Erika Aittamaa
Swedish mitten inventor
Why this is trending
Interest in “Erika Aittamaa” spiked on Wikipedia on 2026-02-28.
Categorised under Arts & Culture, this article fits a familiar pattern. wt.cat.arts.1
GlyphSignal tracks these patterns daily, turning raw Wikipedia traffic data into a curated feed of what the world is curious about. Every spike tells a story.
Key Takeaways
- Maria Erika "Riiga" Olofsdotter Aittamaa (22 February 1866 – 15 December 1952) was a Tornedalian artisan, famed as the inventor of the Lovikkavante mitten.
- A part of the Finnic Meänkieli-speaking population of the Norrbotten County in northern Sweden, she lived in Lovikka with her husband and children and started to sell mittens to make money.
- Demand for Erika's mittens became so great that she taught others how to make them.
- The process however cost money and although the teacher found people who would fund the cost, Aittamaa refused to take charity.
Maria Erika "Riiga" Olofsdotter Aittamaa (22 February 1866 – 15 December 1952) was a Tornedalian artisan, famed as the inventor of the Lovikkavante mitten.
Aittamaa was born to a poor family with many children. A part of the Finnic Meänkieli-speaking population of the Norrbotten County in northern Sweden, she lived in Lovikka with her husband and children and started to sell mittens to make money. In 1892 she invented the Lovikkavante, a special kind of mittens. Demand for Erika's mittens became so great that she taught others how to make them. During the 1930s a local teacher found that she could patent the design. The process however cost money and although the teacher found people who would fund the cost, Aittamaa refused to take charity.
References
Further reading
- Erika Aittamaa at Svenskt kvinnobiografiskt lexikon
Content sourced from Wikipedia under CC BY-SA 4.0