TartuWolf
One Too Many
- Messages
- 1,255
- Location
- Tartu, Estonia
Greetings!
As I've been quite annoyed by my hand freezing while wearing various gloves that I have during this Estonian winter, I've been researching gloves and glove warmth a bit lately.
First, perhaps obvious, realization was that mittens > gloves apart from dexterity.
Then I tried to investigate sheepskin vs knitted mittens.
In terms knitted mittens I tried to understand what are the differences between:
- Sheep wool
- Lambs wool
- Merino wool
- Alpaca wool
- Angora wool
- Mohair
- Camel wool
- Yak wool
- Goat down
Etc...
But one interesting piece of information that I stumbled upon was the idea of "boiled wool (mittens)".
After reading about it a bit it seems like it's a straight up improvement over over regular knitted (any) wool mittens.
Ordered a pair of these for testing : https://edz.co.uk/product/edz-boiled-wool-mittens/
Ordering a pair of wool mittens at the end of winter, very smart, I know..
I guess these are the most famous ones:
https://www.sweaterchalet.com/dachstein-woolwear/dw-3112-adult-mitts/
And then I found this article:
https://newengland.com/yankee/magazine/boiled-wool-mittens/
This part sounds astonishing to me:
As I've been quite annoyed by my hand freezing while wearing various gloves that I have during this Estonian winter, I've been researching gloves and glove warmth a bit lately.
First, perhaps obvious, realization was that mittens > gloves apart from dexterity.
Then I tried to investigate sheepskin vs knitted mittens.
In terms knitted mittens I tried to understand what are the differences between:
- Sheep wool
- Lambs wool
- Merino wool
- Alpaca wool
- Angora wool
- Mohair
- Camel wool
- Yak wool
- Goat down
Etc...
But one interesting piece of information that I stumbled upon was the idea of "boiled wool (mittens)".
After reading about it a bit it seems like it's a straight up improvement over over regular knitted (any) wool mittens.
Ordered a pair of these for testing : https://edz.co.uk/product/edz-boiled-wool-mittens/
Ordering a pair of wool mittens at the end of winter, very smart, I know..
I guess these are the most famous ones:
https://www.sweaterchalet.com/dachstein-woolwear/dw-3112-adult-mitts/
And then I found this article:
https://newengland.com/yankee/magazine/boiled-wool-mittens/
This part sounds astonishing to me:
I would love to hear some thoughts from you folks who have any knowledge or experience with boiled wool mittens (or gloves)!Time was that when a man went out in his boat in winter, he took his wool mittens off a nail on board, dipped them in the warm water from the engine, wrung them out, and put them on wet. Then he clapped and beat his hands and swung his arms until his fingers were so red they stung. After that he could work all day, hauling traps from the frigid salt water, working with sloppy, half-frozen bait, or even clamming, and his hands would stay warm.
When he peeled his mittens off at the end of his day, his hands were red and so warm they steamed in the cold air. He hung the mittens up again by little loops on their cuffs and went ashore.
The boiled wool mittens had an amazing insulating quality when wet. They may have been knit by his wife, or he may have bought them — handknit — from the same store that sold him his trap stock, boots, netting shuttles, and other gear. Wherever he got them, they were big, maybe a third bigger than his hand, and made of oily, cream-colored yarn. Some men took them home and soaked them in hot water; others put them in the bilge of their boats and walked on them all day while doing other work. And they shrank. The wool became thicker, the stitches tighter than can be knit, and as the fisherman wore them, wetting them each time in salt water, they shrank and matted even more until they were shaped to his hands and quite stiff when dry.
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