'Sewing is therapy': Why this Nunavut mom sews clothes for her kids
Facebook post of Wen Alookee's hand-crafted parka received over 1,000 likes
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Determination, survival and love — these are reasons why 25-year old Wen Alookee sews.
The Taloyoak, Nunavut, mother of three (with one more child on the way) had a brush with social media celebrity after creating a stunning puuq, or Mother Hubbard parka, for her daughter Tunnuq, who is turning two next month.
"I just love her, I wanted to make it really pretty for her because she's so pretty and I wanted her to look really pretty."
Both of Tunnuq's older siblings are brothers.
"I always sewed for my boys but when I got a girl, I was so happy I could finally design," she said.
Alookee got the pattern to sew a puuq from her grandmother. She made it using three layers that includes windproof material in between the inside lining and the printed material on the outside.
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The bias tape featuring the ulu (a traditional Inuit women's knife) was a Christmas gift given to her, as she is known to love sewing.
"I learned [how to sew] from my grandmother Anaoyok," she said. "When I got my first child ... our winters are so cold ... and I really wanted an amaut," a traditional baby carrier that is also the mother's jacket.
"I was so determined to get one. I took eight months sewing my first amaut and I didn't stop from there."
Alookee has since learned how to sew winter parkas, hats, ski pants, mitts and kamiit (traditional Inuit footwear).
She makes them every year for her children.
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"I found they really look up to me. And from that I kept going and kept trying because they were watching me," she said.
"It makes me feel good inside that I'm able to provide that for my kids because I can't stand seeing kids cold. And so it makes me happy and grateful that I'm able to do that for my kids."
She also made a caribou-skin amautik last year under her grandmother's guidance. Caribou-skin is known to be the warmest kind of Inuit traditional clothing.
Alookee says her beloved grandmother is pleased with her that she has learned to sew.
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So what did she have to say about Tunnuq's puuq?
"She said it was really nice, she was proud of it. Everything I make, she's always really happy and grateful."
Alookee named her daughter Tunnuq, after her 77-year-old grandmother, Anaoyok Alookee. In Inuit culture, naming a newborn after an elder means that the elder will always live on.
"I wanted to be with my grandmother forever, I named my baby after her."
It's not only Alookee's grandmother who likes the puuq.
Members of CBC North's Facebook group, the Arctic Sewing Room, do too. Just take a look at these numbers: over 46,000 members have clicked on Alookee's post, and it's received over 1,000 likes, and over 200 shares.
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"That was really lots… I was kind of overwhelmed," she says about how popular her post is.
"There's a lot of people who really like [Tunnuq's] parka and it was just something I made because I love my daughter and I wanted to keep her warm," she said. "I was so thankful."
Alookee also has this to say to young parents in Nunavut: anything is possible.
The mother of three, going on four, raised her children while getting through school, learning how to sew and now works full-time at the hamlet as a finance officer.
"Sewing really helped me survive. And it's therapy. Sewing is therapy, it really helps."