X Marks the Scot - An on-line community of kilt wearers.
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19th October 21, 08:34 PM
#11
 Originally Posted by OC Richard
What's amazing is that I've had several newer pair of kilt hose get big holes, while a pair of hose I got in the 1980s still are fine.
About repairing hose, in West Virginia I grew up with my Grandmother around, who lived in a log cabin with a dirt floor until she got married and moved to town. She came of age in the Great Depression and the "make-do" attitude permeated everything she did.
That mindset rubbed off on me. I learned to darn socks as a kid by watching my Grandmother, and I couldn't imagine throwing socks away due to a hole or two.
Her method was to make a series of parallel strands of yarn going across the opening, then make a perpendicular series of parallel strands of yarn, weaving each perpendicular strand over and under, creating a woven patch in effect.
She would have a big light-bulb inside the sock.
My father learned to darn from his mother, but never passed it down. I've never bothered to learn, but I think I now know how thanks to your short description. Thank you, Richard.
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