Do you say Snood like 'hood' or Snood like 'food'? || Crocheting a vintage 1940s snood for lazy days

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  • Опубликовано: 25 окт 2024

Комментарии • 173

  • @JennySpaghetti
    @JennySpaghetti 3 года назад +87

    Snood is like food. My bigger gripe, though is the sheer volume of people who call things snoods that are actually cowls. Makes trying to find patterns a giant pain. (As an aside, there are many places in the UK where hood and food rhyme)

    • @oopsallbugs
      @oopsallbugs 3 года назад +5

      I thought I was crazy because I mentioned, "oh, that's a cowl" and several people insisted that the pattern in question wasn't a cowl haha

    • @denisegore1884
      @denisegore1884 3 года назад +4

      The cowl thing annoys me too. I say snood like food but my friend says it like hood.

    • @eshchory
      @eshchory 3 года назад +4

      I am so with you on the cowl thing but when I make a remark people glare at me like I am some snobbish alien.

    • @harpersmythe658
      @harpersmythe658 2 года назад

      Agree, also with the gripe thing. Also, in the UK we say bootees, with emphasis on eeeee. But some will say boo tiz. Sooo annoying

  • @chrishicks5359
    @chrishicks5359 3 года назад +76

    My Mom, who was born in 1910 and was in her 30s and 1940, pronounced it snood like as in food. She never wore them but she is scarves the same way as a snood. I remember her hair tied up kind of like the Rosie the riveter . I am almost 75 and I remember some of mom‘s friends wearing them when I was very little like three which would’ve been in 1950 or so. It is so cool that you enjoy this kind of thing and I have the same kind of problem I hate my hair and my face but when I try to put it up in a ponytail or even a French twist or something it it gives me a headache. So I’m going to try crocheting this.

    • @kathleenhensley5951
      @kathleenhensley5951 Год назад +2

      I am just a little young and yes, that is how my mother pronounced it.. it is one of those fashions that should have never been lost it is so practical.

  • @RetroClaude
    @RetroClaude 3 года назад +65

    This pattern was one of my first vintage crochet projects! I used to wear it to protect my brush out on the tube. Every time a train rushed past my meticulously sculpted waves were ruined 😢 back in the days when I left the house of course!

  • @TheMetatronGirl
    @TheMetatronGirl 3 года назад +75

    This is why English is so hard for people to learn. Two words, hood & food are pronounced differently but look the same. My grandmother, who got married in 1940 pronounced snood like food. Yours looks lovely! Somehow I always look like I have a sack on my head, but I wear them anyway. I’m definitely looking forward to your organization video…I need all the help I can get! 😆

    • @kaizma88
      @kaizma88 3 года назад +5

      Snood - Food... A nice brown one to match your hair would be nice also, in fact, I believe I will make a brown one myself! I also get headaches when my hair is tied back. The white one goes lovely with your 1940's sweater!

    • @ColorJoyLynnH
      @ColorJoyLynnH 3 года назад +1

      My hair is past my knees and I also get headaches. My folkloric Bellydance teacher pronounces hers like food.
      I have a few of these. I also wear berets the same way a lot. I prefer berets knit the true French way, as short-row wedges connected at the end. They are knit loosely in very fine yarn and felted, and worn with purl side out. The perfect hat, when not stiff like cardboard as many sold in the US are. It’s really more like a tam if knit in the round, and those don’t drape as nicely.
      Anyway... came here to find the pocket swap???

  • @melyndaritcheson8114
    @melyndaritcheson8114 3 года назад +23

    According to Bing Crosby in White Christmas, and Rosemary Clooney in the commentary of a special edition of the same, it is Snood like Food. 😊

    • @kirbyw.3451
      @kirbyw.3451 3 года назад +3

      Bing Crosby is who I immediately thought about too!

    • @annie4424
      @annie4424 3 года назад +4

      That was the reference I was going to give, too!

  • @Mihier
    @Mihier 3 года назад +17

    I've been crocheting and sewing snoods for well over 10 years ... from the finest yarn, ribbons, pearls. For many different eras and in a number of forms. For me - for others. I love snoods 😊

  • @alisonmarsh5791
    @alisonmarsh5791 3 года назад +23

    I say Snood, like food. I think they should definitely make a comeback. I love mine for all the reasons you listed. It's great to keep your hair back without tying it up. I love my short hair but I like having a pretty way to keep it out of my face. I was wondering about learning to make my own eventually so the video could not have been more timely.

  • @shortsweettoo
    @shortsweettoo 3 года назад +12

    I have barrettes with snoods attached to the bottom to keep my hair crisp and tidy during the day. Plan is to make the large snoods for when I start watching my grandson next month. Great way to keep longer hair feeling like its short. Great job.

  • @ratbrain6991
    @ratbrain6991 3 года назад +7

    As someone who spends hours over an embroidery project and as someone who suffers from migraines snood would be SO helpful to have when working so I can keep my hair out of my face w little worry!!

  • @poppybell87
    @poppybell87 3 года назад +5

    Scottish person here. I pronounce hood, food and snood in the same way, so it doesn't make a difference for me! 😂 Fabulous project as always 😊

    • @MeabhR
      @MeabhR 3 года назад +2

      Same here in the north of Ireland - I was so confused by the title of this video haha!

  • @dee-annegordon5959
    @dee-annegordon5959 3 года назад +8

    I've always heard it pronounced snood like food.
    I love these and wear them regularly. In fact I wore one to work just yesterday.
    I currently own 5 of various colours and weights, and one even has small white "pearl" beads crocheted into it. I can't take credit for making them though since I don't crochet. Luck for me, my cousin does and is happy to make me all the snoods I want.

  • @FlybyStardancer
    @FlybyStardancer 3 года назад +10

    I’ve always heard it pronounced it like food! And I definitely could use some of my own. I have a beret from a friend that I tend to wear like a snood when my hair is taped up.

  • @m.kayewilliams2550
    @m.kayewilliams2550 3 года назад +3

    So interesting! I am in my 70s and my mother, aunt, and grandmother wore and made these and they pronounced it like hood, snood. I'll be this was a regional variant. They were from East Texas in the US. My grandmother, Anna Taylor, usually crocheted these with a thick cotton crochet thread, not yarn. She also made their dresses to match and they looked like models when they were young! In the early 50s, they all cut their hair shorter so they didn't need them.

  • @eshchory
    @eshchory 3 года назад +1

    I wore a silk snood for my wedding. It looked lovely but was also very practical and comfortable.

  • @heathermade7294
    @heathermade7294 3 года назад +10

    My grandma calls them snood like food. I've always wanted to make one of these, but I only know how to knit!

    • @Rotten_Ralph
      @Rotten_Ralph 3 года назад +4

      I have a knitting book that has one, so I know that they can be knit. I might need to make another, my first one is a little to tightly knit, because all of my knitting is to tight.

  • @bobcatnm
    @bobcatnm 3 года назад +2

    I crochet. I made a friend a grocery bag for her birthday. The mesh bag type. We talked a month later but she couldn’t figure out how to wear the snood I made for her…….. fml

  • @beauclausen441
    @beauclausen441 3 года назад +3

    I've always thought it rhymed with 'food' but rhyming it with 'hood' makes it sound a lot more like something that goes on your head, so I will be adopting that pronunciation, thanks! Now to finally get around to making my own???

  • @Bluebelle51
    @Bluebelle51 3 года назад +2

    I've been wearing snoods almost my entire adult life. It's pronounced like "food". I started out wearing them when I went riding motorcycles so I never had to worry what my hair looked like when I pulled the helmet off. A snood and a couple of bobby pins to keep it in place when I took off the helmet, and I was good to go in anywhere without helmet head.
    Now I wear them when I'm cooking, painting or anything else I don't want to drag my (extremely) long hair through.

  • @Ellaodi
    @Ellaodi 3 года назад +1

    It's such a great idea! I don't crochet, but I do have an epic crap load of rectangular oval and circular hand crocheted doilies that are soft and pliable just like a snood.... thinking some nice floral desgins might protect the hair and function as an accessory too with just. alittle ribbon wound through the perimeter....🤔

  • @ymanajohnson585
    @ymanajohnson585 3 года назад +1

    It turned out nicely and I can see that it's so functional for you. I, too, get headaches with any kind of pressure on my head or my face. But since my hair is short, I don't have a weight problem from my hair. Although, I'm sure some of my visitors would like to see my frizz covered up during those times before my hair cuts. Thanks for sharing.

  • @lmchatwin77
    @lmchatwin77 3 года назад +2

    From my understanding an elongated double crochet, is worked into the stitch 2 rows below. It sorta sandwiches in the row directly below.

  • @angelinacrafts5385
    @angelinacrafts5385 3 года назад

    It is great that you had a pattern. I have looked so many times with no luck. Now that I have grown my hair out again I need to restart my search. Vote for 'food'.

  • @crystilmurch5659
    @crystilmurch5659 3 года назад +1

    I am definitely going to follow suit and make one too! Great idea and super cute. :) Also, yes, snood like food. Also looking forward to the organizational video! :)

  • @binglemarie42
    @binglemarie42 2 года назад

    When I crochet cables from modern patterns, the elongated triple crochet is basically a triple with an added chain at the beginning. It’s worked like this: wrap the yarn around the hook twice as for an ordinary triple crochet, then chain one, then complete the stitch as usual.

  • @theweatherisaokay4964
    @theweatherisaokay4964 3 года назад +1

    Wow! I'm going to make a slightly smaller mesh holes, to use when I'm cooking so I can take care of my lion like hair. The shower cap that I used is too hot when I'm wearing them for a long time especially when I'm making breads. Thank you for this vintage idea!🥰🥰🥰

  • @orangew3988
    @orangew3988 3 года назад +2

    I deffo say snood with the longer vowel. But also, my reference is the early 2000s computer game called Snood with little aliens, which basically works like the bubbles game (ie you make three making ones touch, and they disappear, with the aim of the game being to clear the board). Snood, the game, was a big deal in my family in around 2003, lol. Leader boards and all sorts.

  • @lauraraines767
    @lauraraines767 3 года назад +2

    Thank you for another calming informative video. I got myself some tea as well, but it's ice tea because it's already near 90 degrees. How nice your snood looks, I made myself one out of thread cotton last month.

  • @druidsongevergreens
    @druidsongevergreens 3 года назад

    That book is incredible

  • @kjtherrick4031
    @kjtherrick4031 3 года назад +3

    Love it! Like Chris Hicks, I've heard and used snood as in food. I don't particularly have the hair for these, but I think I'm going to see about making one. Thanks for showing how!

  • @aurorapapillon4883
    @aurorapapillon4883 3 года назад +7

    I've made like 10 Snoods, I don't use elastic, I made mine drawstring so they last longer and are more adjustable, I use 2 bobby pins for extra security, more if I'm going to be active.
    I use my snood for helping with headaches, disguising bad hair days, keeping my hair out of the way for things like gardening and cooking. I find it's excellent for keeping my hair hair out of the way for yoga and turns my hair into a pillow when I lay on my back! It's fantastic.
    Then you see versions of the snood sprinkled through portaits across history, it's truly a timeless piece that use can wear for a lot of history bounding. Google Victorian hairnet, and you will find patterns for snoods and portaits of elderly or bookish women wearing a snood.

  • @wandarutledge4260
    @wandarutledge4260 3 года назад +1

    I like it thank you, I love that you are doing your work while you explain it good to see someone actually crocheting and knitting in the podcast thank you

  • @cynthiadugan858
    @cynthiadugan858 3 года назад +13

    Both of my grandmas (born in the 19 teens) pronounced it as “food”.
    I love how yours turned out! So pretty. I have several that I would love to wear but my hair is so dang heavy they won’t stay on. Maybe I’ll try your pattern with some 1” wide elastic and see how that works.

    • @paulakb3614
      @paulakb3614 2 года назад

      Sew a couple wig clips around the top. It works very well.

  • @pauladavitt7554
    @pauladavitt7554 3 года назад +9

    This was the reason I tried to learn crochet. I love my snoods and wanted to make my own. Me and crochet don’t get along 😭. I’ve been trying for a couple of years now and can’t get the hang of it.

    • @vysgiyi
      @vysgiyi 3 года назад

      I am exactly the same with crochet. But I decided to make this French Market bag which is both a beginner project and super useful and it has you making the same sort of pattern for the bag as it does here for the snood. I found this tutorial and my bag came out amazing. But you can def use it to make this project! I know I will! I hope it helps! ruclips.net/video/5oNVWjXrtM8/видео.html

    • @rd6203
      @rd6203 3 года назад +2

      Same! I've tried over and over since childhood, but my brain *does not compute* past the chaining bit. 😥
      I recently tried again, likely inspired from watching this channel, and no dice

    • @vysgiyi
      @vysgiyi 3 года назад +1

      @@rd6203 totally get it. I find that it’s that I’m holding my tension completely wrong and making them too loose. And then I find that I’m unsure where to put the hook in the loop after I make a chain. I’m usually cussing the whole time. But I watched some RUclips videos on how to make flowers and baby booties and it definitely helped. I would t say I’m good or that I like it. But if I could figure it out it’s definitely possible. Hang in there! I know you can do it!

    • @rd6203
      @rd6203 3 года назад +1

      @@vysgiyi I just gave a quick peek at the link you posted, and I think I'll try it after work. She's very clear and easy to see what she's doing... most of the videos I have watched aren't easy to make out, or they accidentally lapse into speaking as if you know what they're talking about. Which I might if I ever sat down to watch *before* I was already frustrated 😅
      Have a nice day/evening, depending on where you are!

    • @vysgiyi
      @vysgiyi 3 года назад

      @@rd6203 ❤️ I’m glad I could try and help! And you too!

  • @BusyLizzy_
    @BusyLizzy_ Год назад

    An elongated Treble Crochet is a great stitch. Begin as if to do a treble (yo twice, insert hook, yo, pull up a loop) then yo pull through 1 before completing the treble as usual (yo pull through 2, 3x). It makes a longer treble stitch (also sometimes called an extended tr). It is a great 'in between' height when you need a longer stitch than a treble but not as high as a double treble (yo 3x). You can also do an extended (or elongated) double crochet. Thanks for the great video, and I am on team "Snood" like "food"!

  • @kathleenhensley5951
    @kathleenhensley5951 Год назад

    I love snoods... my mother made me one back in the 1970s or 80s.. it is tatted, her own design. very precious. I should wear it again. I have very long hair and I can't bear using many of the things made to keep it up.

  • @donchrlan5167
    @donchrlan5167 3 года назад

    I would say snood like food. It came out really cute. Your two sweaters are beautiful.

  • @eeaotly
    @eeaotly Год назад

    I love that sweater! It lightens up your face. I would love to have/make one like that!

  • @ApprenticeWriter
    @ApprenticeWriter 3 года назад +1

    Had one of these on my "to make" list for SO LONG. I do a lot of buns with my hair, but there's some days where even that's a bit too much. I think I'd need a smaller mesh on mine, though- my hair's on the finer end and WILL frizz it's way out of containment if it can!

  • @laughingshaman1
    @laughingshaman1 3 года назад

    Snood like food. Your work is lovely.

  • @EdwardianTailor
    @EdwardianTailor 3 года назад +1

    It turned out beautifully!

  • @oliveri3534
    @oliveri3534 3 года назад +3

    I'm also prone to headaches with things around my head. I had a pair of glasses for a year that were just a little too tight. I didn't realize that's what was causing the headaches until I got a new pair and the frequency went down.

  • @katrinaniewiarowski3549
    @katrinaniewiarowski3549 3 года назад +1

    I so enjoy watching your projects. You’re the one RUclipsr I wait for a video from . Also, I‘ve always pronounced it as in Food.

  • @x1435
    @x1435 3 года назад

    It turned out so pretty! Gotta love quick, simple, effective projects :)

  • @christenagervais7303
    @christenagervais7303 3 года назад +7

    Snoop like food is the correct way! I listen to Victorian audio books and they say snood(food)

    • @YuliaLinderoth
      @YuliaLinderoth 3 года назад +3

      What do you mean by victorian audio books?

    • @christenagervais7303
      @christenagervais7303 3 года назад +1

      @@YuliaLinderoth Classic books like Jane Austen, Charlotte Bronte. Also Anne Perry

    • @YuliaLinderoth
      @YuliaLinderoth 3 года назад

      @@christenagervais7303 Okay! So not that you would be wrong but like it's pretty common for audio books to have wrong and varied pronunciation. Unless it is described in the book, if that's what you refer to.

    • @christenagervais7303
      @christenagervais7303 3 года назад

      @@YuliaLinderoth I listen to British narrators. They usually are the best for pronunciations...

  • @Ez2yLou
    @Ez2yLou 3 года назад

    I made a snood last year and I’m obsessed with it!

  • @lesleyharris525
    @lesleyharris525 3 года назад

    Very cute and practical, I'm looking forward to seeing you organizing your hobby space,mine is spread over three rooms again.💖

  • @robintheparttimesewer6798
    @robintheparttimesewer6798 3 года назад

    It turned out so beautifully!

  • @az_twist6267
    @az_twist6267 3 года назад

    I learned about snoods after hearing Bing Crosby asked Red Skelton in White Christmas," "Did you put it in your snood?" I wondered what it was and looked it up. : )

  • @annie6515
    @annie6515 3 года назад

    I always call it snood like food because of a Bing Crosby line from the movie White Christmas ❄️

  • @momtomtse
    @momtomtse 3 года назад

    Snood, like food, and I love wearing them 😊

  • @onepurpleostrich
    @onepurpleostrich 3 года назад +11

    Question: did you make the black and white leafy sweatshirt from a particular pattern/ are you planning on writing the pattern if it's your own design?
    It's simply gorgeous!

    • @Kato_Rin
      @Kato_Rin 3 года назад +4

      She has the pattern linked in the description! It appears to be a vintage pattern from Etsy.

    • @onepurpleostrich
      @onepurpleostrich 3 года назад

      @@Kato_Rin Thank you, I somehow overlooked that!

  • @BigCrafterTX
    @BigCrafterTX 3 года назад

    Thank you for figuring it for me…it was in the back of my mind.

  • @oopsallbugs
    @oopsallbugs 3 года назад +1

    Recently found your channel and it's a delight!! I honestly hated the word "snood" bc I pronounced it like "food" and it sounded stupid, but pronounced like "hood" is honestly much better 🤣

  • @StrwbrrysNChoco8
    @StrwbrrysNChoco8 3 года назад

    In old movies, and also at history re-enactments I've been to, they say "snood" like "food"

  • @veniestagourdine3881
    @veniestagourdine3881 3 года назад

    That snood looks gorgeous on you.

  • @emmavoels2
    @emmavoels2 2 года назад

    Thank you for putting the title of the book on screen. I was able to find the same volume on archive.org. So now I'll be able to print off the pattern to work from.

  • @KateMH_
    @KateMH_ 3 года назад

    Sooooo cute!!! You should make one in black or another dark color!!!

  • @shainwald29
    @shainwald29 3 года назад

    Snood like food. Bing Crosby makes a joke about one to Danny Kaye in White Christmas for reference. 😃

  • @denisegore1884
    @denisegore1884 3 года назад

    I knitted two just recently. I need to make myself one as my hair is being difficult lately and a snood (as in food) might be the answer.

  • @teressebirkett3387
    @teressebirkett3387 2 года назад

    Loving it!

  • @mirandakett4385
    @mirandakett4385 3 года назад

    I’m not a northerner, but I can see the sense in pronouncing food, snood, good with the same vowel sound.

  • @coreygilles847
    @coreygilles847 3 года назад

    I have always said it like food…but it sounds great like good too. I might have to try this because I get headaches easily as well

  • @emilyprichard8938
    @emilyprichard8938 3 года назад

    Thanks for sharing, now I want to make one to wear in the house :)

  • @hannahgreen681
    @hannahgreen681 3 года назад

    I have always said it like food. It looks really cute btw.

  • @psukebariah3435
    @psukebariah3435 3 года назад

    There's a scene in White Christmas where Bing Crosby asks Danny Kay if he left his wallet in his snood, and he pronounced it like "food". I love snoods, although I rarely wear them. They had a resurgence sometime in the mid-late 80's with satin ribbons and barrets, and I was smitten, but couldn't afford them.

    • @clwest3538
      @clwest3538 3 года назад

      I think that must have been when I made mine - used heavy 'bedspread' cotton with yellow ribbon. When I complained to my grandma it wouldn't stay in she said the trick was to stitch 2 hair combs to them or use 'fancy' bobby pins. As I have my mom's curly hair, the combs worked great! I wore a pencil, mid-calf skirt, high heels and a pretty sheer yellow blouse .... the older guys (to me then) always complimented me! Thanks for the memories!

  • @teacheraprilrogers
    @teacheraprilrogers 3 года назад

    Yep it is Snood like food. I also agree with the other viewer about those that call a cowl a snood. It drives me crazy.

  • @A11yR0ck3r
    @A11yR0ck3r 3 года назад

    It looks so cute!

  • @GwensShenanigans
    @GwensShenanigans 3 года назад

    It looks so cute on you and now I want one too🤗

  • @HeikeWoolard
    @HeikeWoolard 3 года назад +4

    Definitely snood ( IPA(key): /snuːd/) like food.

  • @reynaemari8363
    @reynaemari8363 3 года назад +3

    me, not a native speaker: snood, food and hood have different pronunciations? hahaha I'm still learning ;D

  • @christineb8148
    @christineb8148 3 года назад +2

    Very cute - is this the same concept or type of construction used in those mesh shopping bags (when you go grocery shopping for food as in snood ;-) )

  • @Keira-_-
    @Keira-_- 3 года назад +1

    Hehe with my accent/in my area hood and food are pronounced the same way.

  • @rexgeorg7324
    @rexgeorg7324 3 года назад

    I love it !!!
    Snood

  • @nikkigrossman4244
    @nikkigrossman4244 3 года назад

    I made a couple of these for a production of 7 brides for 7 brothers! Fun memory. It did not look this lovely on me! 😅 I pronounced it like “food”

  • @skippergin2695
    @skippergin2695 2 года назад

    Elongated crochet is just doing a chain one and then finishing the stitch normally. It's useful for filet crochet to make the spaces more square instead of rectangular.

  • @CastielWillow
    @CastielWillow 3 года назад

    SNOOOOOOOOOD!! I love it!

  • @woordenhechtster
    @woordenhechtster 3 года назад +1

    And here I am, always pronouncing hood and food in the same manner haha

  • @BunsBooks
    @BunsBooks 3 года назад

    Now I wanna make one 👀 I pronounce it snood as in hood cause that’s how my grandmother pronounced it, but we’re also southern so we pronounce everything a lil different

  • @1775LostOne
    @1775LostOne 3 года назад

    I didn't know I needed this!

  • @YarrowNjune
    @YarrowNjune 3 года назад

    I was today years old when I found out food and hood are prononunced differently. I never noticed:D

  • @SundaysQuilts
    @SundaysQuilts 3 года назад

    Chiming in as an Australian, we say snood like food 😊

  • @madelinesertner8791
    @madelinesertner8791 3 года назад

    Snood is like hood, because we wear it like a hood? And now I NEED to make one!

  • @intimeoflilacs1
    @intimeoflilacs1 3 года назад

    Bing Crosby says snood like food in White Christmas when he’s mad at Danny Kay for “losing” the train tickets!

  • @published1789
    @published1789 3 года назад

    I picked up the pronunciation snood-sounding-like-food from my grandmother and great grandmother so have assumed it was right (for most values of "right" ... I can easily imagine it being a word pronouced a bit differently in differnt English speaking regions/countries/eras!).

  • @winnieskees9622
    @winnieskees9622 3 года назад

    Just like food sweetheart ~ grandma was right!

  • @RoseThistleArtworks
    @RoseThistleArtworks 3 года назад +1

    That turned out beautiful. Do you have to wear your hair a certain way inside there? Or do you just stuff your hair in? Your hair looked all smooth. I think mine might be wildly trying to escape through every window. ha ha

  • @rodentary
    @rodentary 2 года назад +1

    Omg. I want this pattern. Is there a way i can buy a scan of it?

  • @tracynail4432
    @tracynail4432 3 года назад

    I say it like food because that feels right but it probably should be like hood just because that makes sense

  • @Pinkstars1605
    @Pinkstars1605 3 года назад

    ive always pronounced it snood as in hood for your hair, but both british and american english seem to have a very similar pronunciation. which is snood as in (rude) according to what google tells me.

  • @Ashley-li5yv
    @Ashley-li5yv 3 года назад

    Brilliant! I too get headaches from up dos. This looks great!
    Also, I love your sweater. Where did you get it?

  • @diannenixon621
    @diannenixon621 3 года назад

    It's funny, I'm nearly 70 and I've always pronounced it "snuud" not "snude". However it's pronounced I think it turned out nice. The website Heart, Hook Home has a modern take on the snood. I've been growing out my hair, CoVid threw my haircut schedule off. If you can't fight it.... make a snood.

  • @MrsBrit1
    @MrsBrit1 3 года назад

    Snood, like food! Gotta love english! 😂

  • @HeraldHealer
    @HeraldHealer 3 года назад +2

    I say snood with the long o like food

  • @geraldinalagos
    @geraldinalagos 2 года назад

    I like your doggie.

  • @ravensnow2931
    @ravensnow2931 2 года назад

    Here's an online version of this pattern for anyone who's looking to make their own: victoryvintageblog.blogspot.com/2012/04/favorite-vintage-crochet-pattern-perky.html?m=1

  • @masuganut2082
    @masuganut2082 Год назад

    I know it’s an easy project I’m sure but my brain isn’t grasping how to do it all. Do you think you could do a tutorial? Start to finish (ribbon too)?
    I have a 23.5 inch head and I’m always getting headaches from tying my hair up but I have a three month old and my hair is falling out and I just really need something to keep my hair up and away without getting a headache
    Thank you. I’m sorry

  • @kikidevine694
    @kikidevine694 Год назад

    Snood keeps one's hair tidy whilst preparing food.

  • @TheMayLight
    @TheMayLight 3 года назад

    I imagine it being called snood like in hood, as a short form for 'snug hood'. 😍 Don't know what it would have to do with food, but then i'm no native english speaker, so ... words don't always need to make that sort of sense, right.

  • @AgentPedestrian
    @AgentPedestrian 3 года назад

    if the word is from the Scandinavian "snodd" Then it should be closer to food.
    although snodd as in 'tied' is in swedish pronounced with a shorter O sound

  • @a.r.3476
    @a.r.3476 3 года назад

    No it's snoood, like food. But it never occurred to me to pronounce it that way, so you could be right.