual three-needle bind off but is
perhaps joined with a seam hidden on the inside. This is thin evidence to be sure but the number of knitters was becoming quite limited by the 1960s and 70s. Maybe this, and GP86, are examples of Lizzie Mason~s work.
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