• Home
  • Suggest A DIY
  • DIY Newsletter

Knitting

Free Patterns, Tutorials and Project Ideas

  • About CraftGossip
  • Our Network
    • Bath & Body Crafts
    • Candle Making Ideas
    • Crochet Ideas
    • Cross Stitch
    • Edible Crafts
    • Felting Patterns
    • Glass Art
    • Home & Garden Ideas
    • Indie Crafts
    • Jewelry Making
    • Kids Crafts
    • Knitting Patterns
    • Lesson Plans
    • Needlework
    • Party Ideas
    • Polymer Clay
    • Quilting Ideas
    • Recycled Crafts
    • Scrapbooking
    • Sewing Patterns
    • Card Making
    • DIY Weddings
    • Not Craft Ideas
  • Giveaways
  • Roundups
  • Store
  • Search

Why Do Knitters Have Beef with Hank Green?

September 12, 2025 by Sarah White

With all that’s going on in the world right now, I am here for a little knitting related controversy, and luckily the universe delivered in the form of a SciShow episode from Hank Green about knitting and physics. 

The very beginning of the video is likely to rile some knitters because he’s talking about the “oldest knitting object,” an 800-year-old sock. A producer for the show clarified that they were talking about this particular remnant of a sock, which is knit, but what’s commonly thought of as the oldest “knit” item, is not really knit at all. The technique used for those Egyptian socks was actually nålbindning, a process that makes loops with a single needle. Without an image of the sock in question there was confusion as to which sock fragment he was talking about.  

He also calls it simple to knit a sock, which, whether its nålbindning or not, isn’t actually simple, as anyone who has ever read the instructions for turning a heel will tell you. And the sample they were talking about is worked in two colors with two different stitch patterns, so it’s not like that’s a beginner project even without also turning a heel. 

Leaving that aside, the video talks about the ubiquity of knit fabric in the world while showing woven garments, labels a fabric of reverse stockinette stitch as stockinette and says knitting is “kind of like programming” when really that’s exactly what it is, and that’s just in the first two minutes of a ten minute video. 

It’s after that when he says why knit fabric behaves the way it does is “mostly of a mystery” really feels like they just didn’t ask knitters. Maybe we wouldn’t say that knit stitches have force fields that work toward being held under the least tension, but there are definitely knitters down through the ages who understand how knitting works and how to manipulate it to make the kinds of fabrics we want. 

Knitters the Internet over have stepped in to correct, clarify and call in Green and his producers, saying the show amounts to mansplaining knitting and does a disservice to the topic by saying that knitters have learned what we have about our craft mostly through trial and error and intuition, and only just now that scientists are using it to develop better packaging and soundproofing we’re seeing “there might be something useful here.”

Because all those knit fabrics that have kept people warm through the centuries aren’t useful? 

Producer Jenn left a long comment on the video responding to knitters who are rightly upset both by errors in fact and implications that knitting is simple or frivolous. As a knitter herself, she acknowledges the errors as technical mistakes made by non-knitters who worked on the video and attempts to simplify language (using words like knots and string). 

She also notes the video was a test to see if it attracted knitters to the show (it did) or if a more general population would be interested in topics like this. But it sounds like they really weren’t trying to get knitters to watch or they would have taken the time to make it more factual and not sound like they’re discounting the whole history of knitting as being some kind of happy accident. 

She writes: 

The experienced knitter in me can see how that line leaves out the mathematical complexity and skill that knitting can employ. The hobbyist knitter in me is grateful that knitting doesn’t have to be complex to be worthwhile. The SciComm producer in me knows that intuition, practice, trial, and error are exactly the way science happens, and it really can be as simple as that.

Of course this is a little thing with so much going on in the world, but it also feels like just another way men “discover” something that women have known about for centuries and decide it’s interesting when they can make it about science and not about “women’s work.”

Did you watch the video? (It’s linked at the top.) What do you think about this “controversy?” I’d love to hear your thoughts!

Next Pattern:

  • A Knit Blanket for Green Thumbs, Or Black Thumbs
  • Why Storebought Sweaters are Terrible
  • Why Does Stockinette Curl and Can You Fix It?
«
»

Have you read?

How To Do Kitchener Stitch: A Beginner-Friendly Guide To Grafting Knitting Seamlessly

Knit Summer Tops with Fun Necklines

Free Trauma Teddy Knitting Pattern – A Simple Comfort Bear To Knit And Donate

Vintage Knitted Lace Stole Pattern PDF – A Romantic 1950s Bridal Shawl

Knit a Little Scarf Full of Luxury

Categories

baby hat Baby Patterns Beginner Book Reviews cardigan Christmas CraftGossip Giveaways Craft News and Events Free Knitting Patterns Giveaways! Hats Knitting Articles Of Interest Knitting Patterns Knitting Technique & Ideas mittens Quick scarf shawl patterns socks Sweaters

Featured Posts

log cabin mitts

Try Out Log Cabin Knitting with These Free Mitts

Free Hat Pattern – Leija!

Explore Mosaic Knitting with the Pine Sweater

knit ruffles tricksy knitter

Pin of the Week: Ways to Knit Ruffles

Book Review – Bath Knits

RSS More Articles

  • Cross Stitch Ice Cream and Frozen Treats
  • 15 Charity Sewing Projects That Let You Sew Something Useful For A Good Cause
  • Sunflower Ribbon Embroidery Tutorials and Kits to Brighten Your Hoop
  • Decorating Mistakes That Make Your Living Room Feel Cluttered
  • Remembering Jill Smokler, Founder Of Scary Mommy
  • In the Garden Layer Cake – A Bloom-Filled Fabric Collection for Spring Sewing
  • How To Do Kitchener Stitch: A Beginner-Friendly Guide To Grafting Knitting Seamlessly
  • Pattern Review: Georgie Granny Square Bucket Hat Crochet Pattern
  • 12 Handmade Patriotic 4th of July Card Ideas
  • Shark Week Learning for Kids

Pick Your Blog

  • Sewing
  • Knitting
  • Quilting
  • Crochet
  • Home & Garden
  • Recycled Crafts
  • Scrapbooking
  • Card Making
  • Polymer Clay
  • Cross-Stitch
  • Edible Crafts
  • Felting
  • Glass Art
  • Indie Crafts
  • Kids Crafts
  • Jewelry Making
  • Lesson Plans
  • Needlework
  • Bath & Body
  • Party Ideas
  • Candle Making
  • DIY Weddings
  • Not Craft
  • Free Craft Projects

Copyright © 2026 · CraftGossip | Start Here | Contact Us | Link to Us | Your Editors | Privacy and affiliate policy