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Quilting bees. Sewing Circles. Community dye baths. Local seamstresses and tailors. For generations, textiles were entirely reliant on and related to place.

Who had access to what fibers, dyes, and traditions? Who did that collection of knowledge keep warm? Fibers were based on what grew near you and what you could domesticate.

Fibers would change based on region; your needs for your climate, the environment the fiber was raised in, even who or what your family represented.

Today, we know these traditions are important. Modern fabrics contribute a large percentage of our plastic consumption. Because it touches our skin—our largest organ—constantly, we send a direct feeding of plastic to our bloodstream, ensuring we get our daily dose. If it’s making us ill, what could it be doing to our waterways? The rest of our planet? The people who live near or produce these plastic fibers?

I am on a mission to localize and reinvigorate textile traditions. I don’t care what Shein or Instagram announces we all should be wearing. I barely engage with what Ravelry says everyone is making!

I live in Nashville where it’s mostly hot, most of the time. I will not be making the Halibut sweater (or any extra-warm, wooly garment) anytime soon. I want to make things that respond to my environment—and, if I’m lucky, are from within 100 miles of it.

That means I’ve got a lot of skills to develop and a lot of people whose help I need. Regional textile production and logistics cannot happen in a vacuum, especially when the ethos of the day is “as fast as possible, however possible.”

I need to be connected to the Greater Cumberland Fibershed for pricing on locally reared and raised fibers. I need the Zuri Quilting Guild to teach me techniques and traditions. I need Turnip Green Creative Reuse for affordable supplies, and a place to off-load a stash I will never work through. I need MAKE Nashville so my bedroom can be mostly a bedroom, instead of a full studio.

And I need community.

I need a community to answer questions about fibers and patterns and designs and sizing. I need people who can inspire me and be inspired by me. I need elders to teach me the histories of textiles in this place. And I need people who want the things I make. I need people to visit their local markets and want to find pieces that help them stay warm—or cool.

The people around you are required for a healthy textile economy and tradition. Here in String City, held together by strings on instruments and on needles and hooks, there are plenty of crafty makers that need people, too.

While Nash Yarn Fest showed that Nashville can be the center of the knitting universe for a few days, I firmly believe that MDK HQ should have a strong gravitational orbit for Nashvillians.

We can support knitting groups, inspire the next generation of knitters, and help develop a local aesthetic for the fibers we wear and the things we make. We can take the strings of each knitting and fiber group around town and tie them all into a beautiful nest of Nashville crafters.

At Modern Daily Knitting HQ, we have the unique ability to support local textile businesses, feature local designers, and of course, host live music. Our online community is as robust as ever and I hope you feel welcome to join us in person in Nashville.

This is a community effort. My role is to find you and invite you in! While I’m here with Modern Daily Knitting, you can trust that we’ll have great gatherings, interesting activities, and deepen our relationships with one another.

About The Author

Nia Smith is a knitter, designer, gardener, and cyclist. When she’s not knitting, she’s probably spinning, thinking about knitting, or trying to convince other people to start knitting. She loves hosting craft events and sitting around eating snacks.

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57 Comments

  • I live in London, UK, a long way from Nashville, Tennessee! But I can read your posts and offer tips and ideas that might be helpful. I’ve been knitting and sewing since I was 5 or 6. I’m 67 now.

    I’m still trying to fill my wardrobe and drawers with me-made clothes. I’ve got most of the fabrics and yarns. Now I just need the energy and motivation.

    • It can be a struggle to find the time and motivation! Sometimes I find it helpful to craft with people around me! Then I can really get going!

    • I agree the square with the dot is very annoying. I almost just stopped reading anything on the page . I use my phone like others and I find that it constantly covers what I’m trying to read .

  • I’ve been on Ravelry since 2007, the beginning. I still check in every day. I love to see what everybody is making, what random people are making, and to record what I’m making. I participate in group discussions and knit alongs and test knitting. None of my friends or family currently knit or crochet and if I didn’t “engage with Ravelry” I would have no knitting community.

    I am looking forward to the end of this summer of unbearable heat and the chance to bring out and wear my warm wool handknits. I may not cast on the Halibut sweater but I would go for the Salmon sweater and thanks to Ravelry I know I should modify with a provisional cast on instead of the pattern instructions.

    • Yes! Online communities can be so helpful. I’m glad you can still find places and ways for to connect with other knitters. That camaraderie is so important to make more beautiful things.

      Excited to see your modified Salmon sweater!

  • Welcome Nia!

    If your aesthetic is exemplified by the patchwork turtle neck vest you’re wearing, count me as 1 who’ll be eager to see more & follow along with you!

    I too am trying to foster more of a local fibreshed in my neck-o-the-woods, but I am in a decidedly and emphatically animal fibre domain. We have a few fibre plants that we can cultivate & grow here in Ontario, Canada (linen, hemp), but there aren’t a lot of “elders” working with those fibres to take us by the hand, lead us along & help us out. So, for now, it’s the animal based (warmer, heat holding) fibres to build the fibreshed while we also work to expand into those plant fibres too.

    Bravo to you, Nia!

    • Hooray to local fibersheds! Here’s hoping your elders wrote some ideas down!

  • Great, great initiative. I will look for something similar in my “place”, Denver.

  • Look forward to reading what you write as time-goes-by. I too, love natural fibers against my skin, and I can definitely get on board with the snacking and knitting!

    • Yes! All about a soft life whenever possible; sit, knit, silk!

  • Welcome to the community, Nia! I’m looking forward to learning from you as share your fiber journey!

    • Thank you so much, Sandy!

  • Nia: thanks for inspiration! Go for it! Diane

    • Thank you, Diane!

  • I love your energy and enthusiasm for all things fiber arts! I live in South Carolina but I look forward to reading your upcoming posts. I am a seamstress and knitter. I try to only work with natural fibers. I love to thrift shop, also. Unfortunately for lack of space my bedroom is also my craft room but I love it!

  • Welcome Nia!
    Yarn is my favorite souvenir and we have been known to go out of the way to find the local yarn store.(like our adventure back to Ohana Fiber Mill on the Big Island of Hawaii…just had to bribe my husband with some BBQ 🙂
    I always focus on locally produced, spun, or dyed fiber and the finished project carries those special memories.
    I also look for recycled fibers and even though some contain the dreaded plastics, they offer benefits and keep them out of our waterways.
    The big thing I know is that anything we make will not be fast fashion and disposable which is good for us, those around us, and the big blue ball we live on.

    • It feels good to make an impact that holds our memories and is aligned with our values! It helps that it’s fun, too!

  • Hi Nia!
    It was so nice to meet you yesterday at the MDK Pooch Party. Look forward to lots of community fiber gatherings.

    • Nancy, thank you so much for coming out! We’ll see you at the next one!

  • YES! This! I wholeheartedly agree that a sense of community is a necessity, especially in these trying times. Surround your self with your community! Bathe in their friendships, knowledge and wisdom. I am so grateful for the MDK and Society communities!

    • Wonderful advice! Thank you!

  • To MDK UX team: for those if us who read our morning email on our phones, would you kindly remove the white square with the red dot on the bottom left of every screen, which is a link to Facebook? Along with the MDK banner at the top (which I wish were smaller!), those two design features take up easily 20% of my screen’s real estate, making reading you otherwise-wonderful posts somewhat irritating. I never will connect to Facebook! It is a nefarious bad actor in the online landscape and resent being pushed to do so. Please please please! Thank you!

    • Good news, frenz, the MDK UX team, aka Ashe because she is the entire UX team as well as our buyer, virtual events coordinator, dog wrangler, and part-time pennant maker, has eliminated that white box thingie that honestly nobody here knows how or why it started showing up. It was a shopping cart of some kind or whatever, possibly the result of an app update. Not sure how it was sending you to Facebook because we would wish that only on our worst enemies!

    • Yes – please remove the red-dot-square! What is it anyway?

      • We have no idea how that thing got there, but at least it’s gone now!

    • I agree about removing the square with the red dot. Very annoying as it is omnipresent when reading the wonderful postings.

      • Imagine how annoying it is to US, when something spontaneously shows up on our website with no notice from ANYbody! Ugh! It’s gone now.

    • Yes to removing the white floating square!

  • Wonderful initiative. I look forward to more posts. I live in cold climate (for now) so I get to enjoy working with wool. Buying local as much as possible is a form of resistance!

    • Yes! We must practice corporeal politics! Buying with regionality in mind is so important! I hope to see some of your big wooly sweaters!

  • What a great article, Nia! Welcome! I live a long way from Nashville, on the Oregon coast, but reading what you’ve said so eloquently, makes me want to make a greater effort to seek out my own community of textile lovers. Thank you!

    • Needles crossed, there’s some like-minded folks in your area! Good luck!

  • Welcome! I love the idea of buying local across every respect of my life – local fiber fits right in. Looking forward to more articles!

    • Thank you, Carolyn!

  • Enjoyed reading your first post, Nia, and look forward to hearing more about your community building and fiber projects!

    • Thank you, Lisa!

  • Nice to have you here, Nia! (Great introductory piece too!)

    • Thank you, Teresa! Excited to be here.

  • I found you!! Mt Juliet resident here. I’ve been looking for some local places for yarn. This makes me happy!!

    • Hi Laura! Please come visit us if you get a chance, we’d love to see you!

  • Pleased to meet you! Look forward to more from you– Maine (where I have lived for the past 21 of my 67 years) is a perfect place for warm and wooly, but increasingly it is humid in summers, so I look forward to learning more about steam bath-friendly knits and fibers! I’m thinking we might also all enjoy a “favorite snacks” thing… post, recipes, special recommendations…… YUM!

    • The humidity get us too! It’s not just hot, it’s sticky!

      I know we’ve got some Maine fans out here so I’d love to live vicariously through you with the big plushy woolens. In return, we’ll recommend some hot, hot, hot projects.

      Hmmm…much to write about snacks….especially locally sourced ingredients….

  • Welcome Nia!!!

    • Thank you, Anne!

  • It was a great pleasure to read this and celebrate community. I look forward to more of your writing Thanks!

    • Yay! I’m so glad you enjoyed it! We must celebrate being together with one another! It’s such a treat.

  • Really enjoyed that article Nia! I can’t offer much as I’m in the Scottish Borders surrounded by sheep, knitting socks!! And inspired by the fields, nature, birds, the weather, trees, colour, sunsets, my sister a fellow knit nerd and energy from folk I meet and read about like you! Best wishes x

    • Angie, I know your sheep and nature gain so much more from being around you! If we all make our little sections of the world feel good, we might get pretty close to making the whole world feel good.

  • Welcome, Nia! Fibersheds and their communities and organizations are what will keep us clothed and alive in the future. I’m in Vermont and we have a robust local food, brew, and wool community. The more of these locally-oriented regions that come together the better for everyone.

    • Oh I’m so glad to hear there’s such a local economy! That’s my dream for wherever I live, especially Nashville. We gotta get to your level!

  • I recently attended an event Nia planned. It was wonderful to get to meet the other knitters and to see all the knit samples that have been featured in the MDK Field Guides. I hope to return to other events at the event center.

    • Thank you so much for coming out! Everything is so much more lovely when you can hold them! Don’t hesitate to let me know what kind of programming you’d like to see!

  • Strong AGREE! Look forward to hanging out at MDK with you next time I am there. In the meantime, absolutely rely on my local and far-flung community of creatives to stay sane in our insane world. We share so many things in common about the need to create and also about the greater community of kindness, right v. wrong, and support for community. Thanks for your excellent words, Nia!

    • Thanks Jenn! Let’s keep building community wherever we may find them!

  • You are inspiring!
    Your enthusiasm is infectious and we are happy to have you here.
    Welcome!

    • Aw, thank you so much Elizabeth Ann! So excited to be here!

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