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Native twist

by Silas Walker
Laura Groff machine-knits a "blank" before starting the process of dyeing yarn in her Mt. Sterling store, Native Twist. Frustrated and emotional after having six miscarriages in an effort to have a family with her husband, Brian, she started knitting seriously. Today she divides her time between two children who are seven months apart in age and her husband, home and shop.|

Laura and Brian Groff met online through their love for Indian motorcycles and got married in 2009. Shortly after that, they decided to start a family. Complications followed, leading to six miscarriages.

During these difficult times, Laura, 44, turned to knitting.

“There is a saying, ‘yarn is cheaper than therapy,’ and it is very true,” she says. “It gave me something tactile to do and keep my mind busy.”

Laura and Brian, 43, were eventually successful in having a baby boy they named Oscar. They also were able to adopt a baby girl, Mia. The children’s ages are only about seven months apart.

Laura wanted two children to give them the chance to form sibling relationships so they could lean on each other during difficult times. She and her siblings relied on each other when their mother and father died.

Laura evolved her passion for knitting into a small business with a physical storefront in downtown Mt. Sterling. She named her store Native Twist, taking the name from the fibrous yarn that helped her through the physical and emotional struggles of starting a family. The name also comes from recurring Native American themes in her life, such as the Indian motorcycles that brought her and Brian together.

Laura started work on a personal project consisting of 1,300 rainbow granny squares spiraling into a rainbow teepee – a Native twist. She chose rainbow for the “rainbow babies” she lost before Oscar and Mia came into their lives.

“The rainbow is like the light after the storm to me,” Laura says.

Running the yarn and craft shop allows Laura to spend time with her kids and  pursue her passion. Laura sends Oscar and Mia, both age 5, to school each morning and then opens her store. Her husband’s office is directly overhead in the same building.

When Oscar and Mia are done with school, they come in the back door of Laura’s shop and spend the afternoon with her until closing time, when they head to their home just outside of Mt. Sterling.

Oscar sneaks below the shop counter while Mia watches YouTube videos on her mom's iPad after school.
Laura helps Mia and Oscar with homework in her shop after school. The kids come to Laura's shop right after school and stay there with her until she closes for the day.
Laura helps Oscar tie his shoelace at a Mapleton Elementary open house event. Mia and Oscar go to the same school but are in separate classes despite being the same age.
Laura talks to Brian while the kids play in the hallway of Mapleton Elementary School during an open house event.
Laura reacts to seeing Oscar's learning improvement report from his teacher at Mapleton Elementary School.
Oscar holds hands with Laura while Mia runs ahead to check if the playground gate behind their school is open.
Mia and Oscar Groff choose candy to eat after dinner, before being read their bedtime stories. Laura wanted have multiple children so they could have the option to form a relationship and rely on each other later in life as she did with her siblings after her mother and then father died of cancer.
Laura reads a bedtime story to Oscar while Brian reads a story to Mia in her room.
Laura Groff waits with Oscar and Mia, for their school bus at the end of their culdesac early in the morning at their home outside of Mt. Sterling. She owns Native Twist, a yarn store in My. Sterling.

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