This has been an extraordinary week of firsts for me, and one I’m very proud of. The launch of the Wheway Yarns website, the arrival of freshly minted business cards with Textile Artist printed proudly beneath my name, and the presentation of a hugely successful collaboration with @YAP Ireland at their national event in Croke Park all feel like entirely new experiences.

And yet, when I think about it, embracing a creative identity rooted in textile art is actually four generations in the making – so perhaps not new at all. I grew up in a house brimming with handcrafted pieces, both practical and decorative. My mother made most of our clothes until I was old enough to demand “cooler” shop-bought ones. I can barely remember seeing her watch television without knitting needles clicking away in her hands. Our walls were adorned with cross-stitch, patchwork quilts, and delicate paper cuts (the latter courtesy of my aunt; the only family member who embraced her talent and made a commercial success of it).

If asked, my mother would never call herself “creative” only “practical.” She insisted she was “simply following a pattern,” as if anyone who could read could also sew a Debs dress, quilt a wall hanging, or knit an Aran sweater.

In 2020, when time was plentiful and activities limited, Mom resurrected a work-in-progress quilt she had inherited when her own mother died in 2001. That quilt had already lived a long, unfinished life; begun by my great-grandmother around 1960, continued by my grandmother, and then set aside for decades. Mom took it in hand, completed the remaining patchwork, added the backing, quilted the bedspread, and finished the edging.

The photo above, taken in 2021, shows the stunning result – somehow fresh and contemporary despite being 70 years and three generations in the making. I was awed by this creative lineage: women whose artistry had been quietly diminished by a time that labeled their work “craft” instead of “art.” I also felt a pang of sadness, certain the tradition would end with them, as I had no real skill with a sewing machine and had never considered patchwork or quilting a hobby.

Imagine my surprise, five years later, to realise I have found my own way into textile art, just by a different route. I may not quilt or sew, but I knit and crochet. Occasionally, I embroider onto crocheted pieces or use yarncraft to create works that visualise data or commemorate individual lives. My textiles are often less practical than those of my foremothers, but we share the same foundation: a love of making.

As this week of firsts comes to a close, I want to pause and acknowledge the creative lineage that nurtured my talent long before I recognised it as such. I see the same spark in branches of our family tree in many different forms, and I’m only sorry that the remarkable women who came before me weren’t fully recognised as the true artists they were.

There’s another essay waiting to be written about how women’s creativity was historically relegated to “craft” while men’s work was elevated to “art.” But today, I just want to share something personal – and say a belated, heartfelt thank you to my mother, grandmother, and great-grandmothers (one a quilter, one a writer) for the gift I inherited and the care they gave to help it grow.

P.S. This gorgeous quilted wall hanging was a wedding gift from my mother in 2002, titled The Colours of the Day. I love that its palette perfectly matches my new business card, even though my designer @fierceconsulting had never seen it.