As mentioned above, Suzie Grieve, the mastermind behind Foraged Fibres, is a self-taught wild basket and jewelry maker from Lake District, a region and national park in Cumbria in northwest England.
Grieve weaves miniature baskets and tiny jewelry using dried leaves, vines, and weeds. She also weaves regular-sized baskets, if you’re wondering.
Bored Panda got in touch with Suzie for an interview, so continue scrolling to read more!
“The first time I wove anything was whilst I was living in a community in central France. It was my job to create vegetable beds so I used the abundantly growing hazel to weave the edges,” Grieve explained the origins of her endeavor.
“Whilst weaving the sticks in place, I felt an immediate connection to the craft, the simple meditative rhythm of the weaving, the beautiful tactile way in which it allows you to connect with the land and the feeling of self reliance. To be able to create with only your hands and what's growing around you is an amazing feeling.”
Now, where Grieve lives, it is a bit of a challenge to find the right material for crafting these beautiful baskets and pieces of jewelry, but she found a way around it:
“Since moving back to the Lake District, I've had to adapt the way I find and gather the plants I use in my work. There is a real lack of wild space here to freely harvest materials from, which has forced me to make some beautiful connections with local landowners over the years who allow me to gather from their woodlands and fields in exchange for some simple work such as chopping wood,” explained Grieve.
The plants she gathers, obviously, depend on the seasons, which she particularly enjoys because of the awareness of the seasons and their cycles that it all provides.
She told Bored Panda that, in springtime, she gathers willow bark and dandelions. In the summer, it’s the likes of nettles and brambles. Autumn is “a mad rush of harvesting long leafy things,” while in the winter—as much as the short daytime allows—she forages vines, such as honeysuckles and ivy.
As you might have figured, the whole process isn’t as clear-cut as one might think, requiring time, effort, and, needless to say, luck finding the needed plants. And this is besides all of the processes in between.
“It's a crazy lengthy process using wild-crafted materials for weaving. There's the hours spent finding the plants, gathering and processing them and hanging them up to dry before you even come to rehydrating them for weaving, but I love it. I'm quite an introvert and between wandering in the forests looking for leaves and hermitting away in my weaving workshop, it suits me perfectly. I've always been obsessed with plants, so I'm super grateful I get to spend my days tangling them into little baskets.”





















