Thursday, May 14, 2026

Connections — maybe it's all about the yarn


This post will be a departure for me - in that it has capital letters. I wrote it first over on Substack, but decided I wanted to have it here, where I keep such writing. And I don't have time to undo all the capital letters. Maybe now we'll have a mix here on MPC, or maybe it's the start of something new. 

So much going on at the moment. Lots of separate projects coming together. And I’m starting to see how they all fit. And even though there have been moments when none of it seemed like it was headed that way, they DO all fit. The work ones, I knew would eventually fit. It’s the way that the more personal projects are coming together, or blending into the work that is more of a pleasant surprise. It makes me realize that my life is more holistic than I thought. What a revelation. 

And weirdly (or not), it all comes down to yarn.


Our local creative group, CreaGive, chose Fifty-fifty as the theme for our yearly exhibition. The only requirement is that the work you bring must measure 50cm x 50cm. It can also be 50cm x 50cm x 50cm, or a cube. I spent a lot of time thinking of ways to break the rules while still technically not breaking the rules. (Hello, that’s who I am.) But I’ve ended up making a cube that does indeed measure 50x50x50. (Probably also, admittedly, who I am.) 

I received some wool yarn, left over from industrial carpet production, from a weaver in town who is moving and so she wanted to give away all her weaving supplies (lucky me!). So it was natural to use that. We still have some of the sticks from Syrian artist Nisrine Boukhari’s The Wind’s Home, an ephemeral work that she created near Vejle Fjord in connection with a project for Trapholt Museum, back in 2017. They became the base of the cube.



And speaking of Trapholt, I was part of Astrid Skibsted’s Dataspejlet art project at Trapholt back in 2022. I both embroidered my data (from Facebook, of all places) and wove a section of the weaving done by my weaving group in Randbøldal. It’s when I learned about Astrid’s vikleprøver. And my cube is basically a giant vikleprøve (yarn winding).


So, you might say the cube I’m creating for the Fifty-fifty exhibition has been many years in the making. We are constantly taking in inspiration — through conversations, our eyes, our ears, the things we listen to. And I genuinely think we never know exactly how they will manifest when they become something. But our brains are working on it all in the background and all these impulses ARE becoming something. It’s just a matter of letting it come out.


I don’t really know what it is yet - is it a stool? or a table? a sculpture of sorts? But I will figure that out. Ideally, with enough time (and yarn), I will fully fill it out on all six sides. But for the exhibition, time (and work and other projects) allows only one side of it. But perhaps like life, it takes time to develop into something fully formed and filled out on all sides, connected and whole. I’m loving it as it is right now, but I also can’t wait to see where it’s headed.


I’m also working on a tea towel project. Taking a little break from my self-imposed assignment of weaving Taylor Swift’s albums as tea towels to do some for work. We have this cool drawer-insert contraption that helps you organize your kitchen drawers, but we don’t have proper photos of it. It will perfectly fit 15 tea towels and so I’m working on those. I created a warp that’s mostly white with black edges and stripes and one colorful stripe. I’m going to make it my own by weaving in with colors to make a rainbow of sorts.


I’m also going to change out the red stripe in the warp along the way. That sounds like a crazy idea, but I want to do something challenging and new in every set of tea towels I make. I need to LEARN something here! But really, who changes the warp along the way? And I intend to change it FOUR times!


Turns out I do! And it has worked! I’m happy there’s a four day weekend ahead so I can make lots of headway. I’ve woven the whole first towel since the change from red to orangey-yellow. Two to go before we change it again. I’m so happy to have Emmy, my personal weaving teacher and previous owner of my loom to help me with all of her wisdom and knowledge.


My loom, which is also much more experienced than I am, is also my friend in this project. Sitting at it, weaving these tea towels, the latest in a long line of creative, strong women to sit there, is such a privilege. The threads I’m working with, connecting me to them with every pass of the shuttle. The connections we weave to make up our lives take my breath away. Maybe it really does all come down to yarn.

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