Welcome to The Ready to Fly Project

Welcome to the ‘Ready to Fly’ online blog!

My name is Lucy Worsley and I am the project Coordinator for the Space2b mentoring programme ‘Ready to Fly’. I originally became involved with Space2b over two years ago, through volunteering and running workshops. I am a qualified teacher, project coordinator, artist and all round creative enthusiast.

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When I was approached to help to coordinate and mentor for this project I knew I had to be involved; helping to form connections, motivate and build others’ confidences  and share any knowledge I have.

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My aim through this blog is to keep you all updated with our progress and up and coming news; I’ll share as much as I can including photos, experiences and real life stories. It’s going to be a real journey…I hope you’ll come along for the ride.

A little bit of background information…

This project has been set up as a personal mentoring and training programme to support and develop design and business skills for newly arrived migrants and refugees. Through Space2b we aim to create a platform for creatives to develop products, gain real life work experience and work side-by-side with established designers.

Five experienced mentors will work with ten women, across numerous disciplines  including design, production, research and marketing.

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We believe that this is going to be an exciting project for all involved, but more importantly for those women who have taken this brave first step to trying something new and to learning it all in a second language. We can’t wait to share this journey with you.

Celebration Day for Acceptance + Respect

What a wonderful day at Vegilicious and 4Dverse to celebrate Acceptance and Respect!
Delicious food cooked by Sharifeh and Helen together with Giovana in the Vegilicious Kitchen!
Fun workshops, and lots of monkeys sold.
We have made over 100 monkeys, so 20 have gone to children in detention.
A reminder to them that they have not been forgotten!

Thank you to the City of Port Phillip for funding this important event!

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Handing over the monkeys to Tri for the children in detention

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Program Launched by Pamela Curr, ASRC

Program Launched by Pamela Curr, ASRC

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100 Stripey Monkeys – Vegilicious wall

Vanessa Huxley, Councillor, City if Port Phillip

Vanessa Huxley, Councillor, City if Port Phillip

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Giovanna, Sharifeh and Hadis – Vegilicious kitchen

Sharifeh cooking with Giovana in the Vegilicious kitchen

Sharifeh cooking with Giovana in the Vegilicious kitchen

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Giovanna with Leila and Helen – Vegilicious Kitchen

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Leila Ashtiani – Exhibition at 4Dverse Gallery

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African Beading with Tissi

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Indigenous basket weaving

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Up to Monkey Business

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Linda & Sharifeh with Uma, Sebi & Pin Head

We are half way there.  Already have over 50 monkeys made.
Thank you to Lhakpa, Wenny, Sharifeh and Helen who have been madly sewing the monkey parts and running our workshops!

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Multi heads off with jane

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Timmy performing at the Emerald Hill Festival

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Alexander sunning himself in Burma!

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Alexander at the beach!

100 Stripey Monkeys for Acceptance & Respect

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This is such a fun yet important campaign to remind us that everyone deserves a chance to be happy, safe and accepted.
It is a community inclusion project that involves newly arrived migrants and community members working together to make stripey monkeys from recycled materials.
We are using old scarves, well loved jumpers and outgrown children’s clothes and running monkey making workshops for the community with Truffles cafe, Vegilicious Restaurant, at schools.
Each monkey is named and loved.   The stripey monkeys are for sale and profits will support new migrant training programs at Space2b.
Every fifth monkey made goes to a child in detention.
Come and join us!

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Our first monkey – Sebi

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Great donation from Otto&Spyke.

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Sebi with a few friends

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Workshop at Vegilicious

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Workshops at truffles

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Rachel, helping us to promote the program

Now Moving Forward – an Amazing night with Julian Burnside and Guests

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I thought I should report on this special night, even if I am a bit late!
Such a wonderful evening!  So lovely to see a great turnout, and so it should be with such amazing guests. There was humour, entertainment, many ‘makes you think’ moments and some practical and compassionate ideas.
Our thanks again to our wonderful speakers and entertainers: Julian Burnside, Abe Nouk, Tasneem Chopra and E’eda

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julian burnside

Abe Nouk

Abe Nouk

Tasneem Chopra & E'Eda

Tasneem Chopra & E’Eda

Ban, Linda & Keeru

Ban, Linda & Keeru

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Helen & Mitra serving up Delicious Iranian food

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Abe entertains!

New pop up on Chapel street St. Kilda

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We have found a great little popup, it is in a quieter place than before so please support us by telling all your friends.
Hope to see you soon!
143 Chapel st.  (near the corner of Carlisle St)
All the gang have been madly sewing and making so pop in and have a look.

   OPEN
   Wed – 11-5 pm
   Thur: 11-5 pm
   Fri – 11-5.30 pm
   Sat – 10.30 – 3.30 pm

The story of Space2b with Janine

The Space2b Carlisle St shop closed down temporarily this week, but the spirit of Space2b is still around and a lot of work continues in the background!
I went to Janine to find out where it all started.

JESSICA: Where did the idea of Space2b come from?
JANINE: I always kind of had that idea, and then a friend of mine, Jane, who worked for Tracing with the Red Cross, introduced me to Abdi from Somalia.  He was one of the first families she helped to re-unite. One day as we were sitting in my kitchen having a cup of tea he said to me “my dream when I settle is to establish myself as a tailor.” It was that one little sentence that inspired Space2b. I thought, this is just one person out of  so many with creative skills, who just need the opportunity, the connections, to live their dream.

JESSICA: How did Mariam get involved?
JANINE: I met Mariam in her RAW garden, and I used to talk about Space2b all the time. Each time it would inspire her more and more. She would always say “you Westerners, you’re always worried about the who and the where and the how and the why,  you never do anything! Just do it!” And so I decided to ‘just do it’! That day, I walked down the road and there was a sign saying “pop-up shop short term rent” and I thought ‘this is fated, what’s the worst that could happen’?  The next day Mariam came to my house and told me that she wanted to be my partner!”
So we did it together!   How ironic that she is also from Somalia!

JESSICA: How did it start with all the designers?
JANINE: As a designer myself  I used to sell my clothing, Jiniku in markets and was part of  the designer community.  The idea had been in my head for years, and I began to see the connection between the two.  Many independent designers want to make their range in Australia in small quantities.  Many new migrants have the skills to do this and also want to run their own creative business.  I believe that “Without connections, you are nobody” which is so true isn’t it? You come here as a migrant, and nobody knows you. Nobody really cares who you are. You don’t mean anything to anyone. You’re defined by your friends, your family, your work.  We need connections to thrive.

JESSICA: Are you happy with how Space2b has developed so far?
JANINE: I must say, if I thought about the hard work, I probably wouldn’t have done it. I cannot believe the amount of people that have come on board. It’s just taken off. It’s no longer about Mariam and myself – it’s its own identity. That’s been just amazing. At the very beginning the shop was such a mess. As Mariam said, if I had thought about everything, there’s no way I’d have done it! But everyone came and just gave their time. It’s quite amazing. We get wonderful comments from so many people. What I hadn’t realised was the potential, not just for new migrants and refugees, but for everyone involved. Work experience, practising English, meeting other people. It’s multilayered.

JESSICA: What do you see for the future of Space2b?
JANINE: With time we want to partner with the RAW garden so that there will be a garden, and a little café. With the addition of the food and garden, people can come and get the whole experience, and bring their kids.   I see Space2b developing as lots of small businesses, the shop, gallery, creative workshops, events, small manufacturing and designer studios.  In the background we will be working together with new migrants and refugee, creating, sharing and learning.  It is a two-way process. Some will develop their own businesses in jewellery or fashion for example, others who would like more support may make products for the Space2b brand, some will become employed in the various areas of Space2b. For example, we’ll have someone running the gallery and a few running the shop. We will start to develop a small manufacturing businesses producing products for established Australian designers, like sewing cushion covers, screen printing or making a small run of shirts.. So we will be building mini-manufacturing, locally. The potential is huge and exciting!

JESSICA: What’s the plan for the time off?
JANINE: It is not really ‘time off’.  We will continue to run our mentoring program and develop products so that when we find the new place we are ready to go. We’ll continue with that, and run some English conversation classes in the background. A business needs a couple of years to become established, so we will be looking for seed funding. That’s the plan.


If anyone knows of a suitable space for our shop or knows anyone that can help, please contact us!

Designer Profile: Maoko Carroll

Our first Space2b designer profile is Maoko Carroll of Jamanapo, whose beautiful bags bring a touch of vintage Japan to the store. Maoko’s designs incorporate colourful Japanese silks and denim, often including a single button or contrastive hand-stitching that adds character to each one off creation.

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Maoko was first exposed to this craft while growing up in Japan, watching her mother sew and observing the different fabrics. However, back then, Maoko was less interested in the traditional Japanese materials than she was in Western-style dressmaking. Now, Maoko weaves together the east and west, traditional with modern, to produce unique bags and satchels, lovingly handmade in Melbourne.

She lives in Kangaroo Ground and is constantly inspired by her natural surroundings. However, the fabrics Maoko uses connect her with Japan. Each bag is a one-off creation, made with materials such as indigo cotton from kimono and fabric from workers’ aprons.

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In Japan, it is believed that each baby is born with a red thread on their little finger, and that their partner in life is born with the other end of the thread. Maoko beautifully ties this Japanese tradition to her products by sewing a button onto each bag using a red thread. This represents her hope of a destined partnership between a bag and its owner.

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Maoko has been a great supporter of Space2b. She loves the shop’s atmosphere, and told us after her visit to Space2b, that you feel welcomed when you come in, and come out feeling happy. One of our first window displays featured the Jamanapo bags and the story behind them. Maoko was very impressed by how we transformed the empty window into a space for storytelling. It is very satisfying for one of our designers to commend all the hard work that goes into Space2b and to remind us that we are doing  “something worthwhile and very special.”

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Maoko’s products have been some of our best-selling items since the start of Space2b, and a new range of Jamanapo bags are currently in store.

Meet the Artist Leila Ashtiani

Leila Ashtiani’s art exhibition has been one of the most publicised and talked-about events we have had since the inception of Space2b. It’s no wonder – her story is exactly what this social enterprise is all about. We always tell new customers about the purpose of the store, that “the profits go to migrants and refugees who are interested in art and design.” Leila’s exhibition is the perfect example of the product of all the hard work put in by the people behind Space2b.

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Leila’s art on the Space2b gallery wall

On Sunday the 15th of March, we held a ‘Meet the Artist’ event, so that people who were interested in Leila’s work could come in and ask her questions. Since the exhibition’s opening, we have had large numbers of people visiting because they had read about her story in The Age. Her story has attracted people from all over Melbourne to come into Space2b and view her beautiful artwork.

Meet the Artist event

Meet the Artist event

Being so comfortable speaking Persian in her old Tehran art gallery, the challenge for Leila at this event was to speak about her art in English. However, the same enthusiasm for her art came across whenever she was asked a question. The attendees included people who had seen Leila’s art at previous exhibitions, as well as those who had heard about her work for the first time. Everyone was impressed not only by the art, but by Leila’s own lovely nature.

One visitor, Jane, described the artwork as “breathtaking”, and an intriguing depiction of woman in all her forms. As a woman, Leila’s work is inspiring because of its central theme of freedom. She was not able to show many of these works in Iran, so we are so glad Space2b could be a part of sharing Leila’s art with the community.

Leila’s paintings will be on show and for sale at the Space2b gallery until March 30th.