Fiber Works

Below are all my large fiber projects in order from most recent to oldest! If you want to see the series I'm working on now, check out my Current Projects page!!

when did she disappear? (i’m jealous of the girl i used to be…)
2025
215 inches x 6 inches (~18 ft x ½ ft)
cotton and wool yarn

This weaving was woven with a double weave pick up technique. The “right” side is mainly pink wool and the “wrong” side is mainly light blue cotton. The color palette is inspired by my favorite colors as a child. For the text, I used grids to create my own font, one that felt like it fit into this early 2000’s aesthetic that my color palette was representing. Through this work, I wanted to explore how it felt to transition from being a child to a full adult. It feels exciting at first, to have that freedom, but since I’m graduating in a few months, I’ve been reflecting on how I feel like I’m not ready to make that jump to “the real world.” Ever since I was legally considered an adult, I’ve felt this nostalgia for my childhood years and how we were all in a rush to grow up and get away from our parents. Reflecting on this now, I wish I hadn’t taken it for granted. I lost the girl I was, because society told me that all I should want is to grow up.



hair(cut)
2025
36 x 108 inches (longest sides)
fabric, thread, hair, hair dye

Through this work, I wanted to explore my experience with hair cuts in domestic spaces with family. A tradition within my family is cutting our own hair. For most of my life, I wished to be like all the other kids and go to a salon to get haircuts, but as I got older, I cherished the time and love that my family put into haircuts. Using cyanotyping, stamping, screen printing, and embroidery, I wanted to portray my weird relationship with hair, how I felt about getting my hair cut, and the freedom I feel now, expresing myself through my hair.

I want to go back (to the good old days when i was a kid)
2025
42.5 x 40.5 inches (longest sides)
fabric, yarn

Unfinished quilt discussing ideas of rejection. The words are from recent rejection emails from job applications. The cursive font, appearing soft, while hiding the rejection in plain sight. There are 18 quilt blocks, representing how at age 18, we're immediately called adults, even if we don't feel like it.








-ai
a series of three quilts
‍‍
2025
40 x 40 inches; 32.5 x 28 inches; 34 x 32 inches
hand dyed cotton fabric & yarn, hand quilted

While AI art is gaining popularity, I wanted to make a cute but aggressive reminder to everyone that AI will never be able to make things like this. Handiwork like crocheting and sewing is something that AI will never be able to recreate, there's something about  human touch that makes these techniques so valuable.


These works were made as resistance, all my rage and feelings towards AI fueled the making of these three pieces.


They read:
"I'd like to see AI try and make this"
"I'd rather drink water than use AI"
"I'd like AI to stop being forced down my throat"
IVF Books- Our Story, What If?, IVF Now
2025
‍6 x 6 x 1 inches
Comics on fabric & embriodery floss

These 3 quilted books explore IVF. Not only my mom's journey with IVF, but they also serve as informative books.

I want to be remembered (April)
2025
14.75 x 14 inches
Hand stitched, hand quilted. Fabric, yarn, thread

This mini quilt was my first attempt at making a journal entry through stitching and quilting. This contains text from 5 journal entries throughout the month of April.



You Call Yourself A Friend? (STEP ON ME)
2025
48 x 17 inches
repurposed yarn from thrifted sweater, hand spun yarn, wool

Contrasting to normal welcome mats, this rug is playful at first, then turns aggressive as you comprehend the text. While this was a personal piece, referencing a fragment of a journal entry, it's also relatable to the viewer as well.





hand spun yarn + rope samples
2024
raw wool, assorted commercial yarn

Sewing Sampler
2024
11x11 inches
lace fabric, hand spun yarn, &  knitting pattern paper






READ BANNED BOOKS
// Protest Banner 1
2023
31x24 inches
cotton fabric, felt, & embroidery floss

The top 50 titles of banned books in 2023 are embirodered on the fabric.



0429
2023
15 x 13 inches unopened, 29x13 inches opened
Quilted Scrapbook with photo transfers, fabric (cotton, lace, linen, polyester), embroidery floss, ribbon, sequin, & 57 plastic ducks

In this interactive scrapbook, I explored the ideas childhood and playfulness, while also portraying growing up. The outside has a more childhood look to it, while the inside explores growing up and no longer being around family 24 hours a day anymore.




Soft/Hard, Nice/Mean
2023
Experimenting with performance!
yarn, polyfil, screws, masking tape, fabric, digital embroidery, & safety pins








unravel
2023
yarn from thrifted sweaters & a dowel rod

This work explores the idea of using the materials around you to create new things. To create this work, I unraveled yarn from five sweaters. (Since it's creation, the sweaters have been used for other purposes!)






Friends Forever
2023
oil paint on canvas, embroidery floss, & yarn


Three of Me
‍‍
2023
17 x 22 inches
fabric (cotton, fleece, naturally dyed fabric), yarn, & digitally embroidered faces

This work focuses on the idea of joy and what brings me joy. My childhood and my two sisters bring me joy and it's sad we don't all live under the same roof anymore. This is a quilt version of an old photo :)



Things You Don't Know
2023
6.5 x 11 x 4 inches
yarn, ribbon, cotton fabric, embroidery floss, & safety pins

This crochet book listing things my parents don't know about me. In my first semester of college, I was fully away from my parents and realized how much they didn't know about me and put all of those feelings into this book

Displayed in SAIC's 2023 ARTBASH


Thank You For Shopping
2023
yarn, fabric, clothing tags, leather, zipper, & yarn from a thrifted sweater

This work focuses on the idea that fast fashion brands steal from small businesses and the overproduction of garments is a large issue. We should refrain from giving large corporations our money and instead spend a little bit more to support slow fashion

Displayed in SAIC's 2023 ARTBASH







"Crochet Machine"
2022
yarn, embroidery floss, & metal crochet hooks

This life size work focuses on the idea that fast fashion is making crocheted items for cheap. Many people believe that since there are knitting machines, there are also crochet machines. This work was meant to fight that idea and appear a little threatening with the crochet hooks at the bottom. 



THIS IS ART
2022
26 x 23 inches
Experimentation with cotton, polyester, & linen fabrics and quilting
Made with fabric (dyed, heat pressed), embroidery floss, & iron on patches

This work focuses on the idea that fiber pieces are often referred to as "craft" and not seen as "art" by many people.




Untitled
2022
23 x 13 inches
yarn and safety pins





LOOK AT WHAT WE'VE DONE
2022
18 x 45 inches
yarn

This work focuses on how society's expectations and social media have affected young people’s minds. Everyone thinks they have to be perfect and society keeps telling us what the standards are. The words at the bottom are lyrics from a song called Pasta by New Rules, which forces you to think about standards society has set for us.