McKnittey Musings
Hollywood Knitting - Audrey Hepburn
Posted by Kelli Ladwig on
Besides being a knitter, Audrey Hepburn spoke 5 languages. During World War II, Hepburn's mother moved her to Arnheim, believing the Netherlands would remain neutral and safe. Hepburn acted as a courier for the Dutch Resistance and danced at fundraisers. She suffered from malnutrition at one point and because of this experience became an advocate for UNICEF.
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- Tags: consciously crafting, hollywood, knitting, knitting needles, knitting notion, social good, Vintage hollywood
Hollywood Knitting - Maureen O'Hara
Posted by Kelli Ladwig on
In memory of Maureen O'Hara, I found this photo of her working in her mending in a bed jacket and negligee across a bed covered in an amazing crochet coverlet. There is another photo in this series where she is sitting up and under the coverlet and seems to be really mending something.
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- Tags: consciously crafting, hollywood, knitting, knitting needles, knitting notion, social good, Vintage hollywood
Hollywood Knitting - Merle Oberon
Posted by Kelli Ladwig on
Merle Oberon knitting while Vivian Leigh and Laurence Olivier look on. Merle, nicknamed "Queenie," was born in 1911 in Bombay, India and was raised by her grandmother. Merle was best known as Cathy in "Wuthering Heights."
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- Tags: consciously crafting, hollywood, knitting, knitting needles, knitting notion, social good, Vintage hollywood
Hollywood Knitting - Myrna Loy
Posted by Kelli Ladwig on
We know her for her roles in romantic comedies like "The Thin Man" and "The Bachelor and the Bobby Soxer" but did you know that Myrna quit acting during WWII so she could focus on the war effort? She worked with the Navy and the Red Cross and was so outspoken as an anti-Nazi she made Hitler's blacklist.
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- Tags: consciously crafting, Crochet, hollywood, knitting, knitting needles, knitting notion, social good, Vintage hollywood
Hollywood Knitting - Bette Davis
Posted by Kelli Ladwig on
The great Bette Davis crocheting. She was the first female president of the American Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences. She was the highest paid woman in the United States in 1947 and 1949.
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- Tags: consciously crafting, Crochet, hollywood, knitting, knitting needles, knitting notion, social good, Vintage hollywood