Anthropology
Related: About this forum1,700-Year-Old Sock Spins Yarn About Ancient Egyptian Fashion
Katherine J. Wu
Correspondent
October 10, 2018
This stripy toe sock appears to have warmed the foot of a tot in the late antiquity period
Child's left-foot sock British Museum
There are old socks, and then there are old socks. This stripy sock, discarded around the 3rd or 4th century, falls into the latter category. Fished out of a landfill during the 1913-1914 excavation of the Egyptian city of Antinooupolis led by English papyrologist John de Monins Johnson on behalf the Egypt Exploration Fund, the sock ended up in the collections of the British Museum in London. While previous research had pinpointed its age, not much else was known about the sockor its partner, which presumably was lost to time (and did not succumb to whatever the late antiquity period equivalent is to being swallowed by the dryer).
Now, new research is unraveling the socks secrets. As Caroline Davies reports for the Guardian, a group of museum scientists hoping to better understand ancient Egyptian clothing manufacture and trade practices decided to analyze the dyes in the sock, along with several other textiles dating between about 250 and 800 A.D. Avoiding older techniques that required an invasive approach, they utilized multispectral imaging, which only needs to scan the surface of artifacts to test for pigments. Even if certain colors have degraded to the point that theyre not visible to the naked eye, multispectral imaging can detect minute color traces under different wavelengths of light. Think of it as a camera for invisible ink.
Sure enough, the analysis revealed that the sock contained seven hues of wool yarn woven together in a meticulous, stripy pattern. Just three natural, plant-based dyesmadder roots for red, woad leaves for blue and weld flowers for yellowwere used to create the different color combinations featured on the sock, according to Joanne Dyer, lead author of the study, which appears in the journal PLOS ONE. In the paper, she and her co-authors explain that the imaging technique also revealed how the colors were mixed to create hues of green, purple and orange: In some cases, fibers of different colors were spun together; in others, individual yarns went through multiple dye baths.
Such intricacy is pretty impressive, considering that ancient sock is both tiny and fragile, as Dyer tells Davies. Given its size and orientation, the researchers believe it may have been worn on a childs left foot.
More:
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smartnews-history-archaeology/1700-year-old-sock-spins-yarn-about-ancient-egyptian-fashion-180970501/
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Pardon the age of the article, I couldn't resist posting it. It seems impossible to believe! Wow!
Easterncedar
(3,614 posts)Those colors are so clear. Very cool.
Judi Lynn
(162,491 posts)(I never saw any socks in the hieroglyphs!)
From:
https://discoveringegypt.com/egyptian-hieroglyphic-writing/
That foot is crying out for a sock!
Bayard
(24,145 posts)I can't believe that survived the centuries, and in good shape.
Warpy
(113,131 posts)Nalbinding seems like the most appropriate method for stitching something that tiny, the needles needed for such teeny knit stitches would have been like wrestling with a porcupine. I still imagine this kid's mom would have been very upset that a sock had been lost and she couldn't find it--the sock, not the kid.
PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,771 posts)It almost looks knitted, but I'm pretty sure knitting didn't happen for a very long time after the sock was made.