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There are so many unanswerable questions in life. Why are we here? What gives life meaning?

And, sometimes, the beginnings of an answer to those questions begins with a fiberglass cow.

Lisa Cohen lives in Hardwick, Massachusetts, a tiny town about 20 minutes from Sturbridge. As a fundraiser, Old Sturbridge Village, a living history museum, decided to put on a Cow Parade. Artists would decorate life-size cows, which would then be auctioned off.

“I could knit a sweater for a cow,” Cohen thought.

“I started giggling and I went to talk to my husband and I said, ‘Look, you need to talk me out of this. This is a bad idea. I don’t have time to do it. You have to talk me out of it.’”

Reader: he did not talk her out of it. Instead, he said “you should totally do it.” He even provided the name for her project: Yarning for the Past.

Along with a couple of hundred other artists, Cohen applied for one of 25 cows. She was chosen.

“Then I basically had to actually do this thing and make a sweater for a cow, as one does,” she said.

She did have a loose plan in mind.

“I live in a fairly small, rural agricultural town. We’re fighting to keep farmland so I wanted to knit a sweater that had all of these farming motifs and incorporated local wool that was spun from Hardwick sheep.

“Of course, I had no idea how I was going to actually pull it off. It’s not like you can go to Ravelry and search for a sweater for a life-size cow,” she said.

“But I figured if I had the measurements and a lot of patience, I could sort it out.”

MDK’s own Dana Williams-Johnson’s column about translating human sweater patterns for a four-legged creature offered some guidance.

“I found that at the beginning of this project and it helped me visualize the cross-section, and that was super helpful. It’s sort of the same measurements really, because 80% of the circumference is the back of the shoulders and 20% is the front, kind of, sort of.”

The bulk of the project was knitted in Alafoss Lopi—five pounds worth—because it is hard wearing and great for colorwork. Cohen knitted on size U.S. 10 needles. She tried 10.5s but they proved bulky enough to be hard to hold.

Another reason to choose Lopi is for its natural stickiness, which is useful when you opt to go the extra mile, steek your sweater, and turn it into a cardigan. For a cow.

The horn warmers, Cohen said, were not part of the original plan.

“Somebody in town had a relative who actually used to work at Old Sturbridge Village and had some yarn they spun from the sheep there. It was not quite sock yarn, but not DK, somewhere in the middle. It was too thin to use for the body, so I thought, ‘Well, I really wanted to use it.’”

And she did, even if they were still in process during her cow’s photo shoot.

This and header photo by Carley

Now that her cow is out in the wild, so to speak, the response has been amazing.

“People who know me (after they stop laughing), say ‘This is the best thing ever.’

“People online have just really loved it, and that’s been super exciting for me. You get the obligatory, ‘Do you take commissions?’ at which point I laugh right back at them.”

The great American writer Kurt Vonnegut, when asked about the meaning of life, would often say, “I tell you, we are here on Earth to fart around, and don’t let anybody tell you different.”

And what better way to do so than to work out how to knit a cardigan that celebrates rural life in order to clothe a fiberglass cow?

Cohen documented the entire process (including blocking, which required some creative problem solving and the repurposing of lawn furniture) on her blog.

If you’re in the area, you can see Yarning for the Past at the Old Sturbridge Village Visitor’s Center through September 28. All 25 cows will be on display on the property.

About The Author

Adrienne Martini, the author of Somebody’s Gotta Do It, would love to talk with you about the importance of running for elected office or about all of the drama of holding a seat on the Board of Representatives in Otsego County, New York. Adrienne has a newsletter, too.

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16 Comments

  • Love this. Well done!

  • Oh my goodness; the timing of this article is amazing! We are headed to Sturbridge today for a 2 week visit! I can’t wait to see, “Yarning for the Past” in person!

  • You’ve started my day here in Oslo Norway with an udderly milky mooing LAUGH!! Bravo! Inspiring, somehow or other!

  • What a great project from inception to completion. Well Done!!! Moo on.

  • You made my day! The sweater is lovely and as knitters we KNOW how much work it took. Bravo!

  • Holy Cow ! That’s impressive.

  • Brilliant! See you at the Hardwick Fair- can the cow come?

  • Roughly a million years ago, I was a dairy science major in Upstate New York. You cannot imagine how much I love this! Would you mind telling us what pattern(s) you pulled the motifs from? My grandchildren need sweaters with tractors and apples and all of the things. At least the ones I can fit on a small human, rather than cow, sized sweater.

  • This is so great! Congratulations on a wonderful idea and an amazingly successful out!

  • I love this!! A crazy amount of work and yarn We need this to make us smile through the chaos.

  • It would be great to see this sweater and horn warmers on the Wall Street Bull in front of the stock exchange.

    What a great memory maker for your community!

  • Love to come across something magical when I am visiting a place…..this will make alot of people smile…..

  • Insane. INSANE. Funny. Beautiful. Whimsical.
    So—how long did it REALLY take to knit this???

  • I LOVE this!!! I am so impressed with your success with this. Just Amazing!

  • Absolutely amazing! And I agree with Kurt Vonnegut

  • I love this story. Made my day

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