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S1 E1 – Game of Wool: Britain’s Best Knitter 🧶🏆
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00:00A nueva generación de knifters está tomando el mundo por storm.
00:04Con solo dos dedos o un hook,
00:06están testando los limitados de creatividad.
00:09Y 10 de los más talentosos de la nación
00:12están conmigo en Scotland
00:14para batallar esto, por ejemplo,
00:16para asegurarme la última crown.
00:19Cada semana, se enfrentará dos desafíos
00:21en este momento en nuestra magia de yarn bar.
00:30La solo challenge
00:35will test the knitters' individual talent and skill.
00:38I think those are going to look visually very pleasing.
00:41While the team challenge
00:42will see them collaborate on a scale
00:44never seen before.
00:46Is it straight? What do I care about straight?
00:49Nothing escapes the forensic gaze
00:51of judges Di Gilpin
00:53and Sheila Greenwell.
00:55Softly spoken, but with eyes
00:57sharp as steel.
00:58I will be looking at the smaller technical details.
01:01I want to see that creativity coming out.
01:04Oh my gosh, Sheila.
01:05I always cry when I see something beautiful.
01:1010 knitters,
01:118 weeks,
01:1316 spectacular challenges
01:15and one ultimate champion.
01:17I need small sharp scissors.
01:20Sew as fast as you can.
01:21Oh, I've missed a stitch.
01:23We can do this.
01:25We can, we can, we can.
01:27At the end of the day,
01:28this is a competition
01:28and someone has to be cast off.
01:33This is knitting
01:34like you've never seen it before.
01:37It's a big woolly adventure.
01:39Britain's best knitter.
01:40That would be unbelievable.
01:42Welcome to Game of Wool,
01:45Britain's best knitter.
01:52It's week one
01:54and 10 talented amateur knitters
01:56have arrived in Scotland.
01:58Historic home of all things wool
02:00where the sheep are fluffy,
02:02the stakes are high
02:03and our magical yarn barn awaits.
02:06Oh my gosh, look.
02:18Doesn't this look fabulous?
02:20Oh wow.
02:26As our knitters battle it out
02:28to claim big knitter of the week
02:30and avoid the dreaded cast off.
02:36Welcome knitters.
02:45I'm Tom
02:45and over the next eight weeks
02:46I'm going to be guiding you
02:48through some incredible challenges
02:49where nine of you
02:50are sadly going to be cast off
02:52but we will be left with one
02:54Game of Wool champion
02:56Britain's best knitter.
02:58And although I am knitting obsessed
03:00I'm not going to be judging you
03:02through this competition.
03:03I have two people next to me
03:05who are true knitting VIPs.
03:08We have Dai Gilpin
03:09and Sheila Greenwell
03:10who have worked with the likes
03:11of Chanel, Vivian Westwood
03:13and even His Majesty
03:15the King himself.
03:17These queens of couture
03:18have built their career
03:19on high fashion
03:20hand-knit
03:21show-stopping garments
03:23and in this competition
03:24nothing less than perfection
03:26will do.
03:27I'll be interrogating
03:29all of the technical choices
03:31that they have to make.
03:33I want to be completely
03:34blown away by creativity.
03:37Every stitch counts.
03:40These two boss stitches
03:42are going to be responsible
03:43for setting your challenges
03:47each and every week.
03:49And speaking of challenges
03:50this is your first solo challenge
03:53where you will be able
03:54to show off your individual
03:55talent and skill
03:56to impress our lovely judges.
04:00For your first solo challenge
04:02we'd like you to re-imagine
04:04a fair isle.
04:07We'd like you to make a tank top
04:09and we'd like you to make it
04:11your story defining
04:12who you are as a person.
04:14There are a few key elements
04:17to include repeating patterns.
04:20We would like to see
04:22peries or motifs
04:23in your tank top.
04:26Don't let the people
04:27of Fair Isle down.
04:31There you go.
04:32I mean you've heard
04:33Di and Sheila.
04:34They would love for you
04:35to make a modern twist
04:36on the classic
04:37the Scottish Fair Isle.
04:39But as a tank top
04:40you only have 12 hours.
04:41So let's get knitting.
04:44Fair Isle is a traditional
04:48but tricky knitting style
04:50which was invented
04:51here
04:52on Fair Isle
04:53a tiny island
04:54in the Shetlands
04:55centuries ago.
04:58Fair Isle is a visual story
05:00told through repeating bands
05:01of symmetrical patterns
05:03larger motifs
05:04and smaller peries.
05:06The yarn barn's
05:13fully stocked
05:14haberdashery
05:14is now open
05:15This is my idea
05:17of heaven.
05:18And knitters
05:18have full creative freedom
05:20to design
05:21and knit
05:21their own
05:22Fair Isle story.
05:23Right.
05:24Come on let's hear.
05:27To knit their tank tops
05:29they will all start
05:30from the hem
05:31of the garment
05:31and work upwards
05:33using circular needles
05:34which means
05:35they can knit
05:36continuously
05:37in a loop.
05:38Then
05:39they will move
05:40on to their
05:40Fair Isle
05:41peries
05:41and motifs
05:42which they have
05:43meticulously designed
05:45beforehand.
05:46To knit these
05:47they will use
05:47a technique
05:48called stranded
05:49colour work
05:50which is where
05:51they alternate
05:51two coloured yarns
05:53along each knitted row
05:54to create
05:55their iconic
05:55Fair Isle pattern.
05:57Once the body
05:58of the tank top
05:59is done
05:59they switch
06:00to straight
06:00needles
06:01to create
06:02their arm
06:02and neck holes
06:03before finishing
06:04and weaving
06:05in any loose
06:06ends.
06:07An average
06:07Fair Isle
06:08tank top
06:08could take
06:09over 40
06:10hours to finish
06:11using a fine
06:12weight wool.
06:13Our knitters
06:13are using
06:14chunkier yarn
06:15because they
06:15have just
06:1612 hours
06:17to complete
06:18this first
06:18challenge.
06:19This is quite
06:20a first
06:21challenge
06:22creating a
06:22modern twist
06:23of a Fair Isle
06:24but with a
06:25tank top
06:25we deliberately
06:26set a really
06:28tough first
06:29challenge.
06:30We wanted
06:30to push
06:31both in
06:32creative
06:32and technical
06:34terms.
06:35It's a visual
06:35world
06:36Fair Isle.
06:37We really
06:37want them
06:38to be telling
06:38their own
06:39story
06:39talking about
06:40themselves
06:41through the
06:41medium of
06:42knit.
06:45I've started
06:46my tank top
06:47at the bottom
06:48edge
06:48with the
06:49ribbing
06:49that will
06:50then go
06:50into the
06:51main body
06:51of the
06:51tank top.
06:52Originally
06:53from Germany
06:53but now
06:54living in
06:55London
06:55is
06:55Savile Row
06:56fashion
06:56designer
06:57Holger.
06:58I was
06:58always
06:58very much
06:59interested
06:59in the
06:59construction
07:00of
07:00clothes
07:00the way
07:00they
07:01are
07:01made
07:01and
07:02obviously
07:02for
07:03classic
07:03men's
07:04tailoring
07:04Savile Row
07:04is like
07:05the place
07:06to be.
07:07Fair Isle
07:07is very much
07:08what I like
07:09doing but
07:10not on this
07:11yarn and
07:11not on this
07:12needle so
07:12to tell me
07:15that I have
07:15to express
07:16myself on
07:17a super
07:18chunky yarn
07:19is like
07:19asking a
07:20vegetarian
07:20to express
07:22themselves
07:22with a
07:23medium of
07:24steak or
07:24something.
07:26Holger has
07:27chosen ribbed
07:28neck and
07:28arm holes
07:29for his
07:29tank top.
07:30On the
07:31body he's
07:32gone for
07:32classic
07:32fair-al
07:33motifs
07:34and
07:34peeries
07:34in a
07:35red
07:35yellow
07:36and blue
07:36gradient
07:37inspired by
07:38a previous
07:38project.
07:39she came
07:43into being
07:43around the
07:44time as
07:44everybody
07:45seemed to
07:45have been
07:46knitting
07:46emotional
07:46support
07:47chickens.
07:47It does
07:48represent me
07:49a nonchalant
07:50chicken.
07:53For my
07:54design I've
07:55got a repeating
07:56pattern throughout
07:57of the Sierra
07:58Leonian flag
07:59because my
08:00family is from
08:00Sierra Leone.
08:01Cyber security
08:02student Isaac
08:03learned to knit
08:04when he was
08:0410 years old.
08:05I knit
08:06primarily for
08:06myself because
08:07I don't have to
08:09impress too much.
08:10It's quite handy.
08:11I don't need to
08:12stick to any
08:12deadlines.
08:13I have in the
08:14past knit for
08:15my mum and
08:16my granddad.
08:19Isaac's family
08:20inspired tank top
08:21features a gaggle
08:22of geese marching
08:23across it as his
08:24motif and peeries in
08:25the colours of the
08:26Sierra Leonean flag.
08:28It's finished with a
08:29ribbed hem,
08:30neckline and
08:31armholes.
08:31So Isaac,
08:34what exactly are
08:35you up to?
08:35You've gone through
08:36the ribbing and
08:38you've done your
08:38first motif.
08:39My main motif is
08:41a series of geese.
08:42My mum calls me a
08:43silly goose, my
08:44girlfriend calls me
08:44a silly goose, I'm
08:45just a silly goose.
08:46In terms of time, is
08:47it something that
08:48you're worried about
08:49with this challenge?
08:50I'm not great at
08:50estimating time, so
08:52I suppose we'll
08:53see.
08:56Fair Isle is
08:57largely a lot of
08:59what I do when I
09:00knit for myself, so
09:01I sort of feel I
09:02know what I'm
09:02doing.
09:03Already familiar
09:04with the Fair Isle
09:05technique is
09:06cruise ship singer
09:06Gordon.
09:08I'm a very
09:09traditional knitter,
09:10I've never tried
09:11anything particularly
09:12avant-garde.
09:14Heritage knit
09:15enthusiast Gordon is
09:17combining his love
09:18of Shetland with his
09:19passion for music by
09:20knitting peeries of
09:21piano keys accompanied
09:23by the oxo motifs used
09:25in traditional Fair
09:26Isle designs.
09:27Gordon is the only
09:28knitter attempting the
09:29risky traditional
09:31fair isle method of
09:32steking, which means
09:34to cut open the
09:35neck and armholes.
09:36You heard that
09:37right, cut into the
09:39knitting.
09:40You can't spell
09:40stek without
09:41spelling eek.
09:42It won't ravel out,
09:44people think it'll
09:45just completely
09:45disintegrate, but it
09:48won't.
09:53Knitters, that's two
09:54hours gone, you
09:55have ten hours
09:56remaining.
09:58A pile of wool next to
09:59me, a cup of tea on
10:01the side.
10:01Nice.
10:02Torted.
10:03You guys are loving
10:04this, aren't you?
10:05Time over your lives.
10:07The best part of any
10:08day is a cup of tea.
10:14Hoping to impress the
10:15judges with a nature
10:16inspired knit is
10:17psychotherapist Tracy.
10:20Hello.
10:20Hello.
10:22I'm a grandmother of
10:23eight and I've been
10:24knitting as long as I
10:25think I've been
10:25breathing.
10:27Do you want to tell us
10:28a little bit about the
10:29design?
10:29As I kind of thought
10:30about what I'm going to
10:31do with this, I saw a
10:32picture in a charity shop
10:33and it was a picture of
10:34trees.
10:35So I kind of believe that
10:37everyone's born as a
10:38little seed and then they
10:39grow into a mighty tree and
10:40no one says, well, it's a
10:41fat tree, that's an odd
10:42tree, it's a weird tree.
10:43We just love trees the way
10:44they are.
10:47Tracy's Fair Isle design
10:48story is all about the
10:50circle of life and
10:51incorporates nature symbols
10:53and scissors to represent
10:54pruning and shaping your
10:56path.
10:58So are you going to
10:59embellish it?
11:00I might be.
11:02You know, I've been
11:03known to add pieces of
11:04chandelier to a shawl, so
11:06I do like to change things
11:07as I go along.
11:10This whole thing has been
11:12absolutely new to me.
11:13I've never done Fair Isle
11:14before, ever in my life.
11:15Library worker Dipti
11:17knits to unwind, but is
11:18still getting to grips with
11:19some of the trickier
11:20techniques.
11:21I generally am very
11:23amateur.
11:24I have told my son that I'm
11:26going to be in a knitting
11:27competition and he said
11:29to me, you're not very
11:30good, so you'll come home
11:31soon anyway.
11:34Dipti.
11:35Hello, Tom.
11:36How are we getting on?
11:37I am a massive fan of
11:38stuffed toys.
11:39So is my little boy.
11:41This is a design for the
11:44love of his favourite soft
11:45toy.
11:46We love him so much.
11:47That's his own bedroom.
11:49He literally is a member of
11:50the family.
11:51We even celebrate his
11:52birthday, the first of
11:53August.
11:53Wow, okay.
11:55Literally, it is adorable.
11:58Dipti's knit has both
11:59heart-shaped motifs and her
12:01son's favourite birthday
12:02celebrating bunny, all
12:04incorporated in a blue,
12:06white and pink design.
12:08Is there anything with this
12:09project and this challenge
12:10in particular that you're
12:11concerned about?
12:12For me, it's always the fit.
12:13I'm not a massive maker of
12:15garments and finishing it
12:16because I'm quite a slow
12:18knitter.
12:22I'm back on track.
12:24I thought I was behind, but
12:25I'm back on track now.
12:26I'm so delighted.
12:27It's really exciting.
12:28It's making me let it
12:30faster.
12:30This giddy knitter is life
12:38coach Stephanie, who first
12:40picked up a set of needles
12:4145 years ago.
12:43I'm not your average gran.
12:45I do all sorts of things and
12:47now I'm in an extreme knitting
12:49competition that I'm going to
12:50win.
12:53Stephanie's Fair Isle design
12:54features motifs of all the
12:56things she loves.
12:58Games at the table with her
12:59daughters, knitting needles
13:01and a cup of tea.
13:02But she's hoping to wow the
13:03judges with a unique roll neck
13:05collar.
13:09Tell us a little bit about
13:10the design.
13:11I'm going to do a roll
13:13collar.
13:14A collar?
13:15That's exciting.
13:17That's the plan.
13:18Fingers crossed.
13:2018-year-old fashion student
13:22Meadow only got into knitting
13:24recently but already loves its
13:26creative potential.
13:27For my motifs, I've decided to
13:29go with daisy or my granny.
13:31I just really like bright
13:32colours.
13:33I'm the youngest knitter in the
13:34competition.
13:35I'm very excited to show people
13:37that I can make.
13:38Meadow's Fair Isle tank top is a
13:40multi-coloured love letter to her
13:42gran.
13:42Complete with checkerboard peeries
13:44and a giant daisy motif, her
13:46gran's favourite flower.
13:48I have my granny's knitting
13:51needles.
13:51She taught me how to knit when I
13:53was really young so it's always
13:54something we've had a bond over.
13:59During the first half of the
14:00challenge, it is essential the
14:02knitters complete the body of
14:04their tank tops to allow time for
14:06the fiddly neck and arm holes.
14:08Well, unless you've found a cheeky
14:10shortcut like me.
14:12Oh, stannit.
14:14That's me finished with my Fair
14:15Isle sweater and we're only
14:17halfway through.
14:18So, knitters, you're halfway
14:21through.
14:21Six hours to go.
14:25How you doing, Gordo?
14:26Um, I'm further behind than I
14:29would have liked to have been.
14:30It's like being in one of these
14:32anxiety dreams.
14:33It isn't a dream.
14:34I'm really here and I'm knitting
14:36like mad.
14:37It's week one here in the Game
14:46of Wool yarn barn and our 10
14:48knitters are over halfway through
14:50their first solo challenge, a
14:52modern Fair Isle tank top.
14:54The plans are still fine.
14:55I've just messed up this motif so
14:56I'm just trying to fix it at the
14:57moment.
14:58Ex-Marine turned builder Simon
15:00has been knitting for over 10
15:02years.
15:02Generally, knitting on a
15:03building site goes down with a bit
15:05of shock.
15:05Like, what the hell is this dude
15:06doing with a set of knitting
15:07needles?
15:08Simon, can you tell me about your
15:10tank top design?
15:10Some of my motifs are based
15:11around my life story, really.
15:15Simon's tank top is partly
15:16inspired by his time with actual
15:18tanks as it uses the colours of
15:20the Royal Marines.
15:22He's also adding a trowel motif as
15:24a nod to his new career as a
15:25builder and to reflect he and his
15:28wife's IVF journey, motifs of
15:30Petri dishes and egg timers.
15:33Each egg timer should, if I can
15:35get there, go down in time to
15:37signify IVF and the amount of
15:39time it took.
15:40Well, that's such a great idea
15:42because fair oil usually repeats
15:43but there's, like, subtle
15:44differences.
15:45How far in are you?
15:46Not as far as I should be.
15:52Also struggling to stay afloat is
15:54cruise ship entertainer Gordon.
15:57I decided to do what I always do and
16:00I'm stinking the armholes.
16:01Oh.
16:03Stinking using a chunkier yarn will
16:05be tricky because this wool isn't
16:07as sticky so it won't cling together
16:09like a Shetland wool which is
16:11traditionally used in Fair Isle.
16:13That's quite a risky decision,
16:16Gordon.
16:16So timing.
16:18Timing, yes.
16:19I'm hoping I'll be okay but I don't
16:21think I'm going to be sitting around
16:22having a cup of tea.
16:29With just a few hours remaining,
16:31the knitters should all have moved on
16:33to the neck and armholes.
16:36I've done the main body of my vest
16:38and so now I'm picking up stitches
16:40for the neckline.
16:42Lydia juggles her passion for knitting
16:44with a career in the charity sector
16:46whilst also raising three-year-old twins.
16:49Right, I don't knit for barely anyone
16:52but myself and yes, I have kids
16:54and no, I don't knit for them.
16:56Wow, Lydia, what have we got going on
16:57here for your Fair Isle vest?
16:59I'm doing a take on a kente print
17:01which is a traditional West African
17:03material.
17:04So I was inspired by this dress.
17:06Oh, wow.
17:07This is me and my husband
17:08at our wedding party.
17:11Inspired by her wedding dress,
17:13Lydia's Fair Isle story explores
17:15her Ghanaian roots, combining
17:16traditional symbols representing love
17:18at her motifs and peeries
17:20within a bright West African colour palette.
17:23Wow, that's so special.
17:25The meaning behind it, the patterns.
17:27You're cracking through it.
17:28I think I'm about an hour off.
17:30And she's not the only knitter
17:32approaching the finish line.
17:34It's possible, looking around,
17:36I might be one of the first to finish
17:37but I've also got a couple of design features
17:40further up that take a good bit of time.
17:44Elsa works for a fairy company
17:46and has been knitting for over 20 years.
17:49Elsa, do you want to tell us a little bit
17:52about the story?
17:53My design is based on a day in my life.
17:55I live next to the beach with my dog Brillo.
17:58That's who this is.
17:59Oh, lovely.
18:02Elsa's tank top is inspired by her local beach
18:05with a waved peerie accompanied by a motif
18:08of her beloved dog Brillo.
18:11She's pushing the boat out
18:12with a few extra flourishes
18:14such as a vintage ribbon-inspired necktie
18:16and a surprise on the back.
18:19I'm creating a hole, like a porthole.
18:22Oh.
18:23Because I work for a fairy company,
18:25I'm bringing that into my design
18:26because I'm lucky enough through work
18:28to be able to go to places
18:30with some of the best knitting and wool history.
18:33When I discovered that there's a history to knitting
18:38and it's such an interesting history,
18:41I was just down that rabbit hole.
18:44I have been called an old soul
18:45quite a few times in my life.
18:48I'm probably perceived as being quite quiet,
18:51but I'm just soaking everything up
18:53and seeing what I can do
18:55to be really loud with my knitting,
18:57albeit being quiet myself.
18:58How are you getting on, mate?
19:04I'm feeling very stressed about time.
19:05I am whizzing up my front piece.
19:08Unfortunately, the whizzing
19:09is not quite as whizzy as it should be.
19:12Do you want me to run across for a cuddle?
19:15I'm busy, I'm busy knitting.
19:17I think I'm here to just try
19:19and put a smile on Holger's face.
19:21Yeah, amazing, thank you.
19:22So, right now, I'm adding a duplicate stitch
19:30to add the orange bills.
19:32So, instead of being these sad little bill-less geese,
19:36they're nice and happy and they can honk at you.
19:38Duplicate stitch is a common technique
19:41used to embroider over existing knitting to add detail.
19:44But Isaac is unusually combining this
19:47with the ladderback technique,
19:48a method to neatly hold strands of yarn
19:51on the inside of your garments.
19:53I've done duplicate stitch before,
19:54so I'm quite confident doing it.
19:55I've never done it, uh,
19:57cashing it on the back using the ladderback,
19:59but that was just as easy as doing it on the front.
20:01But I think timing-wise,
20:02I might be running a little bit behind.
20:04Still got three to go.
20:07Knitters, that's one hour to go.
20:10Is it really?
20:11No, no, no, no, no.
20:13One hour.
20:14I'm in big trouble.
20:15Major big trouble.
20:16Oh, we've got about 16 rows still to knit.
20:19In the final hour,
20:20our knitters must complete their garments
20:22and cast off their designs,
20:24which means securing their final row of stitches
20:27before presenting to the judges.
20:30Holger, how are you doing?
20:31Concerned about time or are you...?
20:32Yep.
20:33Ah!
20:34Somebody just told me
20:35I've only got one hour left to do it in.
20:37And how are you doing, Dipti?
20:39Honestly, I haven't got the time.
20:40Sorry.
20:43Hungry!
20:43While some knitters are finishing up...
20:46I'm just finishing, casting it off here.
20:49Happy to have finished.
20:50Good to go.
20:51..for others, the knit goes on.
20:54I'm unfortunately going to have to sacrifice
20:57the finish that I wanted on the neck and arms.
21:00Time-wise, it's not going to be feasible.
21:04This thing's not getting finished.
21:05I might not be able to sew the ends in,
21:08but I should have a garment that goes on a mannequin.
21:12Knitters, you have ten minutes remaining.
21:16OK, I'm going to cut these.
21:18I'm going to just stick the armholes and the neckhole.
21:22It's not really feasible to do
21:24sticking with such a chunky yarn
21:26because the risk of the steaks coming loose
21:29is far, far greater.
21:30I certainly admire Gordon for doing it.
21:33It takes guts.
21:40Gordon's sticky.
21:45What is that?
21:53That gives me a one-arm hole.
21:56Gosh, he's cut these sticky.
21:59And...
22:05All done.
22:07The openings are now made.
22:09I've just got two big, raggy, gaping holes
22:11where your arms poke out.
22:14Knitters, cast off your stitches.
22:16This challenge is complete.
22:19Your time is up.
22:22I'm braced my ends.
22:24You've got them on show?
22:25Yeah.
22:25Beautiful.
22:26This looks absolutely appalling.
22:28Dear God.
22:31Birthday bunnies, a gaggle of geese
22:33and stinking scares.
22:35That's ten Fair Isle tank tops
22:37done in just 12 hours.
22:39I hope the judges see the fact
22:41that I've had a bit of fun with it.
22:43I worked really hard to create something
22:45that I think represents the culture well,
22:47so I hope I've done the side proud.
22:50Well done, knitters.
22:52Before we get to judging,
22:53I should let you in on a little secret.
22:55We're not going to be trying them on mannequins today.
23:00We have a special guest coming in
23:02to model them for you.
23:05Me.
23:06Yay!
23:09Let's get to judging with the first person,
23:11and that is Lydia, please.
23:19Wow.
23:19I mean, I could see somebody going straight down a catwalk
23:24wearing that.
23:24Thank you.
23:25The colourways that you've chosen
23:27are so vibrant, beautiful.
23:31It's a story,
23:32and Fair Isle,
23:33and knitting generally,
23:35is all about making stories.
23:37This has really answered the brief
23:39to show us you
23:41and your roots and your heritage.
23:43Well, thank you very much, Lydia.
23:46Stephanie.
23:50Stitchwork is really even and flat,
23:53and as you would hope
23:55for a really nice piece of feral knitting.
23:59Collar, Stephanie.
24:01Yeah.
24:02Yeah.
24:03Well done.
24:05Next up, we have Meadow.
24:07Great colour choices.
24:12Yeah, thank you.
24:13Contemporary, modern, dynamic, can I say?
24:17Great Piri.
24:18Yes.
24:19There.
24:20It's...
24:21It's...
24:24..really worked out very well.
24:27Yeah.
24:27Thank you.
24:28Next up, we have Simon.
24:33I think this is just such a lovely design story.
24:37Yes.
24:37And these I particularly love.
24:39The egg timers.
24:40Thank you, Simon.
24:41Next up, can we have Gordon, please?
24:43Ooh.
24:45The walk of shame.
24:53OK.
24:54So...
24:55..you were...
24:58..steaking.
24:59Yes.
25:00..quite an undertaking
25:01in the chunky yarn.
25:04OK.
25:04I think that's what has caused
25:05it to be more complicated.
25:08Those are difficult decisions
25:09when you're a sticker.
25:11Can I just say, Gordon,
25:13I really like the overall design.
25:16It tells me a lot about you.
25:18Piano keys.
25:19Lovely Fair Isle.
25:20And it speaks Scotland.
25:22We're very sad that
25:23you ran out of time to finish it
25:25because there is so many elements
25:27that we really appreciate.
25:30Mm.
25:30Well, thank you, Gordon.
25:31Thank you so much.
25:32Be careful.
25:35Ooh, are you OK?
25:36I'm all right.
25:37It's all right.
25:37There we go.
25:38We're out.
25:39I'm going to come and get yours, Tracy.
25:40Thank you.
25:41Thank you.
25:46Got tassels, Tom.
25:47Wow.
25:48Got embellishments.
25:49It makes you do that.
25:51It's like...
25:52I actually love what you've done here, Tracy.
25:54We weren't expecting the tassels.
25:56Thank you so much.
25:58Next up, we have Elsa.
26:06It is...
26:07Wow.
26:08Yeah.
26:08Really, really something else, actually.
26:11Yeah.
26:12I find this quite emotional.
26:15Sorry, because it is just so beautiful.
26:17Oh, thank you.
26:22There's so much about this
26:23which is the balance,
26:25the wave pattern,
26:27your little fine detail,
26:30little tweaks
26:30that can make something
26:32completely new and different.
26:35The neckline,
26:36the classic V-neck
26:37with the tie,
26:39you've appreciated
26:40that this wool is quite chunky
26:43and that actually looks fantastic.
26:47Very much like the green touches.
26:49You know, the stitch work
26:50is really lovely.
26:51Yeah.
26:52And, oh, my gosh,
26:53I've just spotted the...
26:54Sheila!
26:54There's a porthole on the back here, Tom.
26:57It's not every day
26:58that you see a porthole
26:59in a Fair Isle tank top.
27:02Well, thank you very much, Elsa.
27:03Thank you very much.
27:05Thank you.
27:05Next up, Isaac.
27:08The geese.
27:12That's a stroke of genius, really.
27:14I love it.
27:15I love the way you've put the feet
27:17one step in the grass,
27:19almost, the green.
27:20And the thing that really, really
27:23I love,
27:25and we would need to just hold this up,
27:27the way you did a ladder back
27:30for holding your strands
27:32to use it
27:33for the duplicate stitch.
27:36It's very clever.
27:37And quite innovative, really.
27:38I haven't seen it used
27:39very often in Fair Isle.
27:42Tell me about the neck, Isaac.
27:45I have been intending on doing
27:46ribbed neckline and armbands,
27:48but obviously I sort of ran short.
27:52Yeah.
27:53Yep.
27:54Thank you very much.
27:54Thank you, Isaac.
27:56Next up, we have Holger.
28:01Really lovely colour.
28:03Yes.
28:04And I love the transition.
28:05So how would you, Holger,
28:07have finished off the armhole?
28:09Well, I've finished one of the armholes.
28:10It's not ideally finished off either.
28:12Ideally, I would have finished
28:14the ribbing off with an Italian bind-off.
28:18But there was, like, no time.
28:22It's a real shame about the armholes
28:25because that detracts
28:27from a really nicely tailored piece.
28:32Well, thank you very much, Holger.
28:34And last but not least, dip tea.
28:36Oh.
28:45No.
28:47Oh.
28:47Unfortunately not.
28:49Oh.
28:50Well, hold it up like this instead.
28:52Hold it up in front so that we can see it.
28:55Let's have a wee look.
28:56Well, it's a fab design.
28:58Yeah.
28:58Do you think you just had
28:59not quite enough time
29:01to plan the neck?
29:04Yes.
29:04I was rushing quite a lot
29:06to actually just get it into a garment.
29:09Yes.
29:09Yes.
29:09Yeah.
29:10And then it was after I'd finished it,
29:11I realised that the neck hole was just far too small.
29:14Yeah.
29:14Thank you very much, dip tea.
29:15Thank you very much.
29:18It wouldn't go round his neck,
29:19so I was very upset that he couldn't wear it.
29:22Like, that really upset me, but...
29:24Yeah.
29:26I mean, I spend my whole working life
29:29under pressure
29:30playing music live
29:31and Radio 3 and things
29:33and that's pressure,
29:34but this really got to me somehow
29:35and I've disappointed myself
29:37how I sort of cracked
29:38under pressure of knitting
29:41that no one was paying me to do.
29:43With the Tank Top Solo Challenge complete,
29:53it's time for our first Team Knit.
29:57A surprise challenge on an epic scale
30:00and one last opportunity
30:03for knitters to impress.
30:07This is going to be knitting
30:09like you've never seen it before,
30:11so grab onto those needles and get ready.
30:13You're going to be working
30:14in two teams
30:16to transform
30:17a sofa.
30:20Oh, what?
30:21What?
30:22A sofa?
30:23A sofa?
30:25We want you to come up
30:26as a team
30:27with a fitted sofa cover
30:29using a chunky yarn.
30:33You can use as much colour as you want
30:36or you can use as little as you want.
30:38We're looking for a really
30:39cohesive design concept
30:41and we want the best possible
30:44practical fit.
30:46All parts of the sofa
30:47must be covered.
30:50And it's a sofa
30:51that when we walk in,
30:53we really want to go,
30:54wow.
30:55Now for this challenge,
30:58it is going to be judged blind.
31:00So now I am sadly going to ask
31:02Di and Sheila
31:02to leave the yarn barn
31:04and come back a little bit later on
31:05to see your lovely creations.
31:08Now knitters,
31:08you are going to be working
31:09in two teams of five.
31:12So team one
31:13is going to be
31:14Isaac,
31:15Gordon,
31:16Meadow,
31:17Tracy,
31:18and Dipti.
31:18And in team two
31:20we have
31:21Simon,
31:22Lydia,
31:23Stephanie,
31:24Holger,
31:25and Ailsa.
31:26So now you know your teams,
31:28there's no time
31:28to make friendly here.
31:30It's time
31:30to get going
31:31and you're not going to have
31:32very much time to do it.
31:34You have 10 hours
31:35to complete this challenge.
31:37So knitters,
31:38let's get knitting.
31:43Our knitters are used to working alone
31:45but to beat the other team,
31:46they must now combine
31:47their technical skills
31:49and work together
31:50to pull off a cohesive design
31:51in just 10 hours.
31:56This is quite an ambitious challenge.
31:59Well, not very many people
32:01have knitted a sofa cover.
32:02True.
32:03There's five people working on it
32:04and they have to work together
32:07to make it cohesive.
32:09At this point,
32:10we know they can knit.
32:11Yes.
32:11But it's down to those little details.
32:13They have to have planned
32:15right to the very end,
32:18including how they're going
32:19to put the pieces together.
32:25Has anybody done anything
32:26like this before?
32:28No.
32:29Okay.
32:29We need to think about
32:30when we're splitting it out,
32:31how people knit differently.
32:33So how does that fit
32:33into the design concept?
32:35With his experience
32:36of precise Savile Row tailoring,
32:38Holger is the first knitter
32:39to pitch a plan.
32:40As it is a fairly angular design,
32:42that lends itself
32:43to being split up
32:44into lots of geometric shapes,
32:47as in like rectangles.
32:49The concept could be like,
32:51let's say it's a gradient.
32:53You know,
32:53you could then do various colours
32:55in different textures,
32:56for example.
32:58We could have a cable
32:59at every join.
33:01A diamond.
33:02Yeah.
33:02You know,
33:02one person knits solid yellow,
33:04one person knits yellow-orange,
33:05one person knits orange,
33:07and so on.
33:07It could literally be
33:08any colour gradient,
33:09and then you would join them together.
33:11Roughly some sort of look like that.
33:14Yeah.
33:14It would be a relatively simple concept,
33:17but visually it's quite
33:19impactful and strong.
33:23Holger's idea
33:24is for each team member
33:25to knit strips
33:26in different colour combinations,
33:28holding two different coloured yarns
33:30together to create a marl effect.
33:33These will be accompanied
33:34with strips of a more complex
33:36cable stitch
33:37to add detail and texture.
33:39These strips would then
33:40be sewn together,
33:41creating a gradient
33:42or ombre effect.
33:45OK, team,
33:45each of us are going to do
33:46a panel.
33:48We're going to knit
33:48the length of the panel.
33:49Two metres.
33:50Two metres?
33:51Just under.
33:52Two metres.
33:53Whee!
33:53Once we've done that,
33:54we can allocate
33:55who's going to do
33:56the cabled panels
33:57with the solid colours.
33:58I'm good with Chunky,
33:59whatever you need me to do.
34:00Chunky, hmm, OK.
34:02We'll see.
34:03We'll see how it goes
34:04with Chunky.
34:04The other team
34:06haven't been putting
34:07their feet up either.
34:08Student Isaac
34:09has already hatched a plan.
34:11I had a thought.
34:12I'm a fan of colour work.
34:13We can maybe do some
34:14kind of, like, sunset
34:15across the back
34:16of the sofa.
34:17Oh, that sounds nice.
34:18How about holiday scenes?
34:20So when we have beach,
34:21sands, sea.
34:23Maybe the sunset
34:24would be the star
34:25of the show.
34:26The team have struck
34:30on an ambitious design
34:31built around
34:32a picture postcard
34:33holiday scene
34:34of rippling waves,
34:36sandy beaches
34:37and even the starry night sky.
34:40But the centrepiece
34:41will be Isaac's
34:42sumptuous sunset.
34:44The team have decided
34:45to use a variety
34:46of stitches
34:47across the entire sofa.
34:48If you got a stitch,
34:49that would be quite good.
34:50A garth stitch?
34:51We'd have the stockinette
34:53on the front.
34:53That's why I did it.
34:54I'm happy to do anything.
34:55I think that's going to be
34:55like a series of pants.
34:57Do we agree
34:58that we think
34:58it's cohesive enough?
34:59Yeah?
35:00Yeah.
35:00I mean, it has a story, right?
35:02Yeah.
35:05With only 10 hours
35:10to execute these designs,
35:12both teams are getting
35:13to grips with the sheer scale
35:14of this sofa-stitching
35:15showstopper.
35:17I've got a newfound respect
35:18for people who consistently knit
35:20in really chunky yarn.
35:21I physically can't cope
35:23with size 20 needles.
35:26Isaac is tackling
35:27the centrepiece
35:28of his team's design,
35:29the sunset.
35:32I've been quite ambitious
35:33with what I'm aiming to do.
35:35Intarsia is a different beast.
35:37Intarsia is a colour technique
35:39used to create blocks of colour
35:40by using separate lengths of yarn.
35:43But unlike Fair Isle,
35:44where the yarn is carried
35:45along the back of the work,
35:47with Intarsia,
35:48you use a separate ball of yarn
35:50for each colour change.
35:52Every time you see a colour change
35:53in a single row,
35:54you're carrying a new set
35:55of yarn behind it.
35:57I'm basically switching
35:58which colour I'm using,
35:59so I have to, like,
36:00cross them in the back
36:01right here.
36:02This just sounds like
36:03a different language,
36:04doesn't it?
36:05Room for a little one.
36:06Wow, look at all this.
36:08It's getting a bit hectic over here.
36:10I've added in the gradient
36:11and it's starting to take shape.
36:12So quite an ambitious panel
36:14to be making.
36:14Yeah, it is.
36:15Was it your idea?
36:16Yeah, it was.
36:17If we can get it done,
36:19it's going to be really fantastic.
36:20It's going to have that wow factor.
36:22Yeah, because look at that.
36:23That's...
36:24Even as a knitter,
36:26that is terrifying.
36:28Here we go.
36:34Wow.
36:35So this is the plan?
36:36It's a gradient.
36:37OK.
36:37All with a bit of cabling?
36:38With a bit of cabling.
36:40So we've got these
36:41various colour combinations
36:43going on.
36:44This is what we've got.
36:46Great.
36:46Who has knit with
36:47all this chunky before?
36:49Nope.
36:49Never?
36:50Nope.
36:50I love a chunky thing.
36:51It's just not me.
36:52Not for you.
36:53I just can't knit
36:54with really chunky yarn
36:55and really chunky needles.
36:56These needles are
36:57some chunky...
36:58They're huge.
36:59Chunky-chunky.
37:00Huge.
37:0020 mils.
37:01Yeah.
37:02They're massive.
37:03Yeah, we love it.
37:06While the chunky yarn
37:08is slowing Holger down,
37:09on the other team,
37:10Meadow is racing
37:11through her pieces.
37:13Nearly done the first
37:14of the three back panels.
37:16Whoa!
37:16That's quick.
37:18So, Meadow,
37:18when did you start knitting?
37:20Well, my granny,
37:21she taught me
37:22when I was really young.
37:24Like,
37:25because I'm autistic
37:25and I was having
37:26a really hard time
37:27managing some things
37:29in school.
37:30My mind could be so busy
37:31and stressed sometimes,
37:32so it's just really relaxing
37:34to just sit and focus
37:35on a project.
37:36Yeah.
37:36So, like, when I just started,
37:37it was just like,
37:38whoa!
37:38Yeah.
37:38I found my thing.
37:40It's the thing
37:41that I do for myself.
37:42Yes, it is.
37:44It is.
37:44Gordon,
37:45did you say
37:45you did knitting at school?
37:47Oh, yes.
37:47Even as a boy?
37:49I've always been a boy.
37:51Yay!
37:51Cruise ship entertainer Gordon
37:53is knitting the beach
37:55using garter stitch,
37:56a beginner-friendly stitch.
37:58I don't often knit
37:59in a public place,
38:01especially on board the ship.
38:03Most of the time,
38:04I do it in the cabin.
38:07It's only maybe
38:08in the last few years
38:09I've been a public knitter.
38:11I was once on a cruise knitting
38:12and a lady came past.
38:13She looked at me
38:14with great disgust
38:15and said,
38:15I think a jigsaw puzzle
38:17would be a bit more manly.
38:18Oh!
38:20So that was me told.
38:22I don't know any
38:22of this business
38:23of it being like,
38:24oh, you know,
38:24it's not very manly.
38:26Like, there are going
38:27to be people in life
38:27who don't like you
38:28and if the reason
38:29that they don't like me
38:30is because I'm a bloke
38:31who knits,
38:31then I've got more,
38:33like, I've got better
38:33things to worry about,
38:34really.
38:47I've got stars on there.
38:48I'm noticing that
38:49we've got quite
38:51different designs.
38:54You say it.
38:56No, you say it.
38:58We, Tom,
38:59doesn't want to say it.
39:00You're halfway through.
39:02Five hours to go.
39:04Oh, my gosh.
39:07I think we need
39:08to start seaming
39:09because if there's a problem,
39:10then we need more time.
39:11The gradient team
39:15are now moving on
39:16to the critical stage
39:17of sewing their strips together.
39:19Right.
39:20Let's see if we can
39:21put this baby together
39:22to see how the whole principle
39:23that the whole
39:24decides based on
39:25whether this actually works.
39:27With that many strips,
39:28it's obviously crucial
39:28that they're going to be
39:29nicely aligned.
39:30And as an analogy,
39:33this team,
39:34the gradient team,
39:35are doing a modern twist
39:36on a Victoria sponge.
39:38When executed well,
39:39lovely.
39:40Is it as ambitious
39:41as the other team?
39:42No.
39:43But while they are now
39:44racing to turn their strips
39:45into one cohesive cover,
39:47the Sunset team
39:48are still knitting
39:49their individual panels.
39:53I'm slightly concerned
39:54that they're going
39:54to finish in time.
39:56Mainly,
39:57Isaac.
39:58The entire work
39:59and the colour work
40:00and the stranding
40:01that he's doing
40:01is very complicated
40:03and he still has a way to go.
40:07We need to start joining.
40:09We haven't,
40:09we've got panels missing,
40:10haven't we?
40:13Currently,
40:14we don't have enough pieces
40:15to cover the sofa yet,
40:16which is slightly
40:18panic-inducing.
40:21Do we think
40:22we're on track?
40:25Debatable.
40:26It's getting tight.
40:27It's getting tight,
40:27isn't it, guys?
40:28Yeah?
40:28Yeah,
40:29I don't think
40:29we're on track.
40:35The knitters
40:36are running out of time
40:37in their first team challenge
40:39to design and knit
40:40a sofa cover
40:41to wow the judges.
40:43Ploving on
40:43across this vast
40:44expanse of sand.
40:46While the gradient team
40:47are now sewing
40:48theirs together.
40:49I'll sew from this way,
40:50that way,
40:50you sew.
40:51Yes, sir.
40:51Somewhere in the middle.
40:52The sunset team
40:53are still knitting
40:54individual panels.
40:56Close.
40:56No.
40:57Sorry.
40:58Isaac,
40:59how are you looking
40:59at that aspect?
41:00Not fantastic.
41:01Do you think
41:02your time
41:03might be better spent
41:05joining pieces together?
41:07If I start joining
41:08stuff together,
41:09there's going to be
41:09a massive hole.
41:10If I don't start
41:11joining stuff together
41:12and other people
41:12are doing it,
41:13there's going to be
41:13a smaller hole.
41:14I don't want to say
41:15that I've bitten off
41:16more than I can chew,
41:17but I think it just
41:17took me a bit of time
41:18to find my flow.
41:21Knitters,
41:22you have one hour
41:24remaining.
41:25No way.
41:27No.
41:27No.
41:29Simon and Holger
41:30are doing the sewing up
41:31and almost finished.
41:31I'm on one of two
41:33of the pink legs.
41:34I don't know
41:34whether it's blind
41:35hope or optimism,
41:36but I think
41:36we're going to be all right.
41:40Right.
41:41Fun knitting.
41:41Well done.
41:42Well done.
41:43I'm crocheting
41:44the back pieces together.
41:46Do I just cast this off
41:47and we have a massive hole?
41:48Yeah, yeah.
41:48Let's just get
41:49those other two bits on.
41:52Tip it upside down
41:53to put the feet on.
41:56Feet.
41:57Take a look.
41:58Is it straight?
41:59What do I care about straight?
42:02Are we all good?
42:03I think so.
42:07Five minutes, guys.
42:07Five minutes.
42:10Should we offer to help?
42:12Yeah.
42:13Guys, do you need
42:14help pinning up?
42:15Tell us where you want us.
42:16Thank you so much, guys.
42:17This goes together, right?
42:19Four balls of water
42:19to put around the legs.
42:21What color?
42:21Anything.
42:22What if he takes
42:23pin that onto the fat
42:24right up there?
42:25That's the best.
42:25Anything else that you need
42:26can you pin a star on there?
42:31Knitters, needles down,
42:32place your final pins.
42:34Time is up.
42:37Thank you so much, guys.
42:39Well done, guys.
42:40Welcome.
42:40Have a good cry.
42:41Yeah, right.
42:43It's just such a hodgepodge.
42:47We need to do,
42:47we need to finish
42:48on a group hug or something.
42:49Shall we have a team hug?
42:50I'd rather not.
42:51Casey, we need a team hug.
42:52I'm not a massive hugger.
42:54Okay, I'll hug you too then.
42:55That's fine.
42:59In 10 hours,
43:01both teams have completed
43:02their sofa covers.
43:04Sort of.
43:05Well done, knitters.
43:06It is now time to hear from the judges.
43:09So, Di and Sheila,
43:11would you like to come back
43:12into our yarn barn
43:13and let us know what you think?
43:16Starting with the sandy sunset sofa,
43:19what do you think?
43:20Well...
43:21I mean, it's a very ambitious design.
43:37It saddens me to have to say
43:39that it's not properly finished, is it?
43:42It's not finished.
43:42There's some car crashes.
43:43Well, there's lots, actually.
43:45Yeah.
43:46We've got lots of holes
43:48because the garter stitch is...
43:49It's stretched.
43:50Yeah.
43:52There has had to be
43:53some entarsia work done here,
43:55which is commendable.
43:59Mm.
43:59The stocking stitch
44:01going to garter,
44:02there's no cohesion, is there?
44:04No.
44:04I do think
44:07they're an inventive group.
44:08I mean, the balls of wool
44:09for the legs.
44:10We said covered.
44:12Look!
44:14Indeed!
44:15It is really quite fun,
44:17but it's...
44:19It's incomplete.
44:21Di and Sheila,
44:22can I ask you what you think
44:22of the gradient sofa?
44:27It's the cables
44:28that strike me first,
44:29but you would probably say
44:30it's the sweep of the colour.
44:32Colour going through.
44:33It's very cuddly.
44:34That's because of
44:35the raised effect.
44:36With the wide cable.
44:38The diamond.
44:39Interlocking diamond design.
44:40Very clever.
44:41That's why this works so much.
44:42It does have feet.
44:44The feet.
44:45The feet are fabulous.
44:48Have each of these panels
44:50actually been knitted separately?
44:52Di, that's an incredible amount
44:53of sewing up.
44:54You end up with
44:55an uneven effect.
44:58It hasn't been neatly finished.
45:01No.
45:01At all.
45:01It's actually,
45:03do you know,
45:03a very simple design
45:05and we did want
45:07something that is like
45:09wow, wow, wow.
45:11It's wow,
45:12but it's not...
45:13incredible.
45:21Di and Sheila,
45:22have you come to a decision?
45:25Ladies, tell us.
45:26One sofa demonstrated
45:29a better design concept
45:31and execution
45:33overall
45:34and that sofa
45:36is
45:37the ombre.
45:40whose idea was the ombre
45:50so far?
45:52Holger?
45:53Yeah?
45:53Congratulations.
45:56Well, knitters,
45:57those are the challenges
45:58complete for this week.
45:59So,
46:00it's time to wind up
46:01your wall
46:01and let Di and Sheila
46:03decide your fate.
46:04Intagra is a different beast
46:10when it comes to
46:11a lot of types of knitting.
46:12I don't know why
46:13I said I would do it.
46:14I think the bits
46:15that I completed
46:16were fine.
46:17If I do go home,
46:18I'd be disappointed.
46:19It was just time
46:21and if we had more time,
46:21it would have been
46:22better executed.
46:23I'm worried.
46:25It's now up to Di and Sheila
46:26to decide
46:27who will be cast off
46:28based on their performance
46:29across both challenges.
46:30I mean, wow.
46:34What an incredible
46:35first two challenges.
46:37You asked a lot
46:38of the knitters.
46:39We certainly did.
46:40So, who has done
46:40particularly well
46:41this week?
46:42Lydia.
46:44We found very striking.
46:47Ailsa.
46:49Her attention
46:50to detail.
46:53Who are you worried about?
46:56Isaac.
46:59The sunset sofa
47:00was a car crash.
47:02He didn't quite
47:03have enough time
47:04to finish.
47:06And then
47:06in the Fair Isle
47:08challenge,
47:09Gordon.
47:13I don't love
47:14the steaking.
47:15No.
47:16Dipti
47:16didn't quite
47:20produce a garment
47:21that was fit
47:22for purpose.
47:24So,
47:25have you come
47:26to a decision?
47:28We have.
47:30It's time
47:38to hear
47:38who has
47:39knit big
47:40and whose journey
47:41has started
47:42to unravel.
47:43Di.
47:44So,
47:45our first
47:46big knitter
47:47of the competition
47:48is...
47:51Ailsa.
47:52And to commemorate
47:57the occasion,
47:58I'd love to present
47:58to you
47:59the sheep
48:00badge.
48:02Thank you.
48:03You're very welcome.
48:04You deserve it.
48:05Congratulations.
48:07But this is
48:09a competition
48:09and sadly
48:10we have to say
48:11goodbye
48:11to someone.
48:12The person
48:15being cast off
48:17this week
48:18is...
48:19Gordon.
48:28Give us a hug.
48:36He did so
48:37incredibly well.
48:39I just was so keen
48:39to come on
48:40and show
48:41that everyone
48:42can knit
48:42nowadays
48:43without shame
48:44or embarrassment.
48:45We'll have a group hug.
48:46Come on,
48:47everyone in.
48:48Oh my goodness,
48:51I can't believe
48:52I'm here next week.
48:53I genuinely
48:54thought I was
48:55for the chop.
48:56He's literally
48:56going to diminish
48:57the humour
48:57in this room
48:58by about 50%.
48:59Yeah.
49:00We've only got
49:01Simon to listen to.
49:04I didn't expect
49:05to be the first
49:05big knitter.
49:07It's a good
49:07confidence boost
49:08going into
49:09the next week.
49:13Next time,
49:15iconic knits
49:16for dogs.
49:17Don't hate me.
49:18I'm not a dog person.
49:20She's so beautiful.
49:23And a throwback
49:24to the 80s.
49:26You know,
49:26we all remember
49:26the 80s, right?
49:27The shoulder pads,
49:28the big hair.
49:29Results in fashion
49:30fabulousness.
49:32I love the big
49:33puffy sleeve.
49:47hair.
49:52Take care.
49:55Like how long will
49:57it be?
49:57No.
49:58Not yet.
49:58Are you kidding?
49:59Stop it.
50:00I love the hair.
50:00You know,
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