EPISODE 54 :: Sarah Nsikak of La Reunion Studio

The Close Knit podcast aims to hold space for conversation about the ways we use fiber to process life and world events

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This is episode 54 of the Close Knit Podcast, and this week I spoke to Sarah Nsikak of La Reunion Studio. I was introduced to Sarah’s work through a mutual connection a few months ago and I was immediately taken with her work. She centers stories of Africa in her work, bringing to life incredible dresses and tapestries that are full of color and made entirely of remnants & scraps. Sarah speaks to the ways in which COVID19 and social movements of this year have impacted her own work, and how it’s all helped lead her to invest completely in her La Reunion.

We discuss her journey from studying art therapy to moving from Oklahoma to NYC to intern for a fashion designer, to making the move to work for herself full time, during a global pandemic. She details her history upcylcing garments and how she’s worked to source remnants for this current collection, and we trade tips on how we’ve sourced materials and attempted experiments in natural dyeing.

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Sarah’s work is beyond inspiring, in a realm unto itself, in my humble opinion, bringing together her personal life experience and heritage in a way that is so beautifully unique.

I was so delighted to speak with Sarah & I can’t wait for you to hear our chat. And if you haven’t already, you gotta go feast your eyes on her work - don’t say I didn’t warn you, it’s the most incredible.

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Find Sarah : Instagram | Website

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Until next time! 

xx

ani

A Work-In-Progress Approach to Podcast Making

At the beginning of this year, I was thinking a lot about the importance of being where you are and really sitting with things, even when you experience discomfort. I was thinking about embracing where I am in every way- including physically, situating myself more fully within the context of the Bay Area, and using the podcast as a vessel for that embrace. I was excited to get more deeply involved in the local fiber community. I was hopeful I could host all of my interviews in-person and was open to the possibility of in-person event facilitation. I started by speaking to Geana (GDS) & planned to speak to a few other Bay Area based makers I deeply admire in the coming months.

And then we began sheltering-in-place, and that initial plan to be so place-based stopped making as much sense to me. In the midst of this pandemic, the world is starting to open its eyes in a way that hasn’t happened on this scale in my lifetime, and I want to be responsive to that awakening, both in my interior life and with the podcast. 

The podcast is my flawed and work-in-progress attempt at holding space for storytelling about folks’ lived experience. I want to know how fiber intersects with and adds to makers' lives, and it’s important to me that you, as a listener, no matter your race/gender/ability/size/class, see yourself reflected and represented in some way. My hope is that any person can happen upon the Close Knit podcast and have it feel, in some small way, like home. To do this, I seek out diverse makers on Instagram, and more broadly, the internet. While I hope never to make someone feel like a token of facets of their perceivable identity, I must also acknowledge that this is part of how I curate a guest list. (A guest list that I’m aware still looks fairly homogeneous even after I actively take this lens to it). This is why this work is ongoing and important to me to talk publicly about. 

As of June 2020, the podcast is shifting back to a global lens rather than purely SF Bay Area makers, with a focus most predominantly on BIPOC. While my original intention for this year was to reach out to a variety of folks whose identities cross a number of intersections of class, race, gender, and sexuality, it is now my intention for 2020 to be more specific with this lens towards folks who identify as BIPOC. I also intend to engage with my guests on a range of subjects. I attempt, and will continue to attempt, to hold space for subjects most maker/crafting podcasts don’t discuss like money, political realities, social and environmental justice. I believe that existence is inherently political, and just because we don’t talk about something doesn’t mean it’s not real. My hope is that this space is accountable and safe for guests to speak what is true to them: whether that be about their identity, lived experience, or beliefs about the world. 

While I work on the production side over the rest of June and into July, all patreon proceeds will be donated to the Anti Police-Terror Project. For the month of June, there will not be a new podcast episode. I will be donating the entirety of my patreon income ($197) to Anti Police-Terror Project.

For July, there will be 1-2 episodes, likely coming out in the later weeks of the month to allow time for interviewing and production. I’m grateful for your patience while I undertake this process. Whatever patreon income I earn from this month will also be donated, and my producer will be paid her usual rate. 

It’s a pleasure and privilege to work on this podcast, to get to show up as a WIP, and I so appreciate you all for coming along with me. I so appreciate how close knit (please excuse the pun) the Close Knit community is, and I am committed to making this space safer and more inclusive for folks of all backgrounds. If you have feedback for me on the podcast, please don't hesitate to reach out at hello@closeknit.com.au - your feedback is really important to me. 

Craft & Care - COVID19

The Close Knit podcast aims to hold space for conversation about the ways we use fiber to process life and world events

This is a special episode of the Close Knit Podcast, an idea that came to me while I was standing in the shower, trying to process our current reality.

A few days after the shelter-in-place ordinance began in the Bay Area, I started turning more heavily to my knitting, finding myself really drawn to things that provide me comfort, and I started to wonder if others were doing the same. Then I remembered that I, in fact, host a podcast where this is the entire subject : “conversation about the ways we use fiber to process life and world events”, and this is a time of unprecedented processing - on a global scale.

What this made me think of was podcasts and radio shows where the host would ask people to call in and answer a specific question. So, I reached out to the Close Knit Podcast community, former guests on the show, to see if they’d be interested in speaking to what this time has meant for them and their lives and businesses.

I posed the questions: How are you using fiber to navigate this strange time? If you are a fiber-based business- how are you being impacted (if you are comfortable sharing) and how can members of the close knit podcast community support you in this time? 

You’ll hear from:

Anny crane

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I can’t tell you how warm it made me feel to hear the voices of all of these friends of mine - some of whom I haven’t gotten to physically speak to since we recorded. Hearing their voices was like a balm for my tender heat right now.

Thank you so much for listening!

Want more? 

Until next time! 

xx

ani

EPISODE 53 :: Geana Sieburger of GDS Cloth Goods

The Close Knit podcast aims to hold space for conversation about the ways we use fiber to process life and world events

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This is Episode 53 of the Close Knit Podcast - today I am joined by Geana Sieburger of GDS, who founded GDS in 2015. Growing up in Brazil deeply influenced her work, a place where in the 80’s, bakeries could be found every few blocks and skilled seamstresses still sewed a good portion of people’s everyday wardrobes. Community was the connection between everything, including food and fashion.

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With both people and environment in mind, Geana's dream is for GDS to become a meaningful part of her community through products that excite consumers into learning about how their purchasing choices impact their direct neighbors as well as people on the other side of the globe.

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Find Geana : Instagram | Website

Want more? 

Until next time! 

xx

ani

EPISODE 52 :: Gina Stovall of two days off clothing - Building a Sustainable Clothing Brand On Your Days Off

The Close Knit podcast aims to hold space for conversation about the ways we use fiber to process life and world events

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You’re listening to Episode 52 of the Close Knit Podcast and this week I spoke to Gina Stovall of Two Days Off Clothing.

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The final guest in my series of people who are working in production, for this year at least, is Gina Stovall - an intentional minimalist living in LA, working in Climate Research and designing clothing made sustainably in LA. 

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From my time following Gina's clothing brand and her personal instagram, I got the sense that Gina and I might have a bit in common - but talking to her took that to a whole new level. From slightly sillier details, like our mutual love of data, and the way we get a deep satisfaction of packing clothes for traveling, to more profound things - like our shared wondering about how slow fashion can exist, and how to exist in an influencer culture. 

Gina was just so easy to talk to - and we covered so much ground in this chat - running a business alongside a dayjob, how it is that she keeps enough time for herself for rest, and her work in climate research. 

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Gina is very generously offering Close Knit Podcast listeners a 15% off discount! Enter the code CLOSEKNIT at checkout on twodaysoff.com.


This will be the last episode of what I am very informally calling Season 1 of the Close Knit Podcast (although it has technically spanned about 3 years). Something you might notice me doing in this episode (and I have noticed myself doing it a lot of late), is asking questions about the role of the influencer/social media in general on slow fashion and the making community. I have some half-baked ideas around it all, and am finding that something like a break sounds right for me for now. Something else I've been thinking a lot about, especially a few weeks ago when I was sick in bed for about a week - is the necessity of rest. 

I really do love making the podcast, so it's scary to think about stopping doing that - even if I know it's temporary, but in the interest of listening to my body while it's still a whisper and less of a scream, I'm taking a pause on making the podcast to rest more. If you're supporting the podcast through patreon, your pledge will pause until we're up and running again! 

We'll return in the spring of 2020 with more podcast goodness, and until then, you can find me via my newsletter, on closeknit.com.au, and sometimes teaching at various spots in the bay. 

I'll miss making the podcast, but I'm so excited to give my body a chance to really deeply rest, and come back with even more vigor and excitement to produce more episodes with all the wonderful, thoughtful folks working in fiber in our world. 

Find Gina : Instagram | Website

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Awesome! I'm glad you've found your way to this podcast. Please feel free to subscribe, leave a review on iTunes (this makes all the difference to reaching more people!) and share with your loved ones. Thanks for tuning in.

Until next time! 

xx

ani