Posts Tagged ‘charity’

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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How We Spend Our Time

Sunday, February 1st, 2009

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One of the things I find strange and annoying about the place of knitting and crochet in the world is the assumption that it should be done for others. When I’m knitting a sweater, and I say (when asked) that I’m knitting it for myself, I have been met more than once with “isn’t that a bit selfish?” This baffles me. I also sew for myself, and I’ve never encountered that reaction with regards to my sewing.

Making yarn graffiti seems to garner this response even more than crafting garments for oneself. I’ve often read or heard the (sometimes vehement) opinion that people who make yarn graffiti should spend their time and resources crafting for charity, that making objects without a utilitarian purpose is a waste. I would argue that yarn graffiti serves the same important purpose as any other form of artistic self-expression.

There are many ways people choose to spend their spare time: watching TV, shopping, reading, making art, socializing, gaming, crafting, engaging in athletic activities; the list goes on. With most of these pursuits, people accept that they are done for pleasure, or to fulfill personal needs or desires.

If you choose to devote your spare time to crochet or knitting, you may be doing it because you enjoy the tactile aspects of working with a luscious yarn, because you find the act of forming something cozy and tangible to be satisfying, or because you like the idea of making things yourself, instead of purchasing everything you own ready-made. Maybe you just want to have something to do with your hands while you watch TV. There are as many reasons to craft with yarn as their are yarn-crafters. Some people do, indeed, wish to make things to help others.

But knitting and crochet are creative media like any other, and the uses to which they’re put are and should be at the discretion of the person wielding the yarn.

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