The Sunday Post (Dundee)

Well, the accents might be hand-knitted but the hand-knitting is the real deal: Expert team helps Castle rom-com stars get the needle

- By Siobhan Synnot news@sundaypost.com

It may be billed as a romantic comedy but knitwear designer Di Gilpin made sure A Castle For Christmas took one thing seriously: knitting.

In the film, Brooke Shields’ novelist arrives in Scotland to visit the castle where her father grew up. The castle’s owner (Cary Elwes) is far from welcoming, but she gets a much friendlier reception from the local knitting circle, where she finds support, fun and knitting tips.

The film’s producers approached Di Gilpin, Scotland’s hand-knitting queen, to help make Shields and the actors knit up a storm.

“Brooke was tall and friendly and very excited about knitting,” said Gilpin. “It turned out she had done a little before, and our knitting classes were great craic. She was telling us that knitting brings back memories of her father, and she’s put some of her examples on Instagram.

“All the actors we worked with kept up their knitting. Even actors like Cary Elwes, who doesn’t do any knitting in the film, would stop by and watch us in between filming. Each day when we arrived, everyone on set would cheer ‘ The Knitters have arrived!’”

Gilpin’s company, based in Fife, produces striking knitwear collection­s under her own name and for designer brands including Paul Smith, Wolsey and Nike, with the help of a core network of 30 Scottish home-knitters.

Her team spent three weeks on the Dalmeny Estate where most of the filming took place, in order to yarn-bomb the A Castle For Christmas set with gansey jumpers, shawls, pompoms and knitted cupcakes, and keep tabs

on the knitting scenes. “Not only did we knit everything on the screen, but sometimes we had to take the work from the actors and un-knit it, for continuity.”

“I wanted details that knitters would recognise, so we had 80-year-old Tina Grey making a traditiona­l gansey fishermen sweater using needles that were 40 years old. Everything was thought out really carefully and each character had their own authentic knitting style.

Many of the knitters in Gilpin’s company have been with her for years, and she is proud of the fact they are supportive friends as well as workers. One knitter, Kirsty, has a profoundly disabled child but is able to work and care for her daughter Skye through the company’s flexible hours. After learning of Skye’s condition, the film’s producers have donated to a fund that aims to buy Skye a daybed.

The knitters also gathered together last week for a special festive viewing of A Castle For Christmas, mince pies and glasses of bubbly to celebrate moments such as Brooke Shields using Gilpin’s own knitting needles, a special cheer for the knitter who spent weeks making 200 pompoms to decorate a VW Camper van for the film.

“She says it will be a long time before she can face making pompoms again!” laughs Gilpin. “But we wanted to show off another side of Scotland, which is knitting and it’s a great way to reach out to people.

“I’ve read reviews of the film with people rubbishing the accents, but we got to know the film’s voice coach very well. She’s worked on some major films and tried to keep the accents as authentic as possible.

“But it is a rom-com, and they are all about escapism, so of course A Castle For Christmas is an enjoyable fantasy – but the knitting is totally real!”

 ?? ?? Brooke Shields, above, and with co-star Cary Elwes, inset below,
Brooke Shields, above, and with co-star Cary Elwes, inset below,
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 ?? ?? Expert knitter Di Gilpin was drafted in to help out on the movie set
Expert knitter Di Gilpin was drafted in to help out on the movie set
 ?? ?? in A Castle for Christmas and doing some knitting on set, right
in A Castle for Christmas and doing some knitting on set, right

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