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About Ganseys

Filey gansey detailA gansey is a hardwearing, hand knitted, seamless woollen jumper which has been worn by fishermen around the coast of Britian for many years.

A tough weatherproof garment, usually navy blue, its purpose was more than just to keep the fishermen warm and dry. 

Each gansey has a unique pattern which varied from village to village and from family to family. If there was a shipwreck or accident the bodies washed up on the shore could be identified by their gansey as being from a particular village and family. In this way the fisherman could be returned to their family for burial.

It takes around five weeks to knit a gansey by hand. They were usually made by mothers, wives and sweethearts and the patterns were passed down the generations via word of mouth - they weren't written down.

The ganseys are knitted without seams, all in one piece on five or more small needles using very fine, hardwearing four or five ply wool. They are knitted very tightly to make them weatherpoof. The tighter the knitting, the more water and weatherproof it is.

The pattern is concentrated round the upper body for extra warmth and thickness. The stitch patterns, such as anchors, diamonds, cables, lightning, ropes and ladders, symbolised the everyday things in the fisherfolk's lives. Telling of their tools, harvest and the weather. It became traditional for the knitter to put in a number of 'mistakes' so the sweaters were personal to each member of the family.

Gansies were worn next to the skin with nothing underneath. A pure silk scarf was often worn around the neck to stop the wet wool chaffing the skin. Fishermen wore their gansies all the time, they were rarely washed.  Many had a 'Sunday best' specially for church and holidays which would have been decidely more fragrant! 

While the detailed designs may have varied from village to village, ganseys are a shared heritage across the Moray Firth, and their history provides an introduction to the area’s wider fishing heritage and links to other fishing areas, especially east coast fishing communities in Scotland and England, and across the North Sea.


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