Home » today » News » DC Men Knit is a group of men who meet to knit and crochet, aiming to offer a refuge for men to share advice and help each other. Men have always knitted, and it is becoming more commonplace again. Influencer Sam Barsky has almost half a million followers on Instagram and TikTok, creating uniquely-designed sweaters inspired by landscapes, monuments or cultural works. The pandemic has led to a rise in people taking up knitting, with wool being a safe haven against boredom and anxiety. Knitting isn’t just for grandmas, but for anyone of any age or gender who enjoys it.

DC Men Knit is a group of men who meet to knit and crochet, aiming to offer a refuge for men to share advice and help each other. Men have always knitted, and it is becoming more commonplace again. Influencer Sam Barsky has almost half a million followers on Instagram and TikTok, creating uniquely-designed sweaters inspired by landscapes, monuments or cultural works. The pandemic has led to a rise in people taking up knitting, with wool being a safe haven against boredom and anxiety. Knitting isn’t just for grandmas, but for anyone of any age or gender who enjoys it.

The needles rattle, the stitches intertwine and the gossip erupts: a rather banal knitting group on this sunny March Sunday near Washington. With one detail: the participants are men.

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Knitting artist Sam Barsky knits a sweater, March 8, 2023 in Cockeysville, in the eastern United States.
Photo: AFP/VNA/CVN

There are about ten of them from DC Men Knit, a club of knitting and crochet enthusiasts in the American capital, who meet twice a month to create scarves, hats and blankets.

The objective of this pelota friendly: “Offer a refuge for men to knit together, share advice, help each other, because knitting has long been seen as a feminine activity“, explains the group’s coordinator, Gene Throwe.

This employee of a 51-year-old association finishes in a cozy atmosphere the brown sweater, with a discreet golden pattern, which he has regularly put back on the job for several years.

Like many of his friends, he grew up watching his grandmother crochet. And his nostalgia was tinged with regret when he saw the new generations abandon the arts of the needle. Then suddenly he realized he could fix it himself: “Why expect it to be the women” who make these techniques last? “I can do it too!

This merry band of bearded studious bent over their work attracts attention, yes, but not hostility. “Grandmothers passing by often stare at us as if we were Martians“, laughs Gene.

Knitting, banana and Bermuda shorts

Gene Throwe, center, the coordinator of the DC Men Knit men’s knitting group, finishes knitting a sweater.
Photo: AFP/VNA/CVN

Throughout history, men have always knitted, whether they were members of brotherhoods of knitters in the Middle Ages or schoolchildren who, in the United Kingdom and the United States, made blankets for departed soldiers. fight Nazi Germany.

From now on, this practice of knitting among men is becoming commonplace again.

Sam Barsky, slightly bald head and friendly smile, banana around his hips and Bermuda shorts by 3°C, may not correspond to the image we have of influencers, but he emerges at nearly half a million followers on Instagram and TikTok combined.

The one who likes to define himself as “knitter artist“continues to amaze Internet users with its freehand knits, uniquely designed sweaters, inspired by landscapes, monuments or cultural works.

Niagara Falls or the skyscrapers of New York, the stones of Stonehenge or the Eiffel Tower, penguins, robots or even the Wizard of Oz: it’s all there. Sam Barsky has sweaters for all occasions, birthdays, Valentine’s Day, Christmas or Hanukkah.

He even dedicated a sweater… to his sweaters: About thirty of his creations appear there in miniature. His boundless creativity earned him an exhibit at the American Museum of Visionary Arts in Baltimore.

On another – cold – morning in March, he found AFP at Oregon Ridge Park, north of Baltimore, on the American east coast. It was there in particular that he refocused his art when the borders closed on the arrival of COVID-19.

He therefore immortalized in wool the slender trunks of the trees in this park, fifty of which were painted in 2017 in tribute to people who have overcome their addiction to drugs or alcohol.

Pandemic

American knitting artist Sam Barsky poses near the painted trunks of Oregon Ridge Park that inspired the sweater he wears, in Cockeysville, in the eastern United States, on March 8.
Photo: AFP/VNA/CVN

Although he is eager to be able to travel the world again without fear for his health, the pandemic has not only had bad sides: his TikTok account, opened in September 2020, quickly attracted more people than the one he he had been feeding for years on Instagram.

And after the confinements, his knitting groups “had a much bigger crowd, because many people had taken up knitting during this period“, he explains.

Like bread or ceramics, wool was a safe haven against the boredom and anxiety of the first months of the coronavirus. A dynamic at work almost everywhere in the world and illustrated in the United States by the former First Lady Michelle Obama, who now shows off the sweaters she knitted for her husband Barack by promoting his books on TV sets.

Among the DC Men Knit knitters, there is something for everyone: for Gene, it’s a way of “reclaim something that can be modern and useful“; for 48-year-old video game aficionado Devlin Breckenridge, it’s an activity”a little more creative“what of”kill virtual monsters“; and for Michael Manning, 58, it’s “simply very relaxing“.

And then, summarizes the influencer Sam Barsky, “knitting isn’t just for grandmas. It’s for anyone, of any age or gender, who wants and enjoys knitting“.

AFP/VNA/CVN

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