Film understands the power of silhouette. A hat can alter posture, sharpen presence, and complete a character's transformation without a single line of dialogue. Crochet, with its visible hand and architectural structure, carries intimacy and authority at once.
Anat Fritz's signature "Jockey" crochet hat — first introduced in her 2005 debut hat collection — found its cinematic return in The Queen's Gambit. Costume designer Gabriele Binder, whose visionary work on the series earned her an Emmy Award, knew Fritz's early collection and made the deliberate decision to place the structured green crochet piece onto Anya Taylor-Joy's head in the pivotal final scene. This is the original green crochet hat worn in The Queen's Gambit, designed years before the series was conceived.
The result was quiet precision. The saturated green, disciplined form, and restrained military edge frame Beth Harmon in a moment of composure and earned mastery. The hat does not overpower the scene — it seals it. It is the original green crochet hat worn in The Queen's Gambit that has since become one of the most searched costume pieces in recent television history.
In film, costume is narrative architecture. Here, crochet became character. The original green crochet hat worn in The Queen's Gambit traces its origin to Anat Fritz's 2005 atelier — a piece of handcrafted history that found its way from a German-trained artist's debut to a global streaming phenomenon.





