LinkaCreates

LinkaCreates Lightweight • Durable • Wild⁣⁣⠀
Handmade Crochet Earrings ⁣⁣by LinkaCreates

A FEW NEWBIES✨⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀INSPIRED by NATURE & ARCHITECTURE ⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀Crochet💛Earrings ⁣⁣by ⁣⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀•...
04/28/2026

A FEW NEWBIES✨⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
INSPIRED by NATURE & ARCHITECTURE ⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
Crochet💛Earrings ⁣⁣by ⁣⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
•⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
•⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
•⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
❖ I use sturdy and durable nylon cord to crochet my earrings. Once completed, I apply a starch solution to prevent them from warping. ⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
❖ All my earring hooks are hypoallergenic and nickel-free. Niobium hooks for extra sensitive ears are available at a small premium on request.⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
❖ If you’re interested in a pair that’s out of stock, please contact me. If I have all the supplies necessary, I can have it ready for shipping within a week or two. ⁣⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣

THIS 🍃 SATURDAY ⁣⁣⠀Mass Audubon 🕊️🦢⁣⁣⠀Greener Good Market⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀🗓️ May 2nd‼️⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⏰ Time: 11am-3pm⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀📍Magazine Beach, ...
04/28/2026

THIS 🍃 SATURDAY ⁣⁣⠀
Mass Audubon 🕊️🦢⁣⁣⠀
Greener Good Market⁣⁣⠀
⁣⁣⠀
🗓️ May 2nd‼️⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
⏰ Time: 11am-3pm⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
📍Magazine Beach, Cambridge, MA⁣⁣⠀
668 Memorial Drive⁣⁣⠀
⁣⁣⠀
🎟️ Admission: FREE, all ages⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
⁣⁣⠀
☔ Rain Date - May 9th

Inspired by NATURE and Architecture🍃⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀Been using this tagline in my descriptions of  for a while. And for a good rea...
04/13/2026

Inspired by NATURE and Architecture🍃⁣⁣⠀
⁣⁣⠀
Been using this tagline in my descriptions of for a while. And for a good reason. See photo nr. 2 onwards for a few newbies inspired by this photo I found somewhere on the internets🎈

So excited for my first major market of 2026! Here I come The Brighton Bazaar 🎪 ⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀*** NOTE: It’s a two-day eve...
04/13/2026

So excited for my first major market of 2026! Here I come The Brighton Bazaar 🎪 ⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
*** NOTE: It’s a two-day event but will only be there the first day. Gotta protect my AuDHD piece and energy.⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
🗓️ SATURDAY April 18th‼️⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
⏰ Time: 11am-5pm⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
📍Address:⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
Lodge Door - 326 Washington St. 02135⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
Pedestrian Gate - 14 Academy Hill Rd. 02135⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
☔ Weather: rain or shine, outside in the rear parking lot & inside the Lodge.⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
🎟️ Admission: FREE, all ages⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
🐕 Pets: welcome throughout!⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
🎶 Vinyl DJ: High Energy Vintage⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
♿️ Wheelchair accessible. Offsite ADA parking available in lots listed above.⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
*** Getting There ***⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
🚃 T: Green Line B-branch, Washington St. stop⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
🚌 Bus: 57, 86, 65⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
🚗 Drive: 10 min off I-90⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
🅿️ Free Parking:⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
- 400 Market St.⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
- 198 Wirt St. / 301 Washington St.⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
- 29 Academy Hill Rd (public facility closed on weekends)⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
- 49 Chestnut Hill Ave (Library closed on Sundays)⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
- Street parking throughout Brighton Center, no time limit on weekends!⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
⁣⁣⠀⁣⁣⠀
🖼️ Poster by koob!

Wintertime is usually the time for me to catch up on personal crochet projects. I made a couple of MELT THE ICE 🧊✊ hats,...
04/13/2026

Wintertime is usually the time for me to catch up on personal crochet projects. I made a couple of MELT THE ICE 🧊✊ hats, refreshed my knitting skills (still love crocheting more), and crocheted two sweaters. ⁣⁣⠀
⁣⁣⠀
Last month, the day of the last NO KINGS, a fellow crocheter Lianna challenged me to make mini MTI hats. So I did :)

Should I make more of the mini MTI hats?

MELT THE ICE 🧶🧊🧶 The crochet pattern? Bonkers.{Sorry . Still love you. Best $5 spent this year so far.}So instead of fig...
02/16/2026

MELT THE ICE 🧶🧊🧶


The crochet pattern? Bonkers.
{Sorry . Still love you. Best $5 spent this year so far.}

So instead of fighting the faux-knit crochet stitch,
I re-learned actual knitting {second best $5 spent this year}.

Behold:
✨ one half-crochet / half-knit MTI hat
✨ one half-finished all-crochet redo
✨ zero regrets

Last I heard, pattern sales — each only $5 — have raised over $650,000+ for Minnesota mutual aid groups supporting immigrants. Proof that sometimes a hat is not just a hat.

And said it beautifully — swipe left for a few excerpts from their post explaining why the MTI hat is more than just an empty gesture.

02/07/2026

I have a lot of big thoughts right now, so heavy post alert: You may have seen photos of the knit red hat showing up on your feed. (Context: The Melt the Ice Hat is inspired by Norwegian protest hats from WWII, it’s designed by a woman-owned small business in the Twin Cities, Minnesota area and the money from the pattern is being donated to immigrant aid agencies impacted by ICE.) FYI, I’m currently making one, that’s what the image is above. Craft and activism have always been deeply knitted together (pun intended). It’s something that makes the crafting community strong and special.

But over the past few days I’ve seen some backlash about the hat which has made me incredibly sad. There have been crafters getting pretty angry about the hat and claiming it is “performative” or “does nothing” or that instead of making a hat you should donate or call representatives or X, Y, Z thing. (As if most of us aren’t doing those things as well?) Some are claiming that the hat is the very first time some knitters are participating in activism and giving them grief for that. But you know what? WELCOME ABOARD. If it’s your first time participating in activism, thank you for being here.

We are all on the same team. Let’s not forget that. Instead of tearing each other down and shaming people for not doing activism “the right way” or the way you want them to do activism, this should be a moment where we are coming together as a community. I personally know that if I try something for the first time and people immediately jump on me for “not doing it right” I’m highly unlikely to come back and try it again.

Share resources? Cool. Participate in a protest? Awesome. Call your representatives? Great. Donate to mutual aid? Super. Make a hat that is a symbol of resistance? Also fantastic. Everything is a piece of the puzzle and we each do what we can. Maybe it’s one piece, maybe it’s multiple pieces. But we build it together.

Thanks for coming to my rant/TED talk. Love you. xoxo



PS: You can find the pattern here on Ravelry: https://www.ravelry.com/patterns/library/melt-the-ice-hat

02/07/2026

The little Minneapolis yarn shop that launched the "Melt the ICE" red hat movement has some big news: the knitter uprising that Needle & Skein sparked three weeks ago has now raised over $650,000 for Minnesota immigrant rights groups! It all started with a simple red beanie topped with a braided tassel, inspired by hats worn by Norwegians as silent protest against N**i occupation during World War II. Known as the "Melt the ICE" hat, the $5 knitting pattern has been ordered more than 100,000 times, causing red yarn shortages across the country.

In its update yesterday, the shop wrote: "We are speechless. We are overwhelmed with the generosity of the fiber community and beyond. This outpouring of love and support is felt around the state. Because of you, we can help so many people who need it. Thank you thank you thank you. Keep knitting. Keep resisting. Keep showing up for your neighbors. Melt. The. Ice."

The hat is the brainchild of Paul Neary, an employee at Needle & Skein and a history buff who knew exactly where to look for inspiration. During the 1940s, Norwegians wore red tasseled caps called "nisselue" as a wordless show of defiance against the N**i occupiers. The N**is were so threatened by this simple gesture that they eventually outlawed the caps entirely. It was a history based around resistance and solidarity that felt urgently relevant to Neary. "It truly does feel like we are surrounded, and everyone is at risk," he said. "I brought this hat back for a reason."

For Needle & Skein owner Gilah Mashaal -- who is Jewish and an immigrant herself -- the hats have given people something tangible to do with their grief and fury in the wake of the fatal shootings of Renée Good and Alex Pretti by federal agents. "I think this gave people a purpose and a way to channel -- honestly -- their rage and anxiety into something that they could actually create," she said.

Many who are picking up needles are also engaged in other forms of activism -- protesting, organizing, serving as legal observers. As Megan Boesen, the owner of Knit & Bolt, a Minneapolis craft store, put it: "It's not the only thing to do. But it is worth doing."

And the impact is far more than symbolic. Needle & Skein has presented two $125,000 checks to STEP (St. Louis Park Emergency Program) and the Immigrant Rapid Response Fund, both of which assist local immigrant communities. More donations to local groups are in the works.

The campaign has also inspired local action far beyond Minnesota, with knitting shops around the country hosting "Melt the ICE" knit-alongs to raise funds for immigrant rights groups in their own communities. In Birmingham, Alabama, for instance, the knitting shop Knit B'ham hosted a packed event last week to knit Melt the ICE hats while raising over $1,300 for ¡HICA!, the Hispanic and Immigrant Center of Alabama.

Mats Tangestuen, the director of Norway's Resistance Museum in Oslo, was moved to learn that Minnesota -- the state with the largest Norwegian population in the U.S. -- had resurrected this piece of his country's history. "It was used in the period of the war where everything looked very dark," Tangestuen said of the original hat. "The main purpose of it was just to keep up morale, keep up hope and not descend into hopelessness and apathy."

In Minnesota and beyond, the red hats are serving much the same purpose today -- giving people a sense of solidarity, of connection, in a time that feels unrelentingly dark. And if the yarn shortages are any indication, the movement is just getting started.

--> To download the knitting pattern for the Melt the ICE Hat -- all proceeds of which go to immigrant aid groups -- visit https://www.ravelry.com/patterns/library/melt-the-ice-hat

There is also a crochet pattern available at https://www.ravelry.com/patterns/library/melt-the-ice-crochet-version

For more ways to help those resisting the ICE occupation in Minnesota - from local groups to support to action alerts to sending a note of gratitude -- visit https://www.standwithminnesota.com/

----

For several uplifting picture books about Mighty Girls who uses fabric crafts to spread kindness, we recommend "A Hat for Mrs. Goldman" (https://www.amightygirl.com/a-hat-for-mrs-goldman), and "Extra Yarn" (https://www.amightygirl.com/extra-yarn), both for ages 4 to 8

For children's books that encourage empathy and understanding of Mighty Girl immigrants of the past and present, visit our blog post, "A New Land, A New Life: 25 Mighty Girl Books About the Immigrant Experience" at https://www.amightygirl.com/blog?p=12855

For books for children and teens about the importance of standing up for truth, decency, and justice, even in dark times, visit our blog post, "Dissent Is Patriotic: 50 Books About Women Who Fought for Change," at https://www.amightygirl.com/blog?p=14364

For books for tweens and teens about girls living under real-life authoritarian regimes throughout history that will help them appreciate how precious democracy truly is, visit our blog post "The Fragility of Freedom: Mighty Girl Books About Life Under Authoritarianism" at https://www.amightygirl.com/blog?p=32426

To stay connected with A Mighty Girl, you can sign-up for A Mighty Girl's free email newsletter at https://www.amightygirl.com/forms/newsletter

To read more about the Melt the ICE Hat campaign in the New York Times, visit https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/30/style/minnesota-ice-red-hats-knit.html

Address

67 Poplar St.
Boston, MA
02131

Website

https://linktr.ee/linkacreates

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when LinkaCreates posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Establishment

Send a message to LinkaCreates:

Share