Oasis of calm, among 'Knitwits' at library

FALLS VILLAGE —On the Thursday evening before Christmas, a small group of women gathered at the David M. Hunt Memorial Library. They were quiet and intense, frowning in concentration as they applied themselves to their task.

After laboring in solidarity for a few minutes, Monica Connor broke the conversational ice. “I have Second Sock Syndrome,� she announced.

Connor was knitting a pair of socks. The first foot seemed complete; its creator was antsy about continuing on to the  next.

“I’m afraid to put it on,� she said, a faint grin playing about her face.

“It will be fine,� said group leader and resident knitting expert Akke Jasmine, who has been coaching, cajoling and comforting knitters for at least five years, once a week, at the library.

Jasmine refers to the group as “The Knitwits.�

It’s a pretty lively crew, in fact. Jasmine was working on mittens for a friend who teaches at North Canaan Elementary School. “The kids forget them and leave them all over,� she said. But she was available at the drop of a stitch to offer assistance.

Mary Elling, creating a sweater for a 3-year-old granddaughter, had a minor technological crisis. “Double-pointed needles terrify me,� she confessed.

Jasmine calmly demonstrated the proper technique, and the moment passed. “Good thing she’s little,� said Elling. “She might not get it until college.�

Another knitter commented on a sweater in production. “I think this is going to be too short.�

“It would be good for a teenager — they like them tight with a little bit of midriff showing,� replied Jasmine, neatly summing up the entire Britney Spears vogue.

The conversation ebbed and flowed. Current films were on the agenda; the violence of “Slumdog Millionaire� was a cause of concern. And while the topic of Indian cinema was alive, Connor noted that her son, Justin Rosini, a location manager for film production crews, had a small part in another film, 2006’s “The Namesake.�

“The director [Mira Nair] looked at his chubby face and said ‘I must have this face in my film.’� 

The Knitwits took breaks and indulged in cookies and cider, and more conversation. “People are busier than they think the week before Christmas,� mused Jasmine on the relatively small turnout. 

“Boy, is it the week before Christmas,� muttered Elling, manipulating the double-pointed needles.

The Knitwits meet at the library every third Thursday at 7 p.m. 

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