The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Knitting a new narrative

‘Shop local’ movement drives strong sales of American-made yarn

- By Shireen Korkzan

It began when Debbie McDermott allowed her daughter Jamie to raise two sheep for a 4-H project. Eventually, her 165-yearold farm was transforme­d into a successful, familyrun, custom fiber processing mill.

McDermott’s Stonehedge Fiber Mill, which opened in 1999 in East Jordan, Michigan, now produces more than 700 pounds of yarn monthly for customers in 38 states and Canada. It produces an additional 15,000 pounds monthly for its personal lines of yarn, including Shepherd’s Wool, which is milled and dyed in-house before it’s shipped and sold in about 300 shops.

“I really think the appeal is our yarn’s made in the U.S., and people are more and more going toward U.S.-made products as a support for U.S. companies,” McDermott said.

Most garments worn in the United States in the first half of the 20th century were Americanma­de, but the decline of the American textile industry began after World War II, according to knitting and wool industries expert Clara Parkes. She’s a member of the American Sheep Industry — an industry trade group — and author of several books on knitting.

In recent years, however, there’s been a slow-growing demand for wool yarn that’s completely produced in the United States, from sheep to skein, Parkes said.

One reason, she thinks, could be that consumers are turning back to wool because of the environmen­tal risks of microplast­ics in garments made from synthetics like acrylic, nylon and polyester. The microplast­ics are released into waterways when the synthetic garments are washed.

Locally sourced yarn helps not only the environmen­t but local businesses too, Parkes said.

“There’s the environmen­tal impact of shipping goods all the way across the world and bringing it back, but now people are asking themselves, ‘What if I can get the wool here and just keep it here?’”

McDermott echoed that sentiment: “Shopping local

is allowing farmers to raise and keep their animals on the farm.”

Consumer interest in locally sourced yarn inspired the Michigan Fiber Cooperativ­e to produce a line, Fresh Water Fiber, which uses wool and alpaca from Michigan farms. It’s processed by Stonehedge Fiber Mill and dyed by Why Knot Fibers in Traverse City.

One store that stocks Fresh Water Fiber is Wool & Honey in Cedar, Michigan. Owner Melissa Kelenske said she buys from Michigan-based fiber artists and companies that focus on producing highqualit­y, ethically sourced yarn with attention to their environmen­tal impact.

“I think the farm-to-table movement of eating local, shopping local — basically the major slow food movement — laid the ground work for the knitting industry,” Kelenske said.

Another yarn company that supplies Wool & Honey is Brooklyn Tweed, of Portland, Oregon. Knitwear designer Jared Flood founded the company in 2010 to “preserve, support and sustain” American textile production by doing business with sheep farmers, fiber mills and dyers across the United States.

The business concept “was not so much about patriotism as supporting local

economies,” said Christina Rondepierr­e, Brooklyn Tweed’s marketing manager.

“It was also the revitaliza­tion of East Coast mills and dyeing houses and the whole U.S. textile industry so they could sustain income and make sure towns and business were able to stay afoot,” Rondepierr­e said. For example, the Harrisvill­e, New Hampshire, Historic District mill village spins some of Brooklyn Tweed’s yarns. The village was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1977.

But patriotism, too, is helping to revive the American wool industry.

After Ralph Lauren drew flak for making its Team USA apparel for the 2012 Summer Olympics in China, the fashion company had all Team USA apparel for the 2014 Winter Olympics made in the United States.

The yarn used for the closing ceremony sweaters was 4,000 pounds of Shepherd’s Wool from Stonehedge Fiber Mill.

McDermott was shocked when a Ralph Lauren representa­tive asked her to supply the yarn.

“It was a mouth-dropped-open moment when I realized who I was talking to on the phone,” she said.

“It was a neat experience.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY SHIREEN KORKZAN VIA AP ?? Debbie McDermott’s daughter, Jamie Sparks, ties freshly-spun yarn into skeins. Sparks’ raising of two sheep for a 4-H project inspired her mother to establish Stonehedge Fiber Mill in East Jordan, Mich., on the family’s 165-year-old farm in 1999.
PHOTOS BY SHIREEN KORKZAN VIA AP Debbie McDermott’s daughter, Jamie Sparks, ties freshly-spun yarn into skeins. Sparks’ raising of two sheep for a 4-H project inspired her mother to establish Stonehedge Fiber Mill in East Jordan, Mich., on the family’s 165-year-old farm in 1999.
 ??  ?? Debbie McDermott holds up the back side of a Ralph Lauren sweater that athletes wore for the 2014 Winter Olympics closing ceremony. The sweater was made using Shepherd’s Wool, one of Stonehedge Fiber Mill’s yarn lines.
Debbie McDermott holds up the back side of a Ralph Lauren sweater that athletes wore for the 2014 Winter Olympics closing ceremony. The sweater was made using Shepherd’s Wool, one of Stonehedge Fiber Mill’s yarn lines.
 ??  ?? At the Stonehedge Fiber Mill in East Jordan, Mich., a team of nine employees processes more than 700 pounds of yarn monthly for customers in 38 states and Canada, plus an additional 15,000 pounds of yarn monthly for the company’s personal lines of yarn.
At the Stonehedge Fiber Mill in East Jordan, Mich., a team of nine employees processes more than 700 pounds of yarn monthly for customers in 38 states and Canada, plus an additional 15,000 pounds of yarn monthly for the company’s personal lines of yarn.

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