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Join the circle: rug-hooking in Nova Scotia.

Deanne Fitzpatrick’s Amherst, NS workshops connect a new generation with an age-old Canadian craft.

by Julie Ovenell-Carter

In the folk art gallery of the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia in downtown Halifax, NS, there’s a colourful early 20th century piece by Francis Silver Hansport that depicts a women’s sewing circle and poses the question: “One man has typewritten 4,917 words in an hour, but could he keep up with the conversation at a womans [sic] sewing circle [?]”
I had to laugh. I’d just returned to Halifax from Amherst, NS, two hours north, where I’d spent three blissful days at Deanne Fitzpatrick’s rug-hooking studio in the company of a dozen deep-thinking, fast-talking, wise-cracking women. I recognized Mr. Hansport’s question as a rhetorical one.
Rug-hooking—the simple, repetitive act of pulling woollen strips through a burlap backing to make mats and rugs—has vague origins; if it wasn’t born in Atlantic Canada, then it definitely came of age here. Once scorned as a craft of poverty, hooking has in recent years found new fans, thanks in large part to Newfoundland and Labrador expat and Nova Scotia resident Fitzpatrick, whose whimsical rugs and books have earned a loyal international following.
Increasingly, that following is turning up in quaint Amherst (pop. 9,500). Several times a year, Fitzpatrick hosts themed workshops in her recently expanded studio on Church Street. A relative newbie to the craft, I found myself in the company of rank beginners and skilled pros; we came from as far away as Toronto, ON, Vancouver, BC, Maine and New Mexico and other parts of the US. (And some of us had been before. Joked one repeat visitor: “We love Deanne so much that we like to say, even if she taught plumbing, we’d still come to her workshops.”)
We came ostensibly for different reasons—to learn technique, to be inspired, to improve our colour sense. But Fitzpatrick, a former counsellor who listens carefully to the silences between the chatter, told us the real reason we were there: “To get permission to keep doing what you’re already doing; to get permission to keep playing. Now go,” she said, “and make some mats.”
novascotia.com
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We welcome you to use these story ideas as inspiration for your own stories about Canada. The CTC owns all rights worldwide. (Our images are also royalty-free and available for editorial print, broadcast and electronic use.) If you choose to reproduce these texts for editorial use only, please include the author's byline and "courtesy of the Canadian Tourism Commission." If you cut, edit or modify the text in any way, please include this note: "The text has been modified from the original." Thank you.

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Prince Edward Island, Credit - Mandatory Tourism PEI/John Sylvester - Background Image