“People don’t want these anymore” I’m talking about hand-knitted baby cardigans and blankets. What they really mean is, today’s grandmothers were not taught to knit. I remember a time when my kids were small and their two grandmothers started creating an abundance of shawls, booties and matinee jackets. I treasure those items and have never thrown them away. They represent the welcome of love as my kids entered the world. When we say people don’t want them anymore, this is not about what is fashionable, it is about a quiet loss of time, skills, and the passing down of love made by hand. When we get these pieces donated at Daadi we are passing on something special. Pre-loved items mean just that, the hands that made these did them with love, and we are passing that on. When new parents become aware of this, they do want them: why wouldn´t they? and we sell them quickly. If you are a mum and have nobody available to knit for your new baby, at Daadi we will find you somebody to make that gift of love. Please just ask us.Matinee jacket” gets its name from the word matinée (from the French matin meaning morning). In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, a matinée was a daytime social visit or outing—think afternoon calls, gentle promenades, or being wheeled out to be admired.So why the tiny jacket?Back then, babies—especially well-to-do ones—were taken out in the afternoon to be “shown” (very much a thing). The matinee jacket …









