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How many of us had our first "fiber" project at summer camp, only to remember that time as a static activity that would only be interesting to an 8 year-old but have no meaning for you at 12, 15, 18, or 24? Did we then pick up spinning on our own, married, recently single, or working with children? Was their goal to entertain us while it rained? Was it to produce a potholder to take home proving our outing was "educational"?
There is a research project underway by the people over at SimpleMarketFarms involving kids, tweens, teens, young adults, and their parents to help understand the connecting threads within fiber arts that touch on this narrow but dynamic age-range of 15 years (with a few on the fringes) and keep fiber arts as a primary interest in their maturing lives. Dynamic age-range and static activity? As parents, many of us know that our children can grow 5 inches in just one summer. That's not just one size of pants. It's an all over busting-of-the-seams that is not confined to just bodies. They change, as do their interests. From Playmobil to army men and astronauts to the Hardy Boys, axes, pocket-knives and (gasp) girls, the interests of our boys are fairly easy to track. Our girls go from Head-Shoulders-Knees-and-Toes to pinafores & smocking to trees & scuffed knees to heels & strapless bras in what seems too fast a season for us moms. My mother has a story of buying her first strapless bra and dropping by the dime store to pick up the latest paper doll book on the way home. Making felt figures on paper plates with glue and round-ended scissors just isn't interesting to twelve year old. And potholders lose their coolness-factor when a newly voting 18 year-old has been asked to list her favorite hobbies.
Currently, the Hubbards have worked with a young woman named Heather out of Arizona, to help her spin and challenge her efforts. Heather has met the challenge to teach her friends and now her friends are going to start a guild, under the umbrella of the Cyber-Guild set up for the Teens at TeenSpin. While they will meet locally, Heather and her friends will also participate across the board in discussions, educational activities with fiber and spinning techniques to weaving and other ideas as they decide them in their group. Heather's mom purchased spindles from SimpleMarketFarms, and it was as the Hubbards visited with Helene while processing her order that Heather's name came up. She was a weaver, not a spinner, but she was a possibility. Well, Heather is not only a spinner now, she is also a happy enabler, who takes her spinning out to volunteering activities and offers lessons on the spot. She graduates this year and spinning is going with her.
The TeenSpin research project is open to all kids (boys and girls), tweens, teens, and young adults and while the discussion forum is a closed list (to protect the privacy of the minors) you can gain access to join the study by going to http://groups.yahoo.com/group/TeenSpin/. Parents are not only invited, but requested to join if their participant is a younger spinner. |
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