In January 2017, days after President Trump moved into the White House, Justin Connelly was at his home in Anacortes, Wash., bemoaning the fate of scientists.
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In speeches, the president called global warning a hoax. He vowed to disband the Environmental Protection Agency and withdraw from the Paris climate agreement. Worse, Mr. Connelly feared the Trump administration would purge climate information from government databases.
He wondered: Would scientists resort to using chisels and stone to preserve their findings? Or, perhaps, stitch them into tapestries?
Mr. Connelly’s friend, Emily McNeill, worked in a knitting store. The two decided (along with Mr. Connelly’s then wife, Marissa) to assemble a kit of colored yarns that knitters could use to create scarves that documented local temperature changes all year.
Read the story from The New York Times by Laura M. Holson - “Knitters Chronicle Climate Change One Stitch at a Time.”

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