"Stuff" comes from the French word étoffe, which means "fabric." Historically, "stuff" referred to textiles that could be made into clothing, so they were ruling out the deceased wearing any garments made of non-wool fabric. Also: wool was incredibly important to the economy of England for centuries. Fabric was extremely valuable.The industrial revolution began in the textile industry. Fortunes were made in the mills of northern England. When you can make cloth more easily, it becomes cheaper, which means more clothing is manufactured, which means there are more rags which can become paper, which can become books, which can teach children to read.
@juniper88758 ай бұрын
Bless you @RoxanneRichardson, I paused the video to come down and comment about the way "stuff" was used. Fashion history nerds unite :)
@darcieclements48808 ай бұрын
@@juniper8875this is my favorite newly learned thing in a while. Gonna dive into the history after this
@kassywilson92762 ай бұрын
@@juniper8875 I came down to comments to make sure someone had said that, too!
@CatBarefield8 ай бұрын
Ceri being a hobby kid is such an endearing tidbit about her 😂
@katherineannerivera19268 ай бұрын
I got to visit a medical device factory (Cook Medical) where they had a clean room where a bunch of people were hand sewing heart stents and grafts
@VGlauren8 ай бұрын
The reason you can't make a crochet machine isn't necessarily because knitting is simpler than crochet, it's because knitting keeps all of the live stitches on hard anchor point (in the case of hand knitting, a needle, and in the case of machine knitting, a series of hooks and pins that hold each individual stitch in place.) These hard anchor points make it easy for a machine to precisely pick up a live stitch and work into it. Crochet on the other hand only has a single live stitch, and you make the next stitch by pushing the hook through the fabric in a precise spot. The lack of hard anchor points that knitting has make it really hard for a machine to be able to accurately target the right spot. Without hard anchor points for every stitch, the fabric is flexible, and there isn't a way for a machine to be able to reliably insert the hook at the same exact spot every time.
@bcase53288 ай бұрын
Machines can't do all knitting stitch styles. The (knitting) "Nupp" stitch still can't be duplicated by a machine. The technique of the craft "Nålbinding" can't be done by a machine.
@TheBusyJane8 ай бұрын
This.
@darcieclements48808 ай бұрын
We have found the true use for ai androids at last.
@thatkidmorganmariah7 ай бұрын
It might not be *because* knitting is simpler than crochet, but loops are factually simpler than knots.
@fantasticalfascination8 ай бұрын
This is the perfect episode to listen to while crocheting a blanket!
@c1osmo8 ай бұрын
Yep, knitting and crochet are definitely textile. Hank is wearing a knitted jumper, Ceri a knitted hoodie.
@denisehunley95838 ай бұрын
right! my knitterly heart was pumping so hard for this one!
@booklover9008 ай бұрын
same but knitting
@Favian28148 ай бұрын
Yes! That’s what I’m doing too!
@lisanorwoodtreefarm8 ай бұрын
I was very surprised by how long it took for knitting/crochet to come up lol y'all should check out Abby Cox's video essays about the downfall of hats, and also the one about historical laundry and how linen shifts managed hygiene for European
@KathrynsRavens8 ай бұрын
There's a fabric often called Lindsey-woolsey that's linen and wool that sometimes was also called stuff. Even in Victorian England stuff referred to some woven fabrics. Also, a Monmouth cap is fulled/felted and they're so comfy and cozy! They're also pretty water resistant
@GiddyGarlos8 ай бұрын
Crochet also involves picking up the yarn from a variety of angles to form those loops, which is less predictable than knitting. Once robots can reliably "see" where the yarn is and pick it up correctly each time, we might have a crocheting machine on our hands. Until then, granny squares can only come from grannies (or us grannies at heart ❤)
@nataliefoley11178 ай бұрын
15:15 I've heard this is why Converse have fuzzy bottoms - so they can be considered slippers for tariffs
@wyattlewis40698 ай бұрын
And it's a significant reduction in tariffs, from over 30 percent to 3-13 percent according to Puget Sound University
@kida4star8 ай бұрын
Fiber nerd here, I loved this episode. Especially Ceri’s fact. Love this! Also, I think the history of textiles inspiring tech is fantastic and worth exploring.
@Steph-zo5zk8 ай бұрын
Wow I want to watch a whole documentary about those hand woven stents, like how do they make it, what are the qualities that make it more suitable than other textiles, who figured it out and how? I'm very interested in both medicine and textile history so I can't believe I never heard of this. Thanks Ceri!!
@osmia7 ай бұрын
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@missl17753 ай бұрын
Me too! Commenting here so that if anyone finds one later and shares it here, I can find out to watch it!
@nesmarilivengood63058 ай бұрын
Hank, when the needle goes down, the bobin wraps around the working thread to keep it in place
@thezaftigwendy6 ай бұрын
Actually, a hook under the sewing machine bed grabs the needle thread, making a loop which it pulls over the entire bobbin, then when the needle goes up, the lifter arm re-tightens the needle thread, which pulls up on the bobbin thread, locking the two threads together in between the layers or fabric.
@anarchyneverdies35674 ай бұрын
@@thezaftigwendy I'm a professional seamstress and I'd have just accepted his "it's very complicated" answer 😂😂❤❤❤
@victoriaeads61268 ай бұрын
I recently noticed (as I was finally moving them onto the felt textile banner 😉) that Sam designed some of the Bizarre Beasts pins. I love them, Sam!
@Dizographies8 ай бұрын
Can you please do an episode about learning/Memory (if you haven't already)
@halem65808 ай бұрын
Oh hey that's my question! Thanks for answering it. As someone who both knits and crochets, I just keep failing wrap my head around why one is easier to replicate than the other. I wonder if maybe Tunisian crochet would be easier (I've never done it, so I don't really know how it compares to regular crochet)?
@kray38837 ай бұрын
It would have the same problem. You basically do one row of regular crochet and then one row of almost-knitting and just keep alternating.
@thezaftigwendy6 ай бұрын
To make a crochet machine, you'd have to have some sort of hooks that hold the closed top Vs of completed stitches in place and other hooks that draw the new stitches through. It would be extremely complicated, like a combination knitting/sewing machine. It's possible, but no company is going to pay for it as long as they can pay poor women poverty wages to get expertly crocheted pieces.
@LawTaranis8 ай бұрын
Ceri and i would have been "friends" (picking up on each other's hobbies, but almost never talking about normal things)
@PinkThing-m5j8 ай бұрын
40:00 the hobbies are what keep me going too!
@Alice_Walker8 ай бұрын
Ceri!!!! 🤯🤯🤯🤯What an AMAZING fact. I had to immediately rewind and relisten to it! 💜
@yeat72648 ай бұрын
fun language fact about fabric: In danish it's called "stof" which is related to the english word "stuff", as in things. The problem is that the danish word for drugs is "stoffer" which is just plural of "stof", so if you have many different types of fabric, you might accidentally say that you have a lot of drugs. Usually context makes it make sense, but still lol
@anarchyneverdies35674 ай бұрын
I enjoy fabric as well as stuffs (I'm in a legal state😂), so this would be the bane of my existence 😂😂 i have to buy both weekly. That's hilarious
@reginat57498 ай бұрын
The first sewing machines were basically "simple" crochet-machines, that used a chain-stich to join fabrics together with one thread. Newer ones loop two threads around each other to do that.
@saraa34184 ай бұрын
Textiles are a special interest of mine so my husband had to listen to this in 5 minute increments punctuated by 20 minute lectures about textile history.
@katfangtastic14204 ай бұрын
"It's got everything - it's like New York's hottest club!" 😂 I was chuckling when I heard this SNL Stefon reference 😄
@victoriaeads61268 ай бұрын
Veritasium recently did a really cool video on how sewing machines work and how they were developed.
@osmia7 ай бұрын
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@prophetessoftroy8 ай бұрын
Best example I’ve personally experienced of shoes with cloth on the bottom (so they’re taxed as slippers instead): Converse All-Stars. Particularly after Nike bought the mark and moved manufacturing to China. The tariff is a big part of why there’s that felt layer on the bottom of the sole.
@W9e0e2e3e4pizza8 ай бұрын
My grandfather died of that exact congenital heart defect, his was a very small known issue that never got fixed and eventually killed him. He lived beyond the average life expectancy of someone with the issue. Thanks to the American healthcare system it was a known issue that never got solved.
@mylesadams4791Ай бұрын
Tuned into this while working on my current crochet project! Fun fact knowing that crochet machines are terribly ineffective and basically don't exist means every single crochet item on Earth was made by hand by a skilled craftsperson! Something to think about when you see crochet items in huge mass produced stores.
@slagathor918 ай бұрын
I can validate the thoughts about basketry. I just got back from a trip to Washington D.C. and the Smithsonian Modern Art Museum had an entire textile exhibit and one room was dedicated to basketry!
@julescaru85918 ай бұрын
Love the show guys !
@ZaneFall8 ай бұрын
Machine crocheting is also more difficult because instead of "holding" the live loops in a set place like you can do in knitting, you have to have an ability to sense where to insert the hook in a previous stitch in order to start it. This adds complexity that is technically possible but requires more nuanced elements like optical sensors.
@kassywilson72928 ай бұрын
textile: filaments woven, knit (using the term loosely), or matted into a fabric(cated) sheet. Stuff was a specific kind of textile I believe it was a kind of canvas like textile made from wool.
@trc.968 ай бұрын
hehe im finishing a secret vest for my boyfriend today!! what a perfect episode to have on 😄🕺👍
@kelleenbrx66498 ай бұрын
Stoff is a material/cloth in German...20:30
@ninadgadre39342 ай бұрын
Ceri is a true master of deduction, freakin boss
@kingsrook98668 ай бұрын
Sam, your washing machine goes "kechunk kechunk kechunk" because it is unbalanced. A washing machine is a centrifuge for clothing, and the astronauts use centrifuges all the time. All unbalanced centrifuges vibrate an make noises. hence rumble motors for game controllers and mobile phones
@disky018 ай бұрын
Sam, that was a great fact, don't sweat it.
@konohappiness74818 ай бұрын
I love scishow tangents✨
@annasfischer8 ай бұрын
nudist moon colony? also I am a weaver and former hobby kid too, and I am listening to this while weaving a scarf for my sister!
@bcase53288 ай бұрын
What about Star Trek's sonic shower as a basic idea for a washing machine on the moon, as a first stage?
@bcase53288 ай бұрын
Historically, clothes were sometimes dry cleaned by using fullers earth. "Fuller's earth is a term for various clays used as an absorbent, filter, or bleaching agent. Products labeled fuller's earth typically consist of palygorskite (attapulgite) or bentonite.[1] Primary modern uses include as absorbents for oil, grease, and animal waste (cat litter), and as a carrier for pesticides and fertilizers." Wikipedia en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fuller%27s_earth
@osmia7 ай бұрын
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@AmandaBrooks-j8i8 ай бұрын
I'm still a hobby kid! 😂 Re: stuff, I do know that "stuff" was a term for a particular type of fabric historically, although I don't remember if it was used that way in the 1600s.
@SydneyLarrikin-ci2vz15 күн бұрын
I looked up the Bolivian cardiac device weavers... these devices are moving art in themselves!
@richardreardon99488 ай бұрын
when people were buried it was just for long enough for the flesh to decay away. After that they were exhumed and placed in a crypt so yeah, the were handling the corpses a few years later.
@HotelPapa1008 ай бұрын
As for "stuff" meaning "material" in general: I think this is the origin of the word. Only in recent times it has become a somewhat derogatory term, meaning "all the things cluttering up my room". Its German equivalent "Stoff" still mostly has that meaning. it's the root of many German chemical names: "Wasserstoff" (hydrogen): The material used to make water (hydrogen means something similar), "Stickstoff" (nitrogen), material that will suffocate you. "Sauerstoff" (oxygen) the material that makes acids. In addition, it also is the German word for 'fabric', very fitting for today's episode. (It's also a slang term for drugs.)
@jacquelynsmith23518 ай бұрын
My dad's heart hole didn't close as he grew up. And I'm watching this as I'm knitting some lace. Knitting machines can't make Estonian lace with nupps, which was developed as a way to prove it was handmade
@erikakrause30448 ай бұрын
As a professional seamstress I was skeptical of hanks fact of water dissolvable fiber. Can you imagine the possibilities?! My coworkers and I have often dreamed of a solution that could dissolve thread to aid in seam ripping
@kray38837 ай бұрын
Exactly how I knew it was false, they would be selling that for five billion dollars per spool to do basting.
@ThisIsATireFire7 ай бұрын
Really? A quick search says that "superior threads" has one they call "Vanish". Amazon has a water soluble thread too. But the Flemmish origin story is the false part.
@madtownluthier33254 ай бұрын
This makes me wonder what the soluble stitches are made of. I’ve had a lot of dental surgeries where the stitches dissolve and fall out on their own
@redheadfaerie8 ай бұрын
I usually listen on Spotify but you came up in my feed and I know youtube pays better so I'll try watching in the future, but I listed to my podcasts on 1.5 speed and it is so weird to hear people's natural cadence, but also for the podcast to last its actual length. Hahaha
@osmia7 ай бұрын
You can change your settings in the KZbin player to speed it up
@osmia7 ай бұрын
Luv the thumbnail
@sparpie5 ай бұрын
Peeping the Jarvis Johnson merch
@athanatic8 ай бұрын
I have a friend from High School with a Dacron patch in his heart wall because of a similar congenital defect.
@LeroyMustang8 ай бұрын
Hmm, I think a huge discussion on the importance of textiles to most of human innovation is missing here. The first paper, papyrus, was a textile. Also our relatively bald hides required us inventing clothing for reasons of temperature regulation, so our spreading , and population booms, cities, and most human advancement was tied to our ability to produce fabric/textiles instead of being only reliant on pelts. If you read about the importance of clothing it could be said that besides farming innovations, textiles were the most important innovations. Now we might say computers BUT most of the advancements in programming and assembly were directly preceded by inventions for the industrial manufacturing of textiles. Including highly complex looms which could be fed many different patterns “programming“ to embroider automatically. So maybe much more important than assumed by most.
@childkreature80396 ай бұрын
I knew the fabric on the soles of shoes thing was true because when I had to get cheap shoes as a kid, the fabric on the bottom almost caused many playground injuries because they were so slippery
@madtownluthier33254 ай бұрын
Enough that the government deemed them slipper-y too.
@kassywilson9276Ай бұрын
11:02-11:10 weave a story.
@nancyreid87298 ай бұрын
Many shirts are non-woven, i.e. knitted. Crochet also creates fabric, as do a bunch of other non-traditional techniques like nalbinding.
@toddturnbaugh44518 ай бұрын
The medical devices spoken of are nothing new and have been around for at least 2 decades if not longer, the hospital I worked at was, at the time, a clinical research site for these devices prior to their approval.
@פנינהפרנס6 ай бұрын
Interesting. We have machine " crocheted" hats and yarmulkas that look like the real thing. I have no idea how they are manufactured but apparently the are machines that can do basic crochet stitches.
@kassywilson92762 ай бұрын
Knitting and crochet are kind of like algebra and geometry - very few people are really good at both.
@HotelPapa1008 ай бұрын
Crocheting machines for simple designs do exist, they just aren't called that. The very first sewing machines locked the stitch under the fabric by crocheting the loops in a chain stitch. The same principle is still used in machines used to close paper sacks. They are locked in a chain of loops. If you get hold of the end of te string you can pull and open the sack. Yet, just pulling through the final string will lock the stitch, it then has to be loosened deliberately. Sewing machines use a different technique today, employing an additional thread and a circular "shuttle" bobbin underneath. The edge of narrow textiles (ribbons) is also crocheted to lock the looped weft. It can again, be a simple chain stitch, but there are also more involved stitches used to make more robust edges that don't unravel that easily when worn down. And then there is what is called "weft knitting" which is, if you look at the "knitted" part more closely, really a crocheting technique. What is NOT done meachanically are the lace-like crocheting techniques. The doilies many associate first with crocheting. Thanks for a fascinating episode. Your podcast aways sweetens my commute.
@kray38837 ай бұрын
I've always felt kind of dubious about calling just chain stitch by itself as crochet... Sort of like casting on and immediately binding off probably shouldn't count as knitting. I feel like to be crochet probably requires at least a little bit of single/double/nth crochet stitch in there.
@kameradave8 ай бұрын
If the space station had a spin cycle, it would make the whole space station spin slowly in the other direction. Newton! Equal and opposite! That's how reaction wheels work to rotate spacecraft.
@Leabluebell8 ай бұрын
Astronaut Spin Cycle™ is a pretty good band name tho 😂
@David-bs6bv8 ай бұрын
The chicken tax and the inport of small trucks
@matthewring83012 ай бұрын
Paper is pressed similar to felt, not woven. Papyrus and maybe the ancient Chinese equivalent, I think were woven.
@rebekahcastro54308 ай бұрын
Weird but hank why when I watch a Scishow Tangents episode I get only Scishow Tangents recommendations for the next few days it's wild
@chrismacmillan90006 ай бұрын
So what I heard is…Hank is going to crochet some perks for the P4A this year?!? Anyone else get that subtext??
@TiggerIsMyCat12 күн бұрын
I assume the reason the age to wear the cap was 6 (which I guessed correctly, btw), was because that was the age that children were "breeched" (or at least boys were, given that breeches were male garments, the concept was the same for girls, but I don't know if they used the same word), basically it's the point where they were considered, essentially, potty trained, so were given their first set of adult clothing (basically if they were still in diapers they wore easily cleanable and changeable white dresses, and after that, up until about the mid/late 1700s, they were immediately put in miniature versions of adult clothes). So if adult men were made to wear the wool caps, once a boy was breeched, it became part of his wardrobe just like every other clothing item an adult man would wear. "Childhood" as a separate and distinct phase of life (that required its own type of clothing to facilitate it) wasn't a concept until reforming philosophers of the Enlightenment brought it up as something necessary for proper development in the 1700s, and wasn't commonly subscribed to until around the early/mid 20th century.
@JHaven-lg7lj7 ай бұрын
MedLifeCrisis recently did a video on the patent hole in babies’ hearts
@Conus4268 ай бұрын
helloooo new york!!!!!!!!!!!!! how are y'all how are how is everyyone!!!? MR WORLDWIDE
@keanubartolata34655 ай бұрын
molecular textiles... did i miss the tiny matters segment?
@ArtichokeHunter8 ай бұрын
Is textile not related to techne, meaning skill? I thought that as the link between leaving and text.
@thatkidmorganmariah8 ай бұрын
wait just one moment......... do women not get real pockets that can conceal even a small hand due to some stupid tariff?? can we discus this? or can i get a link to somewhere to research this properly?
@paulkinzer76618 ай бұрын
When the woolen caps law was passed -- and repealed -- England had a queen, not a king. Just saying. I don't see Elizabeth I wearing a woolen cap, so that exception for nobles was a good idea.
@curiousfirely8 ай бұрын
Ah ha ha! I'm glad I'm not the only one to notice this. Science nerdery and history nerdery are not mutually exclusive! ❤
@beamteammom54318 ай бұрын
I’m pretty sure stuff referred to a type of fabric and later came to mean all kinds of other things.
@victoriaeads61268 ай бұрын
I feel like "textile" has a clinical, industrial feel, while "fabric" is more general and impersonal. "Cloth" or "material" feels more neutral, while specific adjectives are what give the warmth or lack thereof to descriptions of specific items. A soft silk night shirt sounds better than a scratchy woolen night shirt, for example.
@victoriaeads61268 ай бұрын
That's why crochet is better 😁
@torisandifer5188 ай бұрын
something going into a black hole undergoing spaghettification then becoming long, could theoretically then be woven together into a textile....
@geoffreymartin63638 ай бұрын
Hankbucks inflation at an all time high
@natepellegrino79748 ай бұрын
HEY
@andrewspohrer71838 ай бұрын
Looks like someone is a real gumshoe
@AdventurerJae4 ай бұрын
As someone who wants to get into politics, this was an eye opening video about the truth behind some of the decision made in office. I'm a non violent person and I always try use words to resolve a situation. But thinking of myself within this scenario, I would have choose the same outcome.. Which feels disugusting, but after hearing that phone call; it makes any other option sound unaffected. Tham you Michelle for going through this 💜
@MrReaper53 ай бұрын
A braid is just a ribbon made out of hair, so it's fabric.
@yellowflowerorangeflower57068 ай бұрын
Cool
@jbrecken8 ай бұрын
I don't think Ceri should paint her wall that color - it would just make the room too dark.
@nottsork2 ай бұрын
Sometimes root of words are lost , when words are used together so a fabricated Textile or tetutre , eventually gets shortened using slang , so fabricated texture , is obvious how to drop parts of words off ,
@jebus4568 ай бұрын
wudup!?
@Followmybliss20138 ай бұрын
Banana Republic used to be a great clothing and just odd stuff store until I assume it was bought by someone who turned it into a clone of crappy clothes stores.
@UhOhUmm8 ай бұрын
Crocheting machines are not impossible to make, a modern robot arm can easily manipulate a crochet needle. The problem is that the economy of scale doesn't exist, you would have to program each different item all over again which would take many expensive automation technician hours, but most crochet items are low volume and are mostly appealing because they were hand made.
@theemeralddragon92248 ай бұрын
I love yall but 2 fashion kids have decided that leather is a textile (we aren't experts we're just opinionated)