Welcome to The Group Chat |
| Welcome to The Group Chat, where sports and culture meet and mingle. While low-rise jeans and bubble-hem dresses make traumatizing comebacks, there is one trend that everyone (and their grandmother) can get behind: knits.
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![]() | Knitters ain't quitters | ![]() |
⏪ The history Source: William Vanderson/Fox Photos/Getty Images Who among us hasn't seen their bank account take a hit following a merch drop from your favorite team? Well, things weren't always that way. Replica jerseys and licensing deals are a relatively new phenomenon but, like most things, women had a solution for repping their fandom dating as far back as the early 1900s. To help loved ones show support for their fave soccer club, women in the United Kingdom started knitting scarves in team colors, giving birth to the granny scarf. These homemade accessories became a fixture in football stands across the UK, serving both fashion and function on cold nights.
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The GIST's knits and picks |
| 1. | Dead Dirt x NWSLWashington Spirit creative director Domo Wells dropped an NWSL capsule collection that will have you adding one of each to cart, no matter which team you support. |
| 2. | Gotta start somewhereIf you need more beginning knitter content in your algorithm, Purl Soho is a great place to start. Bonus points for Free Pattern Sundays. |
| 3. | Patterns worth followingRysa Sews Clothes — and you can too thanks to her downloadable patterns. |
| 4. | DIY with othersFind a local knitting group with the power of the Internet. |
🌊 The new wave of knit sportswear | ||
| Fast forward to the present day and that same DIY spirit is thriving. Today's fiber artists are working in an environment where anything and everything is branded, but their work stands out for both its quality and how it centers the modern sports fan. No "pink it and shrink it" here. Rysa Ruth is a big name in the space, and for good reason. Ruth was featured in a The Athletic profile on knitting earlier this year after her designs caught the attention of standouts like WNBA veteran Natasha Cloud and UConn star (and friend of The GIST) Azzi Fudd.
Karla Courtney is another such creator. A devoted Toronto Blue Jays fan, Courtney channeled her World Series runners-up feelings into an enviable baseball sweater collection and a Canada fleece perfect for keeping Shane Hollander warm. Cute and therapeutic. | ||
![]() | Learn The Lore 🏅🧶 Olympic-level knitting skills | ![]() |
| Five-time Olympian British diver Tom Daly most recently won silver at the 2024 Paris Games, but first won our hearts thanks in part to his knitting game. Daly used knitting as a way to cope with stress and anxiety at the 2020 Tokyo Games, inspiring a new generation of Olympic knitters in the process.
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🧵 A tight-knit community | ||
| While projects go viral on social media, there's also a major community aspect to knitting as women's sports bars provide a much-needed space for IRL connection. From Makers Mondays with Seattle's Rough & Tumble to Knit Club with Wilkas in NYC, more spaces are embracing crafting for both community and mental health. Studies show that the repetitive action of these tactile crafts can serve as a form of mindfulness to help with anxiety, stress, or depression. The sense of accomplishment and creative outlet can also result in improved cognitive function. Wins all around.
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