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Love Not Bombs

Monday, February 14th, 2011

Lovers Lane by the Knitorious M.E.G.

Image provided by The Knitorious M.E.G. with permission.

Every street should be a lover’s lane – a Valentine’s Day knitted wish from the The Knitorious M.E.G in Southeastern Virginia, USA.

Image provided by The Knitorious M.E.G. with permission.

Melissa, a new yarn bomber, also got up around her town with some fuzzy love notes. She says:

‘I’m in a small town and today I went yarn bombing and did quite a few. The first photo was done at an elementary school. This one I was a bit concerned about, it’s on a busy road and halfway through the second heart my old teacher pulled in across the street and started eyeing me up. Everything was okay and I snapped a pic. So then I headed downtown and began hanging up little crocheted hearts anywhere they would go. I hung them around the courthouse, banks, stores, ext.  ‘…So I got some weird looks but all in all my bombing experience wasn’t a bad one…’

In addition to the hearts, Melissa also made some hats. She says that this bombing experience won’t be her last.

Get out your needles and hooks and knit something warm for a loved one – whether they be a friend, lover, relative, kid, pet, or your favorite inanimate object. Wishing you a day full of cinnamon hearts, good cheer, and very few dropped stitches.

Like Melissa’s heart garland? Design Sponge online featured a free pattern for a similar garland last month. This could be a quick and easy way to brighten up somebody’s Valentine Day. Choose someone who might not easily embrace V-Day and spread some handmade goodness.

Valentine’s Day Knit-In in Vancouver

For our February 14th, Mandy and I will be knitting and crocheting more cherry blossoms for Historic Joy Kogawa House with young writing students at Christianne’s Lyceum here in Vancouver.  If you have a young crafter aged nine or up, send them to knit with us – there’s still room in the workshops that run between 9-12 pm and 1-4 pm.


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Flower Patterns for Cherry Bombers

Wednesday, January 12th, 2011

We’re excited that so many people have expressed an interest in contributing cherry blossoms! We’ve rounded up a few free patterns for knitted and crocheted flowers, for those of you who would like to contribute blossoms. These are just suggestions; please feel free to use any pattern you like. Make them large or small, simple or complex, just make them pink! And if you want to make them with us, information about the knit-ins and installation for this project can be found here. We hope to see you there!

Knitted flowers:
Little Cotton Rabbits: Knitted Flower Pattern
Knitty: A Plethora of Petals
Knitty: Nagano Sakura
Head Huggers: Knit Flower
Knit Buddies: Pinku Flower Swap Pin

Crocheted flowers:
Greeting Arts: Crocheted Flower Tutorial
Craftbits: Cherry Blossom Scarf
Woolcrafting: Free Crochet Flower Pattern
Bubamara Design: Little Flower
Fiber Star Originals: Basic Flower

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Cheery Cherry Bombing

Wednesday, January 5th, 2011


Cherry blossom image from Bryan Costin

Help Mandy and I yarn bomb a historic landmark and raise awareness for Joy Kogawa House!

Joy Kogawa, one of Canada’s most beloved writers, lived in the house as a child until her family was forced into the Japanese internment camps that Canada erected during the Second World War. During this time, her family lost their belongings and the house. After the expropriation, Joy used the house and her cherry tree in her fiction which has a central place within Canadian literature. The house was recently saved as a heritage site and will serve as a residency for writers.

We’ve worked with the gardener at Joy Kogawa House to ensure that it is safe to bomb Joy’s historic cherry tree during the winter. The fuzzy community creation will stay up until early spring, and then be cut away so that it can blossom naturally. We’d love for you to join us or to mail in some cherry blossoms to add to the tree!

Here is the official press release with details:

Yarn Bombing at Historic Joy Kogawa House

Help writing blossom at Historic Joy Kogawa House! Join us (Leanne Prain and Mandy Moore, co-authors of yarnbombing.com and the book Yarn Bombing: The Art of Crochet and Knit Graffiti), as we cover the Joy Kogawa cherry tree in hundreds of knitted blossoms.

You are invited to come and knit or crochet pink cherry blossoms to help cover this historic tree, whose story is told in Joy Kogawa’s Naomi’s Tree, a picture book about friendship. Knitters and crocheters of all levels are welcome to attend these FREE events.

Join one of these two community knit-ins at the Historic Joy Kogawa House, 1450 West 64th Avenue, Vancouver, on:

Sunday, January 23, 2 to 3:30pm
Saturday, February 5, 2 to 3:30pm

Or help to stitch all of the cherry blossoms into place at Historic Joy Kogawa House on:
Sunday, March 6, 2 to 3:30pm

Leanne and Mandy will entertain stitchers with daring tales of yarn bombing feats from around the world, books will be available for sale and signing, and refreshments will be served. Yarn and needles will be provided; however, donations of pink yarn are appreciated!

Can’t make it to the event? Mail in your knitted or crocheted cherry blossoms to be added to the tree, as follows:

Historic Joy Kogawa House
1450 West 64th Avenue
Vancouver, B.C. Canada V6P 2N4

Or drop your blossoms in the covered bin you’ll find just down the steps from the sidewalk in front of the house at 1450 West 64th Avenue. Submissions will be accepted up until March 1, 2011. All cherry blossoms should be made out of pink yarn.

For more information see www.kogawahouse.com

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Happy Holidays

Sunday, December 26th, 2010

Rocio Jungenfeld, of Weaving the City, sent me this awesome Christmas greeting:

Happy Holidays to you and yours! Yarn Bombing will be back with new posts and projects in 2011.

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Yarn bombing Public Transit!

Sunday, December 12th, 2010

Andrew, a local yarn bomber here in Vancouver, BC, contacted us with a few picture of his recent bright orange tags!

I’ve been crocheting for about 5 years now and sewing for the past year. I totally support the arts and am going to be yarn bombing all over Vancouver, so hopefully you can spot some of my bombs, mainly going to be downtown and on public transit. I’m going to only be rocking a hot orange yarn for my signature to make them stand out, and for orange being my favourite color, ha ha. Just on the way downtown to the library today I did 3 bombs, 2 mini ones on the bus and Skytrain, and I’m in the works on covering a bench arm rest at the library. Here are some shots!!

We appreciate his daring -he’s managed to tag public transit here several times, which is no small feat, as it is heavily patrolled during hockey season. And his work has been spotted all over the Vancouver Transit System – we’ve been getting many reports of sightings.

Andrew was kind enough to take some time out from tagging to answer some questions for us. Some details have been changed to protect his identity:

Tell us about yourself. What’s your name (or code name)? Where do you live in? How old are you? What’s your day job?

Hello all you yarn-bombers out there. My name’s Andrew and I am from Vancouver, Canada. I’m 20 and a full-time business student. I like to think of my employment as crocheting
and sewing. I like to call it a little side project, but I’m in the works of starting up a custom skimboard bag company since all I do, breath, and dream about is skimboarding. I also sell toques* and have
been crocheting for 5 years.

How did you get into textile graffiti?

Funny enough, a friend showed me some pictures of knit/crochet graffiti a while back and didn’t think much of it. After doing a custom crochet project with Complex (graffiti associated) , which was dubbed “The Fray Project”, he told me yarn-bombing was happening right here in Vancouver. I couldn’t believe it and had to get in on the action. I just started yarn-bombing, doing little tags on transit, and covering an arm on a bench at our DT public library, which is still there haha. I mainly do it alone since I don’t know any other yarn-bombers, and am usually on the go.

I’m trying to get a few friends together and do some big missions and get creative, but so far it’s been all talk and no walk.

Where do you create your tags?

I do my tags on the spot in broad daylight, full view for bystanders to see. Typically they are small, going as fast as I can for 15mins on a bus or skytrain with a 7mm hook around a pole isn’t that easy I found out. I plan to only use red-heart orange yarn, as my signature color, since I’m a red-head. I plan on doing some big pieces soon, so watch out for those orange Yarn-Bombs!

I scope out my spot, making sure no authority is present, or anyone who I think would intervene and get to it. I crochet only. I plan on tagging a lot of skytrain and bus poles, just to jazz them up and bring some life to their cold hard surfaces.

I tag whenever I feel the need to crochet or whenever I feel like doing it, lately school has been running my life so I try to do it once in a while.


How do you get your inspiration for tags?

I love seeing what other people do on this blog. I would even be more stoked if I saw some yarn-bomb’s in my city.

What is your craziest yarn graffiti fantasy?

To yarn-bomb a cop’s gun handle while it’s right in its holster!

Does your family know you do this? Do your co-workers know?

Yes, I’ve informed them and my mom think’s its rad. I don’t have any co-workers but I’m sure they would want in no doubt.

What do you say when people ask you what you are knitting?

First of all, I tell them it’s crocheting, big difference. Secondly, I tell them I’m making art. If they continue talking, I do the head nod until they stop since they usually take away time from my precious yarn-bombing.

Have you ever been caught in the act yarn-bombing? What did you do?

Not yet. But if I was, I’d run I think….

Do you document your work? Do you photograph it or keep a blog?

I always try to take photos of all my yarn-bombs. I just usually upload them to Facebook to my “sweatshop” album where I do all my craft. Keep up the yarn-bombing everyone, especially all you Vancourites!

Thanks Andrew – for answering our questions. We’ll be keeping an eye out for your bright orange tags as we move around the city!

*If you are interested in sporting some of Andrew’s hand crocheted work; he sells his toques at Complex, El Kartel, and
Headquarter in Downtown Vancouver.

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Transcending the Material

Saturday, October 30th, 2010

It’s not yarn graffiti, but  this knitted art installation was so beautiful and well-executed that I needed to share it!

The piece is called Transcending the Material, by artist Ben Cuervas. You can read about it and see more photos here, and see a short video of the artist talking about it here.

I find the skull particularly elegant; I love the way the artist used a thinner yarn and a tighter gauge to render the fine detail of the teeth.

Unusual knitted objects like this one are so inspiring! I wonder how I can bring some of these ideas into my yarn bombing…

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Rocket powered and then some.

Thursday, September 23rd, 2010

Amy of Nortfolk, Va, sent me a photo of her very first yarn bomb. It was installed at the end of August at the corner of Evans and Executive.

Some interesting yarn bombing links of late:

Stellar cozying of VW bug via a shoebox of photographs

A heart of gold at the Eddy in Calgary.

The Warm and Fuzzies have knitted the Poster Frame from the Yarn Bombing book! (see via this Washington City Paper article) It is really nice to see Kendra Biddle’s pattern in action.

And also from the book, Chelsea Gunn’s intrepid monster foot has been made by Ange! It looks great on this monsterous mailbox!

Woman reports that this delightful  yarn bombed canon makes her day.

Cute yarn bomber caught in the act of tagging. Props for having 1. Scissors in your pocket. 2. Comfortable shoes 3. A getaway bike.

Arts Green offers some helpful suggestions on how to make your knit graffiti sustainable.

Stop motion animation yarn bomb fence weaving at Curious Yellow Monkey! Need I say more.

Image courtesy of Make Magazine

I’m VERY excited that Robyn Love, yarn bomber and fibre artist extrodinaire will be covering an entire ROCKET  at the New York Hall of Science during Maker Faire New York on September 25th and 26th.  More details here. Since the 26th is my birthday, I’m going to pretend that it is one big knitted present just for me.

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Fuzzy Parking Meter

Wednesday, September 1st, 2010

Peter Regier sent me this great photo taken in Vancouver’s Chinatown:

Knit covered parkin meter

This wooly meter only lasted for a day, so I’m glad that he managed to capture it! I wonder if it was done by Janna?

There’s lots of yarn bombing happening on the Western half of Canada. There have been a series of yarn bombing events in Regina, and the Calgary ArtBomber is adding to the Calgary landscape. A yarn bomb that is embroidered with the words ‘yarn bomb’ makes me giggle.

The weather is getting cooler – bring out those needles and hooks!

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Hometown Pride

Wednesday, August 11th, 2010

One of yarn bombing’s favourite correspondents (hi Mom!) recently sent me some images of tags in the Comox Valley, my hometown.

Pink tree warmer in front of the Courtenay Library on 6th Street, Courtenay. The tag has a little keychain attached to it which says ‘to have joy one must share it open handed’

Frilly tag at England & 5th in Courtenay

Who are these mystery taggers in my hometown? I need to meet them.

Meanwhile on nearby Denman Island, Carolyn, a fibre artist, decided to plant her first work of subversive art:

She says: Denman is a bit more slow-paced and as I was looking for something to do apart from read, I picked up a package of wool roving and a couple of hand-felting needles. While sitting outside the B&B in the evening I made this strange little character – he’s actually quite creepy looking – and in honour of yarn bombing, left him perched on the edge of a plant pot outside our host’s window.  I have no idea if/when they spotted him, and I’m not sure if they’d figure out who left him there, but it was really fun to leave my mark.

Felting offers a lot of possibility for yarn bombers. Anyone else out there use felt as a tagging medium? I want to hear from you.

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Fancy Fences

Friday, August 6th, 2010

The Ladies Fancywork Society is at it again. In July they were commissioned by the City of Denver to add their crochet work to chainlink fence.

Photo courtesy of the Vagabond Shutterbug

From the Ladies:

The Central Platte Valley Fence Project is a continuation of the exploration of scale and juxtaposition with the background upon which the work is placed. The concept of this piece is a wildflower garden, with crocheted pieces of around 6” to 12” in diameter dotting the fence and
humming with leaves, bees, butterflies, and other garden inhabitants.

Colorado draws people from all over the world with its inspiring mountains and never-ending skies, with Denver as the cultural focal point. This installation celebrates that wild beauty through a sort of nostalgic delight: evoking feelings like the granny squares your nana crocheted, cookies baking in the oven, smocked dresses on little girls; simpler times.

Photo courtesy of the Vagabond Shutterbug

Mandy and I profiled the Ladies for the Yarn Bombing book, and we’re so glad to see that they are still up to their stylish, crafty exploits! Check out the great newscast about the creation of the fence on the Ladies’ Fancywork Website:  http://www.ladiesfancyworksociety.com

Knit-In event in Victoria, British Columbia (Canada)


Event: Tall Tales Books is hosting a Knit-In!
Sunday, August 22nd from 1pm to 3pm

On Sunday afternoon, August 22nd, come to Tall Tales Books between 1pm and 3pm and join fellow knitters to sit, knit, and enjoy some tea and cookies!

Do you have kids who love to knit, want to learn, or just want to sit and read some books? Bring them along! This activity is open to everyone!

(Psst…there might even be some yarn-bombing!)

Other links:

An amazing amount of knitting action happening in Brisbane: I knit Brisbane: http://iknitbrisbane.wordpress.com

Frilling yarn bombing in Philly: http://joeinphilly.blogspot.com/2010/08/yarn-bomb.html

Secret toy ambush society: http://melbourne-leader.whereilive.com.au/lifestyle/story/secret-society-in-toy-ambush

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