Archive | September, 2010

Knitted poles at The Ferry Build San Francisco

16 Sep

We ferryed across The Bay and began our first San Francisco installation.  I love The Ferry Building as a building and I thought the knitted poles would look good againest it.

The Russian and I had knit several tags and I had been thinking of several different locations to put them up. I knew if I just let my mind drift over them the perfect place would come to me. And I had knit a really big piece for Jack London Square to go at their Ferry pier. I woke up on Wednesday and I had a brilliant idea. I called The Russian on the phone and said ” Let’s drive over to Jack London Square, Take the Ferry over to The Ferry Building, Yarn Bomb The Ferry Building, eat lunch and then come back and put the pole cozy up at Jack  London Square. Then there will be a narrative of us crossing the Bay into San Francisco to start our big installation there.”

It was 1.15 at the time and we wanted to catch the 2.30 ferry. I began running around like crazy to get the yarn bombing bag set up. We have to carry many balls of sewing wool, thread, needles, labels, scissors, camera, hot tea, warm clothes,trail mix, chocolate and all the knitted tags. And of course our knitting. Can’t go anywhere with out our knitting.We drove fast to Jack London and ran to The Ferry our knitting trailing and made it with 3 minutes to go.

The Ferry ride was a treat.What a great way to be on the water.We got to The Ferry building ,had a cupcake ,had a brisket sandwich and started sewing up the knitting onto the poles . Lots of people streaming by.Everyone glanced over but politely refrained from speaking.It was a radiant sunny day with a pesky breeze.

Sewing is thirsty work so we sewed up this yellow piece and then went in to Peets , had 4 cups of hibiscus tea and then thought maybe we were done, We went to catch the Ferry but it wasn’t going to come for 45 more minutes. “What the heck” The Russian said. ‘Let’s put up one more!” So we put up  this pole cozy.

Then we had a great ferry ride home

Very Tall Ferry Building Yarn Bomb Jack London Square

16 Sep

We rode across the bay on the ferry at the end of what I have to say was a truly glorious day at the ferry building and the sun set pinkly as we ferryed past the container ships. One of those Star Wars cranes was lifting cargo containers which is a great sensation. We got off expecting a dark and weird pier to sew up this big piece. In stead , amazingly , the entire courtyard was filled with live Mexican music, dancing people, fish taco stands and small swirling children with glittering color sticks. It was “The El Grito” Festival celebrating Mexican Independence Day.It was like stepping into  a great dream.

This is by far the tallest piece we’ve put up ,about 15 ft high. I knit it vertically in sections and sewed it together. It obviously has a nautical theme with the different blues with white. It is our first yarn bomb in Oakland. This is a very relaxing and beautiful spot in Jack London Square, I reccomend you go there and then take a Ferry ride to San Francisco and get some chocolate at The Ferry Building.

The Russian Really enjoyed how all these police men on bikes kept coming right across from where we were sewing up this Yarn Bomb and watching the festival. There were 7 of them at the end.

Yarnbombing brightens up East Bay cities

11 Sep

Posted: 09/04/2010 12:00:00 AM PDT

Click photo to look through the incredible slide show!
A “post cozy” is seen in a rainbow of colors on Addison Street in Berkeley, Calif., on Tuesday…

Like many of his colleagues, James Jessie has seen the works by knit graffiti artist Streetcolor around Kensington.

These colorful, yarn-wrapped signposts along Colusa Circle, brighten up this quiet place, says Jessie, who works in this tiny Contra Costa County town.

“It’s kind of fun,” James says. “It’s like a Berkeley kind of cool.”

He pauses then asks: “What are they selling?”

Streetcolor, a name she goes by to avoid attention from the authorities, is selling nothing. She’s “yarnbombing.” She spends at least 12 hours a day spinning yarn, knitting pole cozies and has so far placed nearly 50 around Berkeley, Oakland and Kensington for others to enjoy.

Why?

“That’s so complex to answer,” she says during a phone interview. For starters, she says, she loves vessels and pieces of art that have a significant amount of color. She also likes huge sculpture, so having her knitted work stand tall on a large pole gives her some satisfaction.

She also likes that her art is free and immediate — people can experience her pieces while they walk to the coffee shop or stroll through Berkeley’s theater district.

“Our culture is into being free and immediate,” she says. “Once I put them up and I saw how the knitting looked against sidewalks and roads and signs, I thought it was amazing. It’s thrilling.”

Finally, she says, she was inspired to color up her environment — she lives in the East Bay — after reading the book “Yarnbombing: The Art of Crochet Knit Graffiti” (Arsenal Pulp Press, $19.95) by Mandy Moore and Leanne Prain.Prain, who lives in Vancouver, Canada, says a yarnbombing explosion began last year all over the world and is gaining steam in the United States.

“It’s happening during the American recession,” Prain says. “It’s something you can do at home that’s meditative. People are looking for something that gives a sense of joy right now, alternative ways to express themselves.”

The motivations for knitters to do this painstaking and time consuming work are different for every person, Prain says.

“People knit for political reasons, street art reasons. But what we’ve found from all the groups we talked to is everybody is doing it out of a sense of joy,” she says. “They feel happiness doing it, and they hope it brings a sense of happiness to other people.”

Prain yarnbombs around Vancouver. She doesn’t worry about what happens after she knits and places it in a public place.

“I’ve knit pieces that have been there for over and year and a half. People care take them,” she says. “I’ve also knitted pieces that have been gone in a half-hour. The art of craftiness is making something and the rest is not important.”

That’s how Magda Sayeg of the yarnbombing group Knitta feels about her work. Sayeg is credited as being one of the first bombers and, although Knitta is now just herself rather than a group of people, the group’s influence in this community is marked. For example, the “T” on the controversial “Herethere” sculpture on the Oakland/Berkeley border was covered with a yarnbomb last April. Although a nearby knitting store participated in the bombing, it was credited to Sayeg’s Knitta group.

Sayeg, who now lives in Austin, Texas , started yarnbombing after knitting a piece for the doorknob of her small fashion boutique. Since then, making yarnbomb sculptures has become a full-time job, one that has brought her work to galleries in Rome, London and Bali.

“I like to beautify things,” she says. “I like to put knitting on things that are ugly. To have this sweet universal language of knitting that’s going on, I think it’s incredibly powerful.”

Streetcolor, who works with a helper she’s named The Russian, has seen just a handful of her pieces taken down since she started this project about two months ago. And she no longer puts the pieces up in the dead of night. Instead, she decorates poles during the day, pausing to talk with people who ask questions. She likens it to street theater.

“The interaction is a big part of it,” she says.

Streetcolor says she feels like she is turning graffiti on it’s head.

“It’s only going to be up for a while, and I think it enhances the area,” she says. “It’s just this momentary experience of it being more fun to be there.”

Click here for the original article.

An interesting knitted bannister in Pt.Reyes station

9 Sep

Here is our first foray into the horizontal surface. We had knit a lovely selection of yarn bombs to put up in the charming town of Pt. Reyes Station and of course every single solitary pole in the town is on a big wooden 4×4. so we found this delightful handrail and as so often happens when you are forced to adapt-a new way of looking at things forms. As we drove out of town and passed the train stations I really noticed the graffiti. The Russian has been trying to educate me to the different qualities and levels of painted graffiti now that we are sort of graffiti artists. Anyway, I was startled to see some beautiful complex colorful tags in the train yard. I’d never seen the beauty! We all need our eyes opened, there really is a lot to see .

Great chocolate raspberry shortbread at The Bovine Bakery.

Venus and Pegasus Poles

4 Sep

As we drove over to yarn bomb Venus and Pegasus I looked over at The Russian. She had been on a 3 hour hike already and it was her birthday. She looked asleep. ‘We must continue yarn bombing under all conditions” I said. ” Taxes, getting passports, too much work, friends visiting, teaching, birthdays, cold,disappointment, -keep yarn bombing. Nothing will stop us!’

She turned and smiled radiantly “Yes!’ She said “Yes!”

I had a lot of fun dyeing the browns,greens and blues for the Pegasus piece. The storefront is such an excellent blue. The Russian had knit the Venus piece some time ago and we kept saving it until we had the Pegasus piece finished. Lush oceany ruffles for Venus, we went in after and had a big birthday dinner with an astounding chocolate cake.

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