by Kathleen Webber April 03, 2024
This local nonprofit uses education and advocacy to return textiles to PA, including its latest project: the Philly Dye Co-Op.
Once upon a time, Pennsylvania bustled with the hum of looms and the rhythm of weaving shuttles. The state was a hub for textile production, producing wool, flax, hemp, and silk.
But as the modern world turned towards global trade and distant shores, this once thriving textile industry was decimated, just as it was in states like North Carolina, causing enormous economic and environmental damage.
Rachel Higgins and Leslie Davidson, co-founders of PA Fibershed, hope to reinvigorate the industry by creating a regional, circular economy for textiles that would reduce reliance on global supply chains and grow sustainable farming and local manufacturing.
What is a “Fibershed”?
A fibershed is a geographic landscape that provides the resources and infrastructure to create local fiber, dyes, and labor.
Higgins’ prior efforts with All Together Now PA, an organization founded in 2019 by Judy Wicks, laid the groundwork for building local textile supply chains for this endeavor, which now operates under the name PA Fibershed.
“We have all the pieces of the puzzle, but they are disjointed,” said Higgins. “Pennsylvania has the growing climate for fiber here in the state. We already grow wool, alpaca, mohair, hemp, and flax.”
Subsidies would allow textiles to be grown, processed, and manufactured locally. “The more available textiles are, the more they’ll be utilized,” said Davidson. “The more the demand, the lower the cost.”
As co-founders, Higgins and Davidson are dedicated to building a network of members from various sectors of the textile supply chain, including farmers, spinners, weavers, designers, manufacturers, educators, and agriculture policymakers. Through PA Fibershed, which began as a grant-funded 501(c)(3) just last fall, they coordinate educational workshops, facilitate connections within the industry, and assist members with grant applications.
Some days, they will talk to farmers about their needs, like one who is growing banana leaf fiber, a non-fruit-bearing species of banana that’s been cultivated as a textile fiber for centuries. Other days they are setting up a tour of a sheep farm in Collegeville. That farm is opening an organic mini mill, the only one of its kind in the state.
PA Fibershed is based in Philadelphia and is growing membership by word of mouth and through partner organizations like Circular Philadelphia and Fabscrap. Their membership spans the state making it challenging for all members to meet in person to share information so Davidson and Higgins are establishing an ambassador program to encourage representatives all across the state to hold in-person events like educational workshops about dying and weaving. Monthly lunch-and-learns are held online. One recent session explored fiber policy, featuring state and federal experts sharing insights on harnessing the potential of the PA farm bill and the federal farm bill. “We need government support to make changes that are scalable and can truly shift our industry back to a local level,” says Higgins.