Melt-the-ice-hat. In the 1940’s, Norwegians made and wore red pointed hats with a tassel as a form of visual protest against Nazi occupation of their country.
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Melt-the-ice-hat. In the 1940’s, Norwegians made and wore red pointed hats with a tassel as a form of visual protest against Nazi occupation of their country. Within two years, the Nazis made these protest hats illegal and punishable by law to wear, make, or distribute.
All proceeds from the sale of this pattern go to the immigrant aid agencies who will distribute the funds to those impacted by the actions of ICE.
#abolishice #iceout #knitting #breien #stricken https://www.ravelry.com/patterns/library/melt-the-ice-hat -
A angelacarstensen@mastodon.online shared this topic
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Melt-the-ice-hat. In the 1940’s, Norwegians made and wore red pointed hats with a tassel as a form of visual protest against Nazi occupation of their country. Within two years, the Nazis made these protest hats illegal and punishable by law to wear, make, or distribute.
All proceeds from the sale of this pattern go to the immigrant aid agencies who will distribute the funds to those impacted by the actions of ICE.
#abolishice #iceout #knitting #breien #stricken https://www.ravelry.com/patterns/library/melt-the-ice-hat@cookingroffa Which in turn has attracted attention here in Norway, today the national broadcaster wrote about the phenomenon. The hat was known as jøssinglue in Norwegian at the time, jøssing being a supporter of British intervention against the occupation. Today it's usually referred to as nisselue, or gnome hat.
https://www.nrk.no/innlandet/amerikanarar-strikkar-norske-motstandsnisseluer-mot-ice-1.17733546
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Melt-the-ice-hat. In the 1940’s, Norwegians made and wore red pointed hats with a tassel as a form of visual protest against Nazi occupation of their country. Within two years, the Nazis made these protest hats illegal and punishable by law to wear, make, or distribute.
All proceeds from the sale of this pattern go to the immigrant aid agencies who will distribute the funds to those impacted by the actions of ICE.
#abolishice #iceout #knitting #breien #stricken https://www.ravelry.com/patterns/library/melt-the-ice-hat@cookingroffa we're gonna need a lot of that.
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V viennawriter@literatur.social shared this topic