#OWS FiBeR aRtS

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mOvEmEnT bUiLdiNg, MeDiA rElAtIoNs & oUtReACh ThRoUgH fUzZy LoGiC

Karin Hofmann: “A Paradigm Shift”

February 7th, 2012
Hope Guy FawkesWidowed at a very young age and raising her family as a single mom, Karin Hofmann is no stranger to difficult times. But when she came to ask herself what she could do for the Occupy cause the answer was easy – come every day and knit for the next generation. Still paying off her student loans from too many years ago, at 69, Ms. Hofmann has felt our country’s financial crisis first hand but now finds hope in a newer generation. “The change isn’t going to come fast enough for me”, she says, “but I feel very confident, after a month (here in Zuccotti Park), that these kids – so kind, so generous, so smart – are smart enough that they’ll figure it out…they’ll figure out how to fix it.” Inspired by the energy of the Occupiers and the growing group of knitters, she became a founding member of #OWS Fiber Arts working group and continues to spread her love of the movement at Charlotte’s place and Zuccotti Park when the weather permits.
YouTube Preview ImageSeen most recently at the Occupy Town Square event at Washington Square, she continues, “That’s the paradigm shift – we all work together – and these kids, they know how to take care of each other – it’s inspiring”. As one of the first to broaden the generation range of the Occupy Wall Street movement, Karin Hofmann has helped to show America that working together towards a greater common goal can happen, even if it’s just one stitch at a time.

 

My New Favorite Song

February 4th, 2012
I can’t remember where I first heard of this song.  I ended up listening to it about 15 times and every time I hear it, it just gets better and better.  Please, if you like it, Tweet and Share the hell out of  this.  Thank you.  Marsha

30 September, 2011: A Stitch In Time

February 2nd, 2012
On a sunny day in September, 2011, Marsha Spencer saw an opportunity, an opportunity to use her skill to help a social movement she felt had value. That movement was the Occupy Wall Street (OWS) movement and involving herself amidst the then, rather young crowd, Ms. Spencer began a movement of her own – a movement to, stitch by stitch, bring old and young, rich and poor and the haves and the have-nots together by knitting warm clothes for the soon to be winter warriors of OWS.
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And then the media took notice. From The New York Daily News and NY1 to Jimmy Breslin, the CBS Evening News, Piers Morgan and The Daily Show a 56 year-old grandmother of five had captured the hearts of a nation claiming that she wanted her grandchildren to be “proud of America” like she was at their age and this was her way to do that.

A hat here, a mitten there, little did Marsha Spencer know that those would be the beginning of the #OWS Fiber Arts working group and a commitment to bringing America back to its heritage, stitch by stitch.