Western Living Magazine
Design Victoria 2025: The Buzzy Event for Design Lovers Kicks Off May 1
6 Beautiful Lofts We Wish We Were Living In
Boho Beauty: this bright, airy kitchen is the heart of the home
The Best New Wine & Spirits Books on Shelves Right Now
Recipe: Espresso Tahini Banana Bread Doughnuts with Whipped Coffee “Frosting”
Recipe: Blackened Coffee Fish Tacos
BC’s Best-Kept Culinary Destination Secret (For Now)
Outback Lakeside escapes, where luxury meets tranquility
A Relaxing Getaway to San Juan Island: Wine, Alpacas and Farm-Fresh Finds
8 Spring Home Finds to Refresh Your Dining Table for Entertaining
AUDI: Engineered to Make You Feel
10 Stunning Home Finds You’ll Want to Add to Your Space Right Now
Enter Western Living’s 2025 Designers of the Year Awards
PHOTOS: Party Pics from the 2025 Western Living Design 25 Awards Party
Announcing the Winners of the 2025 Western Living Design 25 Awards
Vancouver weaver Ana Isabel Sousa does fine, fine work.
In the midst of a self-diagnosed quarter-life crisis, Ana Isabel Sousa quit her desk job at a high-tech company in Ontario. Shed taken a few art courses back east, and decided to try her hand at textiles at Capilano University in North Vancouver. The tactile craft was the opposite of her past pursuit, and exactly what she needed. Every thread that is used in a project I have touched, and there is something so special about that, she says.
All of Sousa’s work plays with texture and minimal colour. Photo by Alexa Mazzarello.
Now, she crafts for private clients, interior designers and occasionally the film industry. Compared to other weavers, Sousa uses very fine threads, giving her work a translucent look. I always try to weave projects that really bring peace to a space, she says, because that's something I'm looking for and appreciate in my own life.
I feel lucky to be able to take a bunch of string and make it into something that you use as art or wear, says Sousa. The program through which she learned to weave doesn't exist anymore, so she also teaches. It's important to keep the tradition going in that way, she says. Photo by Alexa Mazzarello.
Using her traditional loom and natural materials like silk, wool and linen, Sousa creates intricate tapestries and wall hangings (usually between 500 and 800 threads), sometimes dyed with plants or woven with copper. Most of her work isnt dyed at all; she instead embraces the yarn's natural colourwhich can vary depending, for example, on the kind of silkworm or its diet.
It's a meditative process. It's not quick, and that's the beauty of it. It's very comforting, she says.
Sousa's Meditation series of wallhangings represents a dreamy landscape, and is woven from linen, silk, wool, organic cotton, copper thread and paper yarn. Photo by Alexa Mazzarello.
Are you over 18 years of age?