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Pretty
Knitty Titties: A cancer survivor's crafty approach to prosthetic
breasts
Julie Hanus,
Utne Reader
March 01, 2008
Six months after losing
one of her breasts to cancer, Beryl Tsang faced a daunting but common
challenge: an invitation to a party at a trendy Toronto lounge.
She wanted to wear a dress but didn't want go out "unbalanced",
which meant finding the right breast prosthesis.
"I went
to every mastectomy boutique and medical supply store in the city,"
Tsang writes on Knitty.com. "There were titties of every shape,
size, and color (from beige to dark brown), but none were what I
wanted — perky, cute, and comfortable. They were too heavy,
squishy, or ugly."
The best commercial option
Tsang found, a light silicone prosthesis paired with an official
mastectomy bra, still brought her to tears on the big night. "The
titty reminded me of raw liver, while the bra resembled the suspension
system of my 1995 Volvo," she writes.
Inspiration struck the
crafty Canadian, who grabbed a pair of knitting needles and proceeded
to whip out a comfy, cute knitted breast. The Tit-Bit was born.
According to
the National Breast Cancer Foundation, one woman in eight will have
breast cancer in her lifetime, and every year thousands of women
undergo mastectomies. Tsang's knitted breasts, comfortable,
knitted alternatives to commercial prosthetics, are a homespun victory
for all survivors. The pattern is available on Knitty.com,
but Tsang also sells a variety of spunky models on TitBits.ca.
Prices range from $65 to $95 Canadian, and she offers three types:
everyday (simple cotton designs in colors like milk chocolate and
buff); fancy (made with luxury yarns such as cashmere or with creative
touches like confetti trim); and floosie (racy models, such as the
Marabou Red, a scarlet cotton beauty with a faux fur trim).
Tsang's
enterprise isn't just a "boob factory," she told
Bust (Dec. 2007-Jan. 2008). She sees TitBits.ca as a social enterprise,
and she hopes that "the homemade prostheses will help women
'take back the tit' from cancer and a male-run health
care system."
Her goal is
political education, and her website is a forum where women with
breast cancer can exchange wisdom, wit, and inspiration. It contains
answers from various women to questions such as: I've just
been diagnosed and I have to make decisions about my treatment quickly
but I'm so overwhelmed I don't know where to start,
help! and Who do I tell about my breast cancer and what do I say?
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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