Tom Daley is all-around gold

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This summer, when cameras at the Tokyo Olympics zeroed in on British diver Tom Daley, he was nearly always knitting: by the pool, in the stands, on the bus.

The needles and yarn became Daley’s signatures, second only to his newly minted gold medal. BuzzFeed deemed his crafting worthy of its own Olympic honors. On social media, knitters, crocheters and would-be crafters swooned over his calm demeanor and steady stitches.

Daley, 27, was among the many of us who turned to craft in the early days of the pandemic as a tactile balm for anxious times and a replacement for disrupted rituals. He had been training for the 2020 Games for four years, and all of a sudden they were off the calendar. Daley and his teammates were used to going to the pool every day and following a regimented training schedule; Britain’s stringent lockdown upended that.

His sofa cushions became a crash mat for practicing somersaults and the gymnastics that make diving mesmerizing to watch. Spin classes, runs and team workouts on Zoom became the norm. The time at home meant he could bond with his young son, Robbie, and his husband, Dustin Lance Black. But he also yearned for a new challenge — something he could take on in his downtime.

At his husband’s suggestion, Daley started watching intro knitting videos on YouTube while traveling for a competition in Canada.

“At first, I was actually terrible at it,” he said.

Beginning knitters and crocheters know just how difficult it is to pick up foundational techniques for the crafts from videos alone. But after lots of practice and consultations with other divers and coaches about their own dabbling in fiber arts, Daley found his footing.

“Each new project I started, I wanted to learn a new stitch or a new skill,” Daley said. “I was completely obsessed with it.”

After mastering the basic knit and purl stitches, Daley conquered the more complicated colorwork knitting techniques and last August added crochet to his craft repertoire. His crafting Instagram, @madewithlovebytomdaley, features his own creations as well as those made following popular patterns and kits from companies like Wool and the Gang and We Are Knitters.

Once in Tokyo, Daley’s new hobby became even more essential. Pandemic safety measures kept the Olympians isolated, which gave them ample time to overthink every little movement. Knitting became not just a downtime diversion for Daley but a way to manage his anxiety.

“I was very grateful to have my little cardigan project to give me that little bit of a healthy distraction and at the same time find calm and peace,” he said.

Daley’s Olympic knitting certainly has brought even more attention to the crafts. But he is using his platform and his knitwear for much more.

Rather than letting the cardigans, sweaters and hats gather dust in a closet, Daley regularly raffles off pieces he makes and donates proceeds to the Brain Tumour Charity in memory of his father, Rob Daley, who died of brain cancer in 2011.

Daley made his Olympic debut when he was 14 at the 2008 Games in Beijing. He brought home a bronze medal in the 2012 London Games and the 2016 Rio Games. In those early years of his career, he faced bullying at school and a flurry of unwanted attention from the British tabloids, including suggestions that he wasn’t taking his diving career seriously.

At the same time, he was grieving the loss of his father and learning more about himself. After falling in love, he announced in a 2013 YouTube video that he was gay.

“I met someone,” he said in the video. “They make me feel so happy, so safe. Everything just feels great. And well, that someone is a guy.” (Now they’re married.)

Tokyo was Daley’s most successful Olympic appearance yet. He won gold in the men’s synchronized 10-meter platform with his partner Matty Lee and a bronze in the men’s 10-meter platform.

Where does he go after bringing home a gold medal, becoming a meme and taking the crafting world by storm? For starters, he has written a memoir, “Coming Up for Air,” which is due out this fall. He also said he is serious about becoming a knitwear designer.

“I would love to make it more accessible for people to learn that they can see something in the shop and then make it themselves.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

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