arts & life f as h i on Woolly Wonder l A local knitter turns her passion into a haven of creativity. Lynne Konstantin Arts & Life Editor Amy Kimball Photographer W Susser models one of her creations. details 40 March 3 • 2016 Visit Woolly & Co. at 147 Pierce Street, Birmingam; call (248) 480- 4354 or check out woollyandco.com. oolly & Co. is warm, welcom- ing and lovely, just like its owner, Aviva Susser. Walking into the down- town Birmingham knit shop and studio is truly like falling into a gorgeous and inviting embrace, carefully curated to make each visitor feel at home. Just opened in December, the shop is washed in white paint and natural lighting, a chic and tranquil backdrop that lets the yarn pop as the star: Luscious reach-out- and-touch-them textures cross the spectrum from fine to super-chunky, with colors both vibrant and soothing. A textural exposed-brick wall, a fireplace and comfort- able sitting areas — layered with cozy handknit throws, of course — are meant to encourage shoppers to relax and lounge, read, chat and knit. Susser’s goal was to emphasize the importance of all customers — from absolute beginners to sea- soned pros — feeling a part of a community, under her nurturing and creative tutelage. Even the studio’s name implies a tactile expe- rience. “To call something ‘woolly’ seems very soft,” Susser says. “It’s your woolly blanket. Woolly can be the sweater, the fiber, the sheep. We added the ‘Co.’ for the company you keep when you’re sitting around the table, talking and enjoying each other’s company.” Born in Riga, Latvia, where her parents experi- enced anti-Semitism, Susser emigrated with her family first to Israel, then Germany and finally settled in Forest Hills, Queens, N.Y., where she entered preschool speak- ing Russian, Hebrew and German, but no English. She attended Hebrew day school in Queens while helping her parents at the children’s clothing store they owned, before studying advertising and communica- tions at the Fashion Institute of Technology in New York City. One summer, she took on a retail job at Saks Fifth Avenue, when Steven Susser, a young law student, walked in to shop and land- ed a girl. The couple soon married and moved around a few years while Steven practiced law before the Michigan native brought his bride home to Birmingham, where they’ve raised their Aviva Susser, owner of Woolly & Co. sons Ethan and Isaac. Susser, 45, learned to knit as a child. “My mother would knit while I napped,” she says. “When I awoke, I would recreate the scene with my doll, using two crayons as knitting needles.” As she grew older, she asked her mom to teach her, and made her first garment, “a cute little tunic dress,” she says, when she was 14. “I wanted to be different and have something dif- ferent from other people,” says Susser, who designed clothes in high school and sold Keds she’d colored to classmates. “I always wanted to wear things you couldn’t get anywhere else. Even now, when I make something from a pattern, I like to change it up a bit, add my Aviva touch.” Last year, with her kids in high school and college, the stay-at-home mom decided to put her creative juices to