Upclose, Unsure, and Unimpressed.

This summer is all about the puppies. Since you have already met my new main man Ari here, I’d like to introduce my new friend Suki. She is almost as wide as she is long. Suki is the first baby bulldog I have ever met in person despite many of my family being University of Georgia graduates.

After a week with Suki, I can honestly say that she has 3 favorite modes:

1. Up close
2. Unsure
3. Unimpressed

You can see more of Suki here.

And for the linguistically curious, here are some recent links to articles about craftivism in foreign languages I don’t know. For those who would prefer English, you can translate the articles fairly well over here.

*Virknålens revolution
*Sådärja, den stickade revolutionen är här!

Let Me Ease Your Day.

The lovely fiber artists Rockpool Candy and My Tarpit have launched a lovely new textile intervention project called Let Me Ease Your Day.

The kickoff for the project was earlier this month, but that doesn’t mean that they’re going to stop there. They’ll be spreading goodness through the UK and Ireland for a bit, and then bringing their magic to the United States in the fall! Below is a bit of text taken from a Rockpool Candy blog post regarding the project’s Belfast kickoff, and above are a few photos taken from their website. Want more? Then have a look over here.

In times of financial worry, charities suffer. The public pull in their purse strings and stop giving. When the living is easy, our money is often given to charity to ease our consciences, to allow us to carry on our day to day lives without having to interact with needy causes and to feel like we’re doing something.

But I want society to be different.

As crafters we have skills that we can put to use and make a difference that is not dependent on the free change we have in our pockets.

6th July sees my LET ME EASE YOUR DAY project launch in Belfast. A movement that takes what can often been seen as a middle-class pass time, yarn bombing, and purposes it for the good by providing knitted, crocheted and sewn textiles to the people in our society who might just need a random act of kindness to ease their day.

It could be you.
You may be having a bad day.
You could be sleeping rough.
Your job may be in jeopardy.
You could be worried about your mortgage.
You could have lost your cat/your friend/your child.

All these things leave us feeling vunerable.

What if, during your day, you found a small item left for you by a stranger specifically to nurture you. It won’t solve all your problems, but it may just put a glimmer of warmth in your chest.

Now, you may argue that LET ME EASE YOUR DAY is still a middle class reaction to human loneliness, but surely, as makers, it’s a way that we can make a difference with textiles.

Big big love.

Definin’ Shrimpin’ and A Whole Mess of Seagulls.

It’s funny how quick we can cling to our ideals so much that we overlook stark realities. How we can wrap ourselves up in our own lives and thoughts and projects and fail to really truly see what’s right in front of us. Recently there has been some discussion online about what craftivism is. Is it this? Is it that? Who can use it? What can it be used for? To me, it’s an umbrella term that captures every movement you consciously make towards making the world a better place via your creativity.

It’s become something so broad and so open-ended that in some ways it’s caused problems instead of helped to identify or explain. So one of the things on my to-do list is to capture the various definitions I’ve used to define craftivism in one place, along with the definitions from others, with this collection made in the hopes that if you’re trying to figure out what this all means craftivism.com can serve as a resource with an aim toward making things more understandable and less amorphous. And there will also be this blog that is updated semi-regularly about the everyday aspects of what it can mean to live an ethical life in modernity.

I’ve also started drafting a FAQ document so if people want to know quick answers they can find them. Eventually, I’d like to have other things linked to the site that others have written about craftivism (essays, theses, etc.) but it’s all a work in progress, much like life itself. Have any ideas? Definitions? Queries? Advice? Things to include? Then please feel free to either comment below or email me, as always. And since it’s just me, myself and I round these parts, it may take me a bit to get back to you, but I will, I promise!



That all being said, here are a few photographs taken from a recent expedition on a former commercial shrimping boat off the coast of Georgia. After only two hours on the boat, I was struck by how difficult and raw and backbreaking the work was, and again reminded how it’s not always necessary to look half a world away to find those in different circumstances or situations or livelihoods. I spent a fair share of those scant hours talking to the teenage son of the shrimp boat captain who had been shrimping since he was 9 years old.

Not only are the coastal regions of southern Georgia beautiful, I had no idea how enriched they were with ocean life. Even though I know that lots of interesting creatures and crawlers live under the sea, given its all too often calm surface, it’s easy to forget just how varied and fascinating the findings are once you peek under the water. Hammerhead sharks, eels, horseshoe crabs, blowfish, flounder, crab, hermit crabs, rays and shrimp were just some of the animals that plopped down on the sorting table, all but the shrimp returned to the sea. Dolphins and sea gulls followed the boat playfully, jumping and screeching, respectively.

We talked about working from sunup to sunset to how hard it is to make a living on the sea to the cost of fuel to the dangers of what can lurk in the nets. It was the perfect analogy of life and all of its varied crevices, how nothing is as smooth as it seems or solely black and white, how every decision we make is based on the millions of events in our lives that have occurred up til now. But perhaps most importantly, it was a reminder of how to keep our eyes open to the fact that no matter how something or someone may look, they are always, without exception, more varied, more amazing and more surprising than what you may see at first glance.

So, with that in mind, I try to define a term that has many definitions and uses in a world that’s just as complex. But that’s what’s so exciting, that what I gain from it may differ from what you gain from it, and still at the end of the day, we are all heading towards the same place. Like the sea and our lives, it’s all changing and moving and evolving as time continues, which makes everything all the more delicious indeed.

Putting the Needle On the Record.

The other week I was flattered to have both a reporter and a photographer come to my house for an article for the News & Observer, my local paper. To read the article, you can either click here or click on the photo above.

I really like this article because it talks about how much I’ve failed over the years. Not failed in a pathetic way, but failed in a “I know I’m put here to do something and I’m going to find it” way. I’ve screwed up so many things along the way it’s laughable, and in time I’ve learned that all those screw-ups weren’t really screw-ups after all, just lessons to be learned.

Over the years I’ve learned to ask questions, explore new things, breathe deep, laugh at myself, apologize when necessary, pack a suitcase in 5 minutes and how to channel both MacGyver and Martha Stewart when something breaks. Time has taught me that challenging yourself and your ideals is the only way to truly move forward.

So, today I thought I’d link a few stories of late regarding people who have used their knitting for good, whether charitable, entrepreneurial or just plain fun.



School Kids Knit for Teddies for Tragedies

Designer Uses Her Flock’s Fleece for Clothing

Women Create Village With Knitting Needles & Yarn

Brain Exercises (Like Knitting!) May Delay Memory Loss

Menno Boldt knits for good, in his Lazy Boy, watching sports

Girl Scout troop makes 130 hats and scarves for local cancer patients

Madison Senior Center knitters in Huntsville, Alabama knit for preemies

Edmonton group (minkhasweaters.com) sells handmade Bolivian sweaters


Warm Heads, Warm Hands, Warm Hearts: Helping Nepal family earn a real living


I have no idea why the link spacing is so weird today. Oh, and wondering why my eyes are closed in one of the article’s photos? Well, let’s just say that’s pretty much the state of every photo people take of me!

CODEPINK White House Banner = Done!

Almost a month ago, I wrote about CODEPINK’S call for crochet and knit squares for a Mother’s Day day banner they were going to display in front of the White House.

Below are some of the resulting photos from all those squares sent (I wonder if my squares made it in?), and you can see all of them over here on Flickr. Clicking on each photo below will take you directly to the Flickr set, too.

Job well done, CODEPINK and all of you who sent in squares!





Also keeping me happy lately:
*Rediscovering Jawbreaker
*Cultcase.com’s post on Israeli graffiti
*Learning more about living green with The Guide Girls
*Bang on instructions on how to make cold press iced coffee!
*If Charlie Parker Was a Gunslinger, There’d Be a Lot of Dead Copycats
*The refreshing honesty of Havi Brooks and Naomi Dunford (Ittybiz.com)
*Jennifer Worick’s always hilarious blog Things I Want to Punch in the Face
*Kayte Terry’s Craft Stylish post on how to make a beautiful scarf from scraps