Advertisement
Bookmark and Share Email this page Email Print this page Print

Warm and Fuzzy

A record-breaking scarf warms our hearts — and benefits others around the world, too

Visitors to the New York Sheep and Wool Festival at the Rhinebeck Fairgrounds in October found the usual glorious array of knitted, crocheted, and woven garments — and one unique and quite unwearable scarf. The World’s Longest Natural Fiber Scarf — which measured a thousand feet and counting at press time — was created in a multitude of colors and styles by knitters, crocheters, and weavers across the country, who contributed sections in yarns spun from sheep, alpacas, llamas, buffalo, angora rabbits — and even the fur of a collie.

Linda Cortright, editor of Wild Fibers magazine (and an enthusiastic cashmere goat farmer), established the nonprofit organization Keep the Fleece to launch the effort in honor of the United Nation’s International Year of Natural Fibers. The idea was to promote the superior qualities of natural yarns over synthetics, and to raise money for Heifer International. Throughout the year, knitters enlisted sponsors at one dollar a row, and donated over $25,000 to Heifer, which will use the funds to provide sheep, llamas, and other farm animals to impoverished families around the world.

“Our goal was to have a scarf long enough to wrap around the White House,” says Cortright, who notes that she’ll probably have to make do with wrapping it around the fence. She’s not yet sure of the scarf’s future, although it may be displayed in the United Nation’s exhibit space. “We want it to have another life,” she says.

Meanwhile, if you’re stumped for a gift for someone who seems to have everything, a donation to Heifer in the giftee’s name — perhaps along with a natural fiber scarf — would help a family that has very little. Check www.keepthefleece.org or www.heifer.org for more info.

 

Add your comment:
Verification Question. (This is so we know you are a human and not a spam robot.)

What is 1 + 10 ? 

 

Letters to the Editor
Like us on Facebook!
  Follow us on Twitter  Watch us on YouTube  Sign up for our e-newsletters

Advertisement
Advertisement

In the Current Issue

Hudson Valley Magazine - January 2010

May 2012

Features

Web Exclusives

Departments

Subscribe Now