Arthur Beale Short Handle Coloured Ditty Bag
Pickup available at Arthur Beale Warehouse
Usually ready in 2 hours
Arthur Beale Short Handle Coloured Ditty Bag
Red
Arthur Beale Warehouse
Severalles Farm
Ilmer
Princes Risborough HP27 9QZ
United Kingdom
Fantastically useful onboard as well as around home. Our bag is made from very heavy natural cotton canvas with a tough hand spliced natural flax rope handle. Each bag has seven external pockets of varying widths to suit fids, marline spikes, note books, needles or knives. The large inside area can take reels of whipping twine, sailmakers palms, handy pulleys and all the little bits of rigging hardware that keeps the boat going smoothly. Technical Specification: Approximately 200 mm high x 170 mm diameter
We make all our Ditty Bag handles in-house using traditional splicing techniques
Features
- Seven external pockets
- 10 mm soft matt braided rope handle
- Very heavy grade canvas
- Large strong eyelets
- Economically Priced
A few uses...
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Sailing ditty bag - keep all your essential tools handy including your Arthur Beale adjustable spanner of course!
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Household sewing bag - keep threads, needles, scrap materials and much more neatly tucked away!
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Canal and Rivers Ditty Bag - perfect for your windlass, lock key, Canal and River Trust Key, hot flask of tea and your Arthur Beale beanie hat for when the weather turns!
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Bag for Artist’s brushes and kit - keep stock of your paint brushes, tapes, palette knives and paints!
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Riggers bag for Mastwork - perfect for easy access to your splicing equipment, spare hardware and rigging knives.
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Foragers Bag - Our Ditty Bags work great for wild foraging, giving enough room for herbs, wild fruits and veg and even your trusty guidebook... we love 'The Edible Seashore River Cottage Handbook' for coastal foraging!
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The neatest Bathroom / Heads Tidy - Stowaway your Arthur Beale Wool Fat Soap and Sea Shampoo in our trusty Ditty Bag, you'll be smelling fresh as a sea breeze in no time!
Tools and contents not included.
The History of the Ditty Bag
The History of the Ditty Bag is rather vague, being a term primarily used at sea and only making it's way into print in 1833 in The Journal of Belles Lettres, Philadelphia:
" On each side of the berth-deck, termed “the wings,” are racks for the accommodation of canvass bags; each man has one in which he keeps his clothes, and a little bag or reticule called “a ditty bag,” containing all the implements of his housewifery, such as thimble, needles, tapes, thread, &c, for you must know that every genuine seaman is always his own tailor, hatter, and very frequently his own shoemaker."
The term 'Ditty' is rather mysterious, with some thinking it originated from the word ditto (in reference to a bag for 'dittos' or a second set of clothes with the idea that a sailors' wardrobe was rather limited). Another assumption is that it is a modified form of kitty-bag, derived from kit-bag. A more creative idea comes from a correspondent to a 19th century journal, claiming the ditty bag or box was just about the right size to store sheet music... therefore drawing its' name from the musical term ditty for a short and simple song!
A likely origin story is that the term actually came from the now obsolete Indian word dutty or Hindi word dhoti which refers to a thick type of calico primarily used for sail cloth. Since a sailor would likely fashion his own Ditty bag from spare sail cloth aboard ship, this seems like a rather plausible explanation for the name.
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