

Two sequels - "Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom" (1984) and "Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade" (1989) - built a legend that has inspired theme parks, video games and mountains of merchandise.Ī fourth outing nearly two decades later, "Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull" brought the combined box office takings to nearly $2 billion. Produced by Lucas and directed by Spielberg, 1981's "Raiders of the Lost Ark" was a triumph at the box office and scooped four Oscars.
JAMIE RASKIN ANDREW CLYDE MOVIE
The beach brainstorms would make movie history. It was there, lounging on a Maui beach in 1977, that George Lucas and Steven Spielberg mulled ideas to follow their respective hits, "Star Wars" and "Jaws". "Knitting is everything to me - without it, well I don't know what I would have," she smiles, and the sound of clicking needles fills the air.įittingly for the globetrotting Indy, whose escapades have taken him from the Himalayas to Shanghai nightclubs, the project was born in Hawaii. On Shetland, locals first started exchanging knitwear for supplies like flour and sugar with passing fishermen centuries ago.īut in her armchair, needles aloft and scouring her book of patterns, Tindall says there is more to it than earning a living. "More egalitarian market conditions and fewer barriers to entry for makers mean that whilst more people are now buying craft, they are buying craft at a lower value," the report says.Īs a result, highly skilled crafters have to "differentiate their skill to justify their higher prices", it added.

Most crafters said they made less than £30,000 profit from sales in the last financial year. SkillsĬraft sales surged to over £3 billion in 2019, according to a report by the UK Craft Council in 2020.īut the average price per object decreased from £157 in 2006 to £124 in 2020. He regularly shares his creations on Instagram. About one million took up the craft since the start of the Covid pandemic.īernard attributed much of that interest to British Olympic gold-medallist diver Tom Daley, who was spotted knitting and crocheting during the Games. The 2021 Craft Intelligence Report found that seven million people in the UK now enjoy knitting.
JAMIE RASKIN ANDREW CLYDE PROFESSIONAL
"I have turned down so many people who have requested me to hand-knit an item," she said.Ī hand-knitter would have to earn between £400 to £500 ($505 to $631) a week to make a living, she estimates.ĭespite the decline in professional hand-knitting, there has been a surge of interest in the craft as buyers become more conscious of "slow fashion" and "ethical consumerism". Juliet Bernard, who represents the UK Hand Knitting Association, agrees that the pay for hand-knitted items does not make it viable for most people. "And if you're wearing wool, well, it's very environmentally friendly and it keeps reproducing. Knitting clothes - especially with soft, strong and lightweight Shetland wool - can reduce waste and protect the planet, she adds. Tindall, who says there is no substitute for practice and watching others at work, says she regularly wears one jumper that is more than 40 years old. Knitting circles and groups have helped to preserve traditional patterns and techniques such as the complex "Fair Isle" pattern, named after one of the islands in the Shetland archipelago.īut they have also become less popular over the years, as young people move on to more lucrative careers. "Once you've been paid, it's barely over the minimum wage." Cost "People don't really realize how long it takes to knit something," she said. Tindall once timed herself knitting a jumper and found it took about 90 hours, excluding the planning time. Knitting is a time-consuming craft that requires planning and patience. "You might get machine-knit stuff, but hand-knits? No." "I reckon in 10 years' time, you won't be able to come here and buy any hand-knitted stuff," she told AFP at her home north of the main Shetland town of Lerwick. Now Tindall and other locals fear the islands' once thriving hand-knitting tradition is facing extinction. But with the discovery of oil off the remote islands in the North Sea in the 1970s, mechanization and cheap imports pushed many into more lucrative professions.
