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Mitten

Type of handwear

Mitten

Summary

Type of handwear

FieldValue
image_fileSouthern Sami Mittens Norway.JPG
captionSaami mittens
typeHand protection

A mitten is a type of glove that covers the hand but does not have separate finger openings or sheaths. Generally, mittens still separate the thumb from the other four fingers. They have different colours and designs. Mittens provide greater thermal insulation than gloves as they have a smaller surface area exposed to the cold, but have a trade-off in dexterity.

Mittens are associated with cold weather, children's clothing, comfort and various occupational uses. In the English-speaking world, they also have a cultural association with domestic cats, as in the "Three Little Kittens".

Mittens are a common sight on ski slopes, as they not only provide extra warmth but extra protection from injury. They are also recommended as part of extreme cold weather clothing. Oven mitts are worn in the kitchen to protect the hands from hot objects.

History

Humans have likely used mittens for millennia, but wool and other materials used to construct clothing biodegrade quickly, which limits the amount of extant relics. From Ancient Egypt several depictions of mittens survive, and some gloves found at Egyptian pyramids have been described as resembling mittens, with the collection of egyptologist Robert Hay supposedly having contained a "linen sleeve and mitten in one piece."

Some of the earliest clearly identifiable mittens date to around 1000 A.D. in Latvia, and mittens continue to be part of Latvian national costume today. Another example is a specimen found during the excavations of the early medieval trading town of Dorestad in the Netherlands: In the harbour area a mitten of wool was discovered dating from the 8th or early 9th century. Two left-handed leather mittens found on the Mary Rose are believed to have been used for falconry, whereas in modern times gloves or gauntlets are used for this purpose. From Elizabethan times, embroidered "gauntlet mittens" survive which were made from crimson silk velvet, satin and sequins, with the thread and floss dyed in twelve different colours.

When knitting became more popular in England in the 16th century, mittens were produced at home from wool. One of the earliest known mittens for children survives from this period. The is a form of circular knitting, and modern knitters often use a circular needle.

Many people around the Arctic Circle have used mittens, including other Baltic peoples, Native Americans and Vikings.

Types

Hybrid glove / mitten

Mittens are made from several materials, including wool, leather and fur. From the late 18th century, knitting patterns were published which allowed to inscribe poems on knitted mittens.

Special types of mittens include:

A one-finger ski mitten, providing the warmth of a mitten, but offering more dexterity in gripping things.
A pair of one-finger ski mittens, providing the warmth of a mitten, but offering more dexterity in gripping things. The attached wristbands prevent loss when removing the mittens.

Hunter's mittens – In the 1930s, special woolen mittens were introduced that had a flap located in the palm of the mitten so a hunter could have his finger free to fire his weapon.

Scratch mitts do not separate the thumb, and are designed to prevent babieswho do not yet have fine motor controlfrom scratching their faces. However, they are usually not recommended anymore as they can prevent the newborn's natural behaviour of sucking on its hand and gaining tactile experience.

Corded mittens are two mittens connected by a length of yarn, string or lace, threaded through the sleeves of a coat. This arrangement is typically provided for small children to prevent the mittens becoming discarded and lost; when removed, the mittens simply dangle from the string just beyond the cuff of the sleeve.

References

References

  1. "Extreme Cold". Center for Disease control.
  2. "Safety Tips: Skiing (for Teens) – Nemours KidsHealth".
  3. Das, Subrata. (2010). "Performance of Home Textiles". Woodhead Publishing India Pvt. Limited.
  4. Hallmann, Aleksandra. (23 June 2017). "The Encyclopedia of Ancient History".
  5. (1873). "Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of London". Society of Antiquaries.
  6. (15 December 2006). "NATO Summit 2006". Rigasummit.lv.
  7. (1 December 2015). "The Latvian Folk Dress". Latvian Institute.
  8. "Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Latvia: National Costume". Am.gov.lv.
  9. Brandenburgh, Chrystel. (January 2010). "Textile Production and Trade in Dorestad". Dorestad in an International Framework: New Research on Centres of Trade and Coinage in Carolingian Times.
  10. "Falconry Mitten". The Mary Rose Trust.
  11. "Pair of Elizabethan gauntlet mittens at Dunham Massey, NT 934939". [[National Trust]].
  12. "Mitten". [[Museum of London]].
  13. "Native American Mittens & Gloves". NativeTech.
  14. "Viking Garment Construction". Cs.vassar.edu.
  15. "Knitted Mittens".
  16. Magazines, Hearst. (18 December 1930). "Popular Mechanics". Hearst Magazines.
  17. Clegg, Lisa. (6 February 2014). "The Blissful Baby Expert". Ebury Publishing.
  18. Modell, Stephanie. (14 May 2020). "100 Tips to Help Your Baby Sleep: Practical Advice to Establish Good Sleeping Habits". Summersdale Publishers Limited.
  19. Fitz-Desorgher, Rachel. (3 April 2017). "Your Baby Skin to Skin: Learn to trust your baby's instincts in the first year". Hodder & Stoughton.
  20. "idiot mittens definition – Dictionary – MSN Encarta". Encarta.msn.com.
  21. "idiot string".
  22. (20 April 2021). "Bernie Sanders' mittens, memes help raise $1.8M for charity".
  23. ""The three little kittens, they lost their mittens"".
  24. Room, Adrian. (1993). "The Naming of Animals: An Appellative Reference to Domestic, Work, and Show Animals, Real and Fictional". McFarland.
  25. Stephens, Gloria. (2001). "Legacy of the Cat". Chronicle Books.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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