She's crafty

Indie music and the internet have fueled an arts-and-crafts renaissance that would puzzle your grandmother
By GEORGIANA COHEN  |  December 10, 2007

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THE NAME SAYS IT ALL: Somerville’s Magpie stocks everything Grandma never imagined.

The framed items look familiar enough — the quaint curlicues of cross-stitch evoke memories of your grandmother’s living-room wall, charming phrases wreathed in chains of flowers. Upon closer examination, though, these picturesque patterns bear unexpected messages: “Home Crap Home,” “Bitch Is the New Black,” “What Would Leonard Nimoy Do?”

Heck, what would Grandma say?

Amberly Stewart — a/k/a “Spamberly” — has been doing counted cross-stitch for years but now creates and sells samplers that depart, somewhat radically, from the traditional country-kitchen designs.

“This is my kind of cute,” says the 28-year-old Somerville resident. Stewart is not flying her freak flag alone: a new generation of twenty- and thirtysomethings are picking up the needles and the glue guns where their grandparents left off. As increasingly socially conscious consumers flock to handmade goods, crafters are finding a glut of outlets for selling their products. And Greater Boston — with stores such as Somerville’s Magpie and prominent events such as the annual Bazaar Bizarre craft fair — is emerging as a crafting hub.

Crafting’s nothing new, of course. And most of its current practitioners have been at it for a long time. But it wasn’t until recently that a full-fledged crafting movement congealed, perhaps most publicly embodied by the “Stitch ’N Bitch” book series and subsequent knitting craze. Some believe “post-9/11 nesting” and the need for community-building was a contributing factor. Others cite a powerful counter-consumerist trend, with young adults rebelling against the alienation of big-box culture.

This past year, Milwaukee-area crafter Faythe Levine decided to hit the road and document this movement. Fifteen cities (including Boston) later, her documentary film, Handmade Nation, is slated for release in 2009, and a book of the same title is coming out next year.

“This is not just a trend. This is a lifestyle for a lot of people,” Levine says. “I don’t think it’s going away any time soon.”

Humble beginnings
The handmade movement represents a convergence of progressive ideals — eco-friendliness, buying local, arts patronage — combined with a funky aesthetic. Various shakers in the national crafting scene have even banded together to form buyhandmade.org, a Web site where people can take a pledge to buy and request handmade gifts this holiday season. “DIY or die!” pledges one. Yes, they are that serious.

Modern crafters frequently point to the Internet as spurring the crafting surge. Leah Kramer believes it. In 2003, the Magpie partner and Bazaar Bizarre co-organizer launched an online crafting community “for people not into Grandma’s crafting” called Craftster (“No tea cozies without irony!”).

To her shock, the cheeky site became hugely popular, with more than 115,000 users sharing their crafts and ideas.

Kramer, who in 2006 published a book titled The Craftster Guide to Nifty, Thrifty, and Kitschy Crafts, says her “kick in the pants to get back into crafting” came from the Bazaar Bizarre. That event, held every December, has humble beginnings: in 2001, a couple dozen vendors and 150 people crammed into Davis Square’s Dilboy VFW. Now, thousands of people line up outside the 20,000-square-foot Cyclorama in the South End to peruse more than 100 vendors’ wares. The Bazaar has also spread beyond Massachusetts and is now held in Cleveland and Los Angeles as well. It has even spawned a book by co-founder and rock musician Greg Der Ananian (Bazaar Bizarre: Not Your Granny’s Crafts! Penguin, 249 pages, $11.53).

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