Tag Archives: Gnomes

Life and All that Jazz: Advent

Ready or not, here it comes! In a week, our annual Advent market begins. Every year, I have a large selection of crafts; what I bring changes from year to year, but some things have become regulars due to popularity. A few months ago, people started asking me if I was going to bring this or that. One thing I introduced a couple of years ago was a huge hit: Gnomes with attitudes and sunglasses. By this morning, I’d made 29; then someone asked if they could buy 10 (!) – so I spent the afternoon making gnomes – and sold 3 in advance today, so I guess I’ll be making them until the market (and likely beyond, because last year I pre-sold special orders to deliver before Christmas). But this is only one of the items I’ll be selling. (And, of course, they’ll all get a nice hair styling when they finally come out of the transport box!)

Another hit is “Spitzbuben” – a two-layered cookie filled with jelly and dusted with powdered sugar. A friend and I spent the morning making hundreds of these cookies; I’ll need to fill, dust, bag, and tag them next week.

Other popular items include notebooks – I make them in every size from a few centimetres to A5, with sewn signatures, spiral bindings and more. Mixed media gift cards, bookmarks of every description, decorative folders, and cloth shopping bags – all handmade. There are a dozen more items, but you get the idea!

As you can imagine, it’s a lot of work to prepare – not just making the items, but putting together price lists, printing price tags and/or signage, packing up display racks/cloths/pieces, packing a toolbox with markers, tags, scissors, screwdrivers, pens, cash, et al. So far, our hall is already lined with boxes ready to transport – because my craft room is like Tetris right now… I need to move out what is ready to go so that I can get other things made! The working space on my craft table has shrunk as boxes of various projects demand my last-minute attention, plus space for the sewing machine for last-minute gnome “kits”.

I enjoy the market, the contact with other crafters and customers, and I enjoy making other people happy while moving my stock to free up room for more creativity afterwards!

Please comment below if you take part in craft fairs, or if you go to one or more in your local area! If you participate or if you go, what kinds of things do you sell/look for?

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Oh, Gnome, it’s almost Christmas!

Image Credit: Familyflowers.ca

This past weekend I had a craft stand at our church’s annual advent market. Ten hours a day. I sold (as you might guess by the title), among other things, gnomes. It got me thinking about the history of these little creatures. I don’t know about where you live, but here in Switzerland, they’re popping up everywhere this season! Statues, cookie tins, ornaments, wrapping paper, socks and anything else you can think of.

You might think of garden gnomes; but the gnomes I’m referring to simply have a bushy beard, a nose, and a body with a hat on top; sometimes arms, but no eyes, though I added artisan sunglasses to some of mine, and those sold out relatively quickly. The image below is a typical Wichtel here in Switzerland.

I’d always vaguely assumed that gnomes were Scandinavian in origin, but it turns out that they are actually Swiss! First introduced in the 16th century by Paracelsus, born Theophrastus von Hohenheim, who was a Swiss physician, alchemist, lay theologian, and philosopher of the German Renaissance. The term “gnome” might have even been his own invention, based on the Latin genomos, meaning earth-dweller. Paracelsus may have been the first to describe them, but there are examples of similar myths in other cultures, too.

Perhaps the reason I’d thought of gnomes as Scandanavian is that, in the early 19th century Romantic writings, gnomes became entangled in the fairy tales which led them to becoming synonymous with goblins, leprechauns, and brownies, which are in turn similar in character to the Nordic troll. Trolls are said to live in isolated mountains, rocks or caves, and as such, are “earth-dwellers”. While the gnomes were thought to be helpful, trolls were rather unhelpful. Scandinavia does have a gnome-type character as well, known as the Danish and Norwegian nisse, the Swedish tomte, or Finnish tonttu, as well as many dialectical names throughout Scandinavia. In German, they are known as Gartenzwerg or Wichtel.

In folklore, gnomes were thought to be short, stout guardians of mines, treasures, and precious stones, and were the antithesis of the tall and slender elves. JRR Tolkien was likely influenced by these legends when creating his races of dwarves and elves.

The practice of garden statues goes back to ancient Rome, where they set up idols thought to help plants thrive and protect animals. by the 18th century, however, such garden statues were simply seen as a status symbol of wealthier families. The statuary as we think of it today is visually based on the Disney dwarves of Snow White; before that, their look was less homogeneous. Over time, they fell into disfavour among serious gardeners; at the Chelsea Garden Show in the UK, they were banned for several years; the powers that be were accused of snobbery, as garden gnomes were popular among the working class; they were eventually allowed in the show’s garden designs once again.

Garden gnomes in particular are something that you either find adorable or tacky. Like any display piece, if it’s done well, they can add a touch of whimsy to your garden or home.

The topic is one of those rabbit holes you could easily dive into; the traditions of the gnome, after all, go back thousands of years.

A Scandanavian Tomte, or German Wichtel

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