Mari Silahli, needlelace doily, Şişli, Istanbul, Turkey. Photo credit: © Deborah Valoma 2023.
our origin story
The Armenian Needlelace Initiative is a collaboration between co-founders Deborah Valoma and Elise Youssoufian.
Strawberry Creek, Berkeley, California, 2022. Photo credit: © Deborah Valoma 2022.
As Armenians living in diaspora, we came together as strangers with a shared goal: to reclaim a familial art form in jeopardy. Individually and in partnership, we research the tradition of Armenian needlelace through honing our needlelace skills, analyzing existing scholarship, and conducting field research and interviews.
We first met in 2022 in Berkeley, California on the shores of Strawberry Creek—a riverlet once filled with salmon that still flows through Lisjan (Ohlone) territory from the hills to the bay. On that pivotal day, Deborah easily found Elise because—as she does frequently out in the world—Elise was making needlelace. We sat on the grass under the summer sun and the conversation flowed swiftly; we discovered synergies in a dizzying flood of recognition. As artists, scholars, writers—and descendants of genocide survivors—we immediately shared a common language of the heart. Deborah dances, Elise sings. Deborah weaves, Elise writes poetry. Deborah gardens, Elise practices aikido.
With deep gratitude for our foremothers who held this tradition in their hands, we work with thread as a tool of cultural continuity and intergenerational healing. Before we met, Deborah sought out needlelace kindred spirits in the United States and Turkey; Elise crossed paths with them in Turkey and Armenia. After joining forces, we pursued our research in new ways—out of which the idea for this initiative emerged in 2024. Through perseverance and serendipity, we continue to forge an intellectual and creative collaboration rooted in needlelace as an embodied ancestral practice.
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