Spyke
Peppycitoreply
sh.itjust.works

It looks very Scandinavian. You could probably adapt a pattern to look like these. My mom made Viking socks once and they were pretty uncomfortable.

11

ravelry[dot]com has lots of patterns (free and for sale) which match these. Judging by the age on some of those patterns on that site, this image has made the rounds for years.

1
lemmy.world

Anyone else surprised they had this level of luxury, unnecessary design, and contemplating our quality of life in relation to our scale of economy and scientific invention?

Or were these king socks?

5
uen3reply
sh.itjust.works

I imagine when you're knitting socks by hand- (or with whatever medieval sock loom may have been available?) it's going to take you almost as long to just make a plain white one. But after the first about two of those you get really bored. Even more so if you were making a full floor size rug. So maybe the motivation for the 'unnecessary design' on everything back then was less about the customer's vanity than the artisan's sanity.

11

Yes but I think socks were inherently a luxury item. I believe most people used footwraps if anything at all.

3

Same. Though, I actually appreciate that they could last a year. They go through many thousands of steps, friction, salty sweat, wash cycles, and are made to comfortably fit many shapes and sizes of feet.

I'm sure they could last longer if made from stronger materials, but probably at the cost of comfort and fit.

🤔 This is probably the most I've ever thought about socks

2
lemmy.world

They look like the kind of socks that always slide down on the ankles.

4

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Socks, 12c. Egypt | Spyke