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Weekly Fiber News ~ Patterns ~ History & Lore
June 7, 2026
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📰 The Fiber Feed: Top News
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Wool Activists (and Sheep) March to Brussels: Shepherds and their flocks, joined by other wool advocates, will soon embark on a 450-kilometer relay race-style journey to deliver a declaration of shepherds’ rights to Members of the European Parliament. Beginning at the Dutch island of Texel in August and ending in Brussels by October, the march aims to raise awareness about the important role sheep play in rangeland preservation and carbon sequestering, along with the challenges facing Europe’s wool sector. Participants are requesting policy support for shepherding, including the reclassification of wool as a valuable fiber, not agricultural waste. Overseas supporters can participate by making a “wool activist blanket” for sheep or humans to wear during the march. | Read more at WoolMarch.com
A Jeopardy Win Helped Launch a Yarn Shop Dream: What began with a television game show victory has grown into a thriving community yarn store in Chicago. After appearing on “Jeopardy,” former data scientist Hannah Wilson decided to use her winnings to quit her corporate job and open The Dropped Stitch. The shop—located at 1524 W. Bryn Mawr Ave.—has since become a hub for classes and creative connection. | Read more at NBC Chicago
Adventure Knitting Becomes a Travel Trend: More travelers are packing yarn alongside hiking boots as “adventure knitting” gains popularity. Pioneered by traveling and knitting enthusiasts Judy Fawcett and Lucy Neatby, the trend combines outdoor exploration with fiber crafts. The two have been running expeditions around the world, recruiting fellow crafty voyagers to weave the slow craft into the experience of travel. That can entail knitting while sitting amongst penguins or taking skill workshops between hikes or buying local yarn to create pieces filled with memories of the trip. Travel companies and fiber festivals are beginning to embrace the movement with knitting retreats, yarn crawls and destination-based crafting experiences. | Read more at Afar
What Yarn Consumers Want in 2026: A new industry survey from Craft Industry Alliance offers a snapshot of today’s yarn buyer. Some of the findings: the more skilled the maker, the more they spend on materials; as crafters advance, their use of synthetics fades; overall, crafters are trending toward sustainability; and, despite online and big box store options, local yarn shops are critical to driving sales and fiber community engagement. Local yarn shop customers were more likely to attend a fiber event or discover new products, and they were also more likely to spend money—making them overall a high-value consumer segment. | Read more at Craft Industry Alliance
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