Saving Sankaty Light
Erosion threatens the 70-foot-tall lighthouse

Inside the Sconset Trust
Protecting and preserving the charm of Sconset Village

A Prize Worth Protecting
Conservation at Eel Point

Anna Lynn Bender
Creator of one-of-a-kind, hand-woven Swedish rugs

An Irish Dinner with Friends
Irish Dinner Recipes

In the Garden: Hollies
Hollies Brighten a Winter Garden

Anna Lynn Bender and her assistant, Karen Gockel, thread a loom by hand, a process which can take days.

Anna Lynn Bender

by Margaret Carroll-Bergman

photo by Nicole Harnishfeger

Anna Lynn Bender opened the Weaving Room in 1984 when all an enterprising artist needed to start a cottage industry was a nail, a sign and a front door.

“I put a sign up, people came by, and I took orders,” says Bender of the Weaving Room’s early days at 73 Orange Street.

Word spread about Bender’s beautiful one-of-a-kind, hand-woven Swedish rugs and more than 20 years later, the sign is still there and the front door is still open.

Bender was born in England, but spent the first year of her life in Zimbabwe, where her father worked as a building foreman. The family didn’t stay long.

“Mother thought Apartheid was unjust and being Swedish, she thought Stockholm would be a better place to raise children,” says Bender.

As a 6-year-old, Bender weaved small cotton rugs for her dollhouse, learning the craft from her grandmother Alice, who had a cottage on one of the 24,000 islands which make up the Stockholm archipelago.

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