Jane Gaugain (née Alison) (26 March 1804 - 20 May 1860) was a Scottish knitter and writer. She built up a successful business in Edinburgh, Scotland, and published 16 volumes on knitting that helped make it a popular pastime for ladies and a source of income for lower classes of women. Her unusually-written pattern books are important in the history of textiles in Scotland.[1][2]
Jane (sometimes Jean) Alison was born on 26 March 1804 in Dalkeith, Midlothian one of 12 children born to Elizabeth (née McLairain/McLaren) (d. 1824) and James Alison (1775–1846). Her father was a tailor and clothier, appointed as a Scottish contractor in ordinary to King William IV, and was a burgess of Edinburgh.[3]
She married English cloth importer John James Gaugain (known as James or J.J.), son of engraver Thomas Gaugain on 16 November 1823 at St Andrew's Church in Edinburgh[4] she worked in her husband's shop at 63 George Street[5] and helped turn it into a thriving haberdashery.[4][3]
Gaugain wrote and disseminated knitting patterns throughout the 1830s from her shop and published her first pattern book in 1840. It was called "Lady's Assistant in Knitting, Netting and Crochet." She had a particular way of writing her patterns with full instructions at the beginning detailing the meanings of abbreviations. The book was very popular.[a] The book reached a massive audience in the UK and America and was the best-selling knitting book of the period. It ran to 22 editions. Throughout the 1840s and 50s, she published a great many titles. In response to readers' feedback, she began to produce charted paper and instructions that allowed knitters to create their own designs and began accepting mail orders at the Edinburgh shop.[6][7][8]
Jane and JJ Gaugain had nine children, six of whom lived to adulthood. Their youngest son, Charles (1836–c.1860) became a sergeant in the East India Company, and he and their youngest daughter, Rosetta Hester Malcolm (1842–1908), survived her.
In 2012, knitter Franklin Habit adapted one of Jane Gaugain's patterns, a pineapple-shaped purse, for a modern audience in the summer 2012 issue of Knitty.[9] Knitters today continue to use and be inspired by Jane Gaugain's patterns, and she is beginning to be recognised as an 'unsung hero' of the history of women entrepreneurs and knitting.[10][11][12][13][14][15][16][17]
Gaugain, Jane (1845). The Lady's Assistant for Executing Useful and Fancy Designs in Knitting, Netting, and Crochet Work (eighth thousand). Edinburgh: I. J. Gaugain; London: Ackermann and Co.
Gaugain, Jane (1845). The Accompaniment to Second Volume of Mrs Gaugain's Work on Knitting, Netting and Crochet, Illustrating the Open Patterns and Stitches; To Which are Added Several Elegant and New Receipts (Third thousand). Edinburgh: I. J. Gaugain; London: Ackermann and Co.
^Online editions of the book exist. For the first edition of the book, see Gaugain 1840; for the 1842 fifth edition of the book, see Gaugain (5th ed.) 1842.
^"7 More Knitting Words to Keep You Warm". Merriam Webster. Retrieved 5 September 2019. The earliest written use we currently have for garter stitch comes from an 1840 book of knitting, netting, and crochet patterns by the Scottish knitter and businesswoman, Jane Gaugain.