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Weaving A Career In Cross Village

Jasmine Petrie at the loom. PHOTO: Jennifer Guerra, Michigan Radio.

<p><em><a href="mailto:guerraj@umich.edu">By Jennifer Guerra, Michigan Radio</a></em></p> <p>Cross Village, north of Harbor Springs, is like a lot of small, rural towns in the state: money is tight, jobs are scarce. And when winter comes around and all the tourists are gone, the outlook is even bleaker. So a group of women started up a cottage industry of rug making to help locals sustain themselves through the lean months. </p> <p><strong>A Surprise Passion<br /></strong>Twenty-three-year-old Jasmine Petrie, with her hair in pigtails and tattoos on her back and arms, looks more like a rock star than a rug weaver: </p> <p>"If you would've asked me a year ago if I was going to have a loom and weave rugs, I would have thought you were crazy," she says. </p> <p>But today, she has her own rug weaving studio in Petoskey, where she dyes her own locally produced wool and weaves rugs on a giant Cranbrook loom. She took her first rug weaving class last winter at the newly opened Rug Works, a nonprofit in Cross Village.</p> <p>"I just couldn't stop, and couldn't stop thinking of ideas of what to do with the fleece, and I really loved it," she says. </p> <p><strong>Getting Her Start</strong><br />That's exactly what the folks behind the Rug Works were banking on. Their mission was to teach unemployed and underemployed locals a trade, like weaving, in the hopes that they'd then use that trade to create goods and earn a living. Petrie says just anybody can learn how to weave. </p> <p>"It's a fairly simple thing," Petrie says. "You don't need a formal education to learn how to weave. It's...you have to be patient and you have to like to use your hands. I'm pretty sure that's the only requirements." </p> <p>The Rug Works hired Petrie and a dozen or so others, mostly women,  and taught them the basics of how to weave a rug. (You have to wharf the loom, slay the reed)...</p> <p>Some learned how to dye wool and do punch needle, too. The Rug Works also paid for the artisans to take classes at the local college and earn a certificate in textiles. </p> <p><strong>A Short-lived Mission<br /></strong>Now, if job security is what you're after, you might think encouraging someone to start a career in the arts wouldn't be the best idea </p> <p>"It's a little bit of a radical idea, but a great one, I think!" says Shanna Robinson, an art professor at North Central Michigan College. </p> <p>It's true, it might have been a great idea. But in the end, it didn't work out. The Rug Works closed after being open for little over a year. </p> <p>Why it had to shut its doors is not clear. One man on the board said it was because the looms were too expensive, although at least half of them seem to have been donated. Another said the major funder pulled out. Shanna Robinson, who was on the board for Rug Works, says they didn't secure enough funding before the nonprofit opened </p> <p>"We were so anxious to put people to work, but perhaps we should have done the fundraising first," she says. </p> <p><strong>A Longer Legacy</strong><br />Once the folks behind Rug Works knew it was closing, they sold the looms to any of the artisans that wanted them at drastically reduced prices so that the artisans could continue to try and earn a living through rug making.</p> <p>Jasmine Petrie couldn't afford the loom of her dreams, even with the steep discount it cost 1200. So her art history teacher bought the loom and generously donated it to Petrie. </p> <p>Today, she's busy churning out new rugs. She even helped create a Weavers Guild with other former Rug Workers:</p> <p>"Rug works ended too quickly," Petrie says. But they really succeeded in inspiring a lot of people to continue with this."</p> <p>And perhaps that's not all she got out of Rug Works. Petrie is taking an art business class this semester to come up with a marketing plan for her new career in the arts. The Rug Works may not have planned for its future well, but Petrie is trying to plan for hers.</p>