Daily Maverick

Cabin crew ties up a new job while flights grounded Biénne Huisman

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With flights grounded during lockdown, cabin crew member Candice Fur’s salary was put on hold. Instead of “numbing out on Netflix” during those winter months, the enterprisi­ng 38-year-old started a new business, showing herself the ropes of macramé.

Macramé is the art of knotting string or rope into patterns. In her Sea Point flat in Cape Town, Fur set up a strict routine: wake up at 6:30 am, coffee, meditation, exercise, then breakfast and creation time.

For guidance, she turned to YouTube, Pinterest and Instagram.

“I was going to be on my own for lockdown,” she says. “I mean, nobody knew how long lockdown was going to be. But even before the initial three weeks or whatever, I thought to myself: ‘Okay, well, I’m going to have to keep myself occupied. I don’t want to just numb-out on Netflix.’ So I bought every sort of craft you can think of. I’m not even a creative person, well that’s what I thought.”

She bought paint, cement to make pot plants, candle-making tools. “My mom gave me knitting needles and wool. Honestly, I thought of everything possible. And one of the things was a ball of rope. My sister, she had started doing these macramé plant hangers. And she said it’s really fun. Initially I wasn’t up for it. I kind of associated macramé with old-fashioned doily things. But after a while I had done everything else and was left with the ball of rope. I was like, okay, let’s give it a bash.”

It was May when she turned to macramé, teaching herself to make plant hangers, bags and yoga straps. It appealed.

“It was a learning process,” says Fur. “To start on it I needed a loop, which I didn’t even have. So, I ended up taking apart a belt. Later, at one stage, I bought new rope that’s not very tightly woven. The cotton was flying in the air; it was tickling my nose, getting in my eyes, little flint pieces all over the place. I’m better now, and much quicker. It all depends on how intricate the pattern is and how thick the rope.”

The perfection­ist in Fur liked macramé’s forgiving nature: if you tie a wrong knot, you simply undo and redo it.

“Initially I did a few plant hangers and got quite excited about it,” she says. “I started an Instagram page [@i_so_knot] and put up pictures. And shame, it was quite sweet, even some of the cabin crew members were buying plant hangers. I mean, I don’t know where they were getting the money. I wanted to say: ‘Are you sure you want to spend your money on this? Thank you for supporting, but are you sure?’”

On the Zoom screen, she shrugs, laughing. Fur’s job title at a major national airline is “cabin controller”. This is the crew manager on board an aeroplane, who, for example, makes announceme­nts. Since flights stopped, she has been claiming Covid-19 TERS (from the Unemployme­nt Insurance Fund), while waiting to be called back to work. However, she notes how lockdown taught her to need less: “Basically, I have realised how easy it is to live on less. There’s a lot of good you can try and take out of lockdown,” she says.

At present, Fur makes two to three plant hangers a day. As her macramé output increased, she also honed her sales pitch: “Like, initially the sales were mainly from friends

and people I knew. But I had to change my mindset. One of my products is yoga straps, for carrying yoga mats. So recently, when I started going back to yoga classes, people would say things like: ‘Oh, it’s such a nice yoga strap.’ Normally I would reply: ‘Oh, I made it.’ But instead of saying that, I trained myself to say: ‘Oh, I’m selling it.’ There’s a difference. So I had to change my mindset to try and push my products a bit more.”

A friend is helping Fur create a website for showcasing her wares. Her pieces are stocked at Montebello in Newlands, with interest by some local markets. “Mostly I make on demand,” she says. “Like if somebody sees something they want, then I can make it up within a few days or so.”

Fur’s new business is a lesson in stepping out of our comfort zones. “I’m one of four girls,” she says. “My sisters studied arts, they are all very artsy and creative. I’m the opposite. I’m more of a gym-going person. I’m more on the athletics side. I mean, I flew, I did yoga, I did athletic stuff, creativity wasn’t a part of my make-up. And now this. So it’s all a great surprise.”

I started an Instagram page and put up pictures. And shame, it was sweet, some of the cabin crew members were buying plant hangers ... I don’t know where they were getting the money

 ?? Photo: Joyrene Kramer ?? Candice Fur, cabin crew at a major national airline, turns to macramé during Covid-19 lockdown, when flights were prohibited.
Photo: Joyrene Kramer Candice Fur, cabin crew at a major national airline, turns to macramé during Covid-19 lockdown, when flights were prohibited.
 ?? Photo: Supplied ?? Candice Fur
Photo: Supplied Candice Fur

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