KOREASCHOLAR

THE REVITALISATION OF A CRAFT ECONOMY: THE CASE OF SCOTTISH KNITTING

Jade Halbert
  • LanguageENG
  • URLhttp://db.koreascholar.com/Article/Detail/351346
Global Marketing Conference
2018 Global Marketing Conference at Tokyo (2018.07)
pp.776-787
글로벌지식마케팅경영학회 (Global Alliance of Marketing & Management Associations)
Abstract

The revitalisation of a craft economy: the case of scottish knitting
In the 1980s, Vivienne Weir knitted for money at home, her skills – little remunerated – realising in luxurious yarns the fashionable imaginings of a local designer. In 2018 Kate Davies knits at home, her skills the foundation of a successful eponymous knitwear design and yarn production business. What separates these women is more than time – in contemporary Scotland, knitting is a valid and valued entrepreneurial pursuit, and so-called home knitters form part of a vast network of crafters whose turn from home craft to design-focused entrepreneurship represents a significant contribution to the £1billion per annum that the fashion and textile industries generate for Scotland. Through analysis of the business activities of both women, collected through personal testimony interviews, this paper examines the revitalisation of knitting in Scotland as a viable and lucrative entrepreneurial activity. It compares and contrasts the historical case study of Vivienne who was not afforded the opportunity to realise her potential and make a business from her skills, with the contemporary story of Kate who has translated her skills in hand-knitting and passion for design into a profitable enterprise. It argues that the revitalisation of the craft economy of knitting in Scotland has been galvanized by the rise of a new generation of knitters determined to rewrite the Scottish aesthetic lexicon in knitwear design, a new appreciation for the heritage and tradition of skilled knitting, and a new-found understanding of the economic, social, and cultural value of knit craft. In an age of increasing automation in fashion and textiles, and concerns around the social and environmental impacts of massmanufacturing, this paper demonstrates the importance of a dynamic craft economy in knitting to the Scottish fashion and textile industries.

Table Content
ABSTRACT
 Two stories: the business of scottish knitting
 Knitter, outworker, trier: vivienne weir, 1980–1984
 Knitter, designer, award-winning entrepreneur: Kate Davies, 2010–Now
 Adjusting tension: representations of knitting and knitters
 Representations of scottish knitting: Harnessing heritage and inverting tradition
 Refreshed and revitalised: Scottish knitting then, scottish knitting now
 Conclusion
 References
 Secondary sources
Author
  • Jade Halbert(University of Huddersfield, UK)