A couple of months ago, I was walking down a street in downtown Reno, minding my own business. There was a young guy, early 20s, lean and hungry-looking, sitting on a stoop, smoking a cigarette. We nodded a silent hello. Then, another young guy, blond and hefty, seemed to appear out of nowhere and said to me, โHey man, nice hat.โ
โWhat was that?โ I asked. I couldnโt tell if he was being sarcastic or not. Were these guys looking to pick a fight in the middle of the day? I was wearing a warm and cozy black-and-white knit beanie that my mother-in-law had made for me.
โThatโs a nice hat,โ said the hefty guy. โIโm being totally serious. Thatโs a really nice hat.โ
โThanks,โ I said. Iโd stopped walking.
โDid you make it?โ he asked.
โNo,โ I said. โIt was a Christmas present from my mother-in-law.โ
โSheโs really good.โ
โThanks. Iโll tell her you said that.โ
โItโs a great pattern.โ
โSo โฆ you guys are into knitting?โ
They shared a meaningful glance. It was like Iโd asked them, โDo you guys get high?โ After a pregnant pause, the lean guy on the stoop took a slow drag off his cigarette, squinted his eye in a conspiratorial, secret-society way, and spoke for the first time: โOh, weโve been known to do a little knitting from time to time.โ
โWell, thatโs cool,โ I said, unsure how else to respond. โYou guys have a nice day.โ
โYou too,โ said the hefty guy with a smile.
โWeโll see you around,โ said the lean guy, still giving me the conspiratorial smirk.
What the fuck was that about? I wondered as I walked away. I spent the rest of the day thinking about knitting.
A tangled yarn
Yellow attaches a knitted wrap around a tree by the Truckee River.
Photo By amy Beck

A week or two later, I was on Facebook and somehow stumbled onto a page called โYarnbombing Reno.โ The page featured photos of various statues around Reno, like the pioneers in front of Pioneer Center or John Mackey at the University of Nevada, Reno quad (photo, this page), all wearing bright, knitted caps. There were also trees and street signs adorned with knitted cozies and other โyarn bombsโโbombs in the slang sense of street art.
I sent the anonymous yarn bombers an email, and after a couple of weeks of conspiratorial electronic communication, RN&R photographer Amy Beck and I arranged to meet with the two bombers, code named โYellowโ and โRed.โ The bombers asked that I preserve their anonymity, even though none of us are sure theyโre doing anything illegal. The yarn bombs donโt do any damage to property. Littering, maybe?โand, in some cases, trespassing.
We met at midnight on a Sunday evening in the parking lot of the RN&R office in downtown Reno. When I arrived, I wasnโt too surprised to discover that the yarn bombers were the same two guys who had complimented my hat a few weeks prior. The lean and hungry guy identified himself as Red, the blond and hefty guy as Yellow. That night, the duo wore knit hats to match their aliases. A friend of theirs, with the less colorful code name Jack, was also along to help, so, including me and Beck, there were five of us.
Yellow and Red remembered our initial interactionโthey were actually disappointed I was wearing a different hat. They said that, at the time, they didnโt know who I was, so they werenโt complimenting the hat to plant a seed for me to write a story about them; They were genuinely impressed by the knitting.
We started walking. It was a cold and windy night, and Red and I took occasional sips from a hip flask of whiskey to fight off the chill. We all talked as we walked.
Yellow, 24, and Red, 23, are both among Renoโs legions of unemployed. They took up knitting and yarn bombing partly out of frustration with the constant struggle of trying to find work. They needed something to doโsomething fulfilling and productive, something they could be proud of, something they could brag about and show to their mothers. Something that strangers would notice, talk about, and maybe even photograph.
โOtherwise weโd just be sitting on our asses in bars,โ said Yellow.
Yarn bombing is a popular activity in bigger cities with young, hipster populations, like Portland and Seattle. Red and Yellow had heard about yarn bombers in those cities but didnโt know of anyone doing it locally.
โItโs just hipster graffiti,โ said Yellow, โbut itโs fun to us.โ He used to drive a cab, a job he compares to โpaddleboat driver on the river Styx,โ and he has the gregarious, easy way with people of a good cabbie.
When they decided to start yarn bombing, neither Red nor Yellow knew how to knit. They bought some starter kits and cheap how-to DVDs. As they started putting in timeโthey say they sometimes knit for 12 hours a dayโthey quickly found their skills improving. They now talk shop relentlessly.
โWeโre constantly talking about knitting and admiring knitted things,โ said Yellow. โWeโve become grandmothers.โ
Red places a knitted wrap around a stop sign pole near the UNR campus.
Photo By amy Beck

Our first stop was the statue of three pioneers in front of Pioneer Center. Itโs a regular target for Red and Yellow.
โLast time, we had a Pioneer employee thank us on Facebook,โ said Yellow, with satisfaction. Both yarn bombers mention that a primary motivation for yarn bombing is simple recognition.
โItโs just about getting some recognition,โ said Yellow. โAnd downtown is just so sterile. And the statues are made of metal. You know they have to be cold.โ
โAnd they look way cooler with hats,โ said Red.
โThe Tin Man wouldโve appreciated it,โ said Yellow.
The Reno yarn bombers make things other than hatsโlike โtree huggers,โ big, colorful knitted cozies meant to be wrapped around trees, street lights and signsโbut hats are the main focus.
โThey make the best gifts,โ said Red. โItโs like, โHere, I made this.โโ
And theyโre cheap enough to give away. In addition to donating them to the regionโs coldest statues, the yarn bombers often give them away to homeless people and other random folks on the street.
Though yarn bombing has its roots in counterculture street art, itโs fairly mild.
โItโs the least amount of street credit you can get for doing something illegal,โ said Yellow.
One of the many bombs Red and Yellow set up the night I tagged along was a bright red wrap around the pole of a stop sign at the corner of Ninth and Center Streets, near the entrance to UNR. Itโs an intersection I pass through every day on my way to work, and every day that wrap is still there, it brings a smile to my face. Each of those knitted caps and tree huggers are like little flags representing two unemployed local guysโcreative, friendly, hard-working people who just want to make Reno beautiful.
