Ugly Object of the Month � February BY SUZANNE DAVIS, Curator for Conservation, Kelsey Museum of Archaeology
Our galleries are closed at the beginning of this month as we install a major exhibit from Pompeii, Leisure and Luxury in the Age of Nero. So I�m taking this opportunity to feature a favorite Kelsey ugly object that is rarely on view: an ancient dirty sock. In the photo below, you see the part of the sock that would cover your toes and the front part of your foot (the heel and ankle are missing).
The sock was excavated at Karanis, Egypt, during the University of Michigan�s 1928 field season. This object is hideous, accessible (who doesn�t have daily experience with dirty socks?), and interesting. It�s obviously old, stained, and worn, with a large hole in one toe. But it�s also a very cool, very early form of knitting called single needle knitting or naalbinding.
I could tell you more about this technique, but why not try it yourself by making your very own ancient-Egyptian-style sock? The Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology in London did this in 2009 and 2010, in an experimental archaeology project called �Sock It!� Scholars used ancient techniques to recreate a pair of socks just like this one. Click here to read their blog about the project, and here for instructions and a pattern to do it yourself. February is a great month to make yourself a cozy pair of ancient ugly socks!
Filed under: Conservation, Ugly Object
https://kelseymuseum.wordpress.com/2016/02/03/ugly-object-of-the-month-february/
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