Calendar

LightHouse will be closed on Monday, May 27 for the Memorial Day holiday.

Events in March 2019

Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday
Feb 24
Feb 25
Feb 26
Feb 27
Feb 28(1 event)

10:00 am: Knitting


Feb 28

Every week, our knitters gather to share their purls of wisdom and get in the loop on each other’s latest project, and usually end up in stitches spinning yarns. Whether you knit for pleasure, distraction or just practical economics, or you’ve never done it before and want to give it a try, there’s always room for another loom. Learn, refine, or teach a skill that makes your gift-giving budget lighter weight or support a student-led altruistic project like knitting chemo caps, beanies for babies, lap blankets or other creative applications.

For more info, needle Adult Program Coordinator Serena Olsen at solsen@lighthouse-sf.org or 415-694-7316.

Mar 1(2 events)

1:00 pm: YES: Learn, Connect, and Start Pitching! Startup Camp for Blind and Low Vision Youth


Mar 1 Mar 3

Youth Employment Series (YES) March 1-3, 2019 Learn, Connect, and Start Pitching!

--NOTE: Location has changed to LightHouse Headquarters due to rain (1155 Market St. San Francisco)

Startup Camp for Blind and Low Vision Youth In March, the LightHouse Youth Employment Series (YES) is excited to host Startup Camp where teams of blind/low vision students will be challenged to grow professionally and in friendly competition surrounded by the fun and exploratory spirit at Enchanted Hills Camp (EHC)! (Note, LightHouse will be offering transportation from the Ed Roberts Campus to EHC).

From Portland to Paris, the startup weekend model has provided an unparalleled level of opportunity for entrepreneurs of all ages. Since the program’s inception, the startup creed has forged connections between like-minded innovators and renowned business leaders, and fostered the formation of robust businesses. As high school students who have organized startup experiences globally, a similar accessible startup event will be held in Napa Valley, CA, in March 2019 to bring the startup energy and opportunity to blind and low vision youth! What makes this startup model remarkable is its relative simplicity. The program organizes participants’ time so as to put the emphasis on student creativity. After students gain exposure to the creative process on Friday night, they design and pitch their original business ideas to their peers. These proposals drive their weekend’s work. Once students join forces with peers interested in their proposed projects, they are assisted in their development of a range of business skills, such as marketing and prototyping, by industry professionals. The student-led teams chart their own path through the process, as they build toward a pitch to professionals on the final day. This is an empowering weekend to not only hone your skills, but to also network and build lasting relationships with blind and low vision peers, local business mentors, as well as have the opportunity to sustain your ideas with enriching prizes.

YES workshops are monthly weekend-long learning experiences emphasizing the vocational enrichment of low vision and blind youth, increasing and providing access to a multifaceted array of mentorship, employment readiness skills, and alternative accessible techniques.

Workshop Learning Objectives:
1. The Startup Camp will encourage students to bring an idea to life from beginning to end, practicing important work-readiness soft skills as they communicate and collaborate with their peers.
2. Youth will have the opportunity to refine their idea development process, to learn marketing and finance strategies, to prototype their innovative ideas, and to confidently pitch their concepts.
3. Transition-age youth will also elevate their attitude and confidence from meeting with successful blind mentors and coaches as they refine their prototype idea, broadening their exposure to different career fields and industries.
4. The over-night nature of the Startup Camp provides opportunities for students to refine their workplace readiness soft skills including effective social and professional communication and independent living all while building community with their blind and low vision peers.

Prerequisites and Things to Bring:
1. Based on program learning outcomes, participants should possess basic computer skills, be able to travel independently, as well as be open to creative energy and the spirit of teamwork
2. Bring a notetaking and research device or implement (braille note, pen, slate and stylus, phone with keyboard, laptop, etc.); you will be asked to complete activities electronically
3. Bring necessities you may need such as any orientation and mobility tools to travel safely, personal toiletries, money for transportation to and from the workshop, or personal medication
4. Recommended items to pack include closed-toe shoes, towels, and warm layers.

If you are interested in participating in the March YES Startup Camp, please:
1. Contact your Department of Rehabilitation counselor to discuss workshop attendance and authorization.
2. Confirm attendance with Ann Wai-Yee Kwong, Transition Program Specialist, by email at youth@lighthouse-sf.org or by phone at 415-694-7328. If you have any questions please contact youth@lighthouse-sf.org.

Please note, space for this program is limited to nine (9) students and workshop attendance must be confirmed one week prior.

1:00 pm: Youth Extreme Recreation Adventure: Rec in the Redwoods


Mar 1 Mar 3

Youth Extreme Recreation Adventure: Rec in the Redwoods
Friday, March 1st to Sunday, March 3rd

During the 2018 and 2019 school years, the LightHouse’s Youth Program will be hosting monthly extreme recreation activities and adventures for youth that are blind or have low vision. Those that sign up for these monthly outings will have opportunities to make new friends, meet mentors and develop life skills that will help them be successful in other aspects of life - all while enjoying the wonderful recreation options that the Bay Area and surrounding areas have to offer.

In March, the LightHouse Youth Program will be joining friends from the Adult Health and Wellness Program as well as Students from the YES program for a weekend of learning and growth at Enchanted Hills Camp. During this busy weekend, students will take part in a variety of fun and thought-provoking activities that will help them reflect on how they advocate for themselves during recreational activities and apply those advocacy skills in other aspects of life.
The weekend’s activities will start Friday evening with a campfire and some team building activities. Saturday, students will partake in a series of ropes course challenges, team building activities and climbing to the tops of some of the majestic trees at EHC with trained professionals. Our weekend will wrap up Sunday with a morning hike before we head back to the Bay Area.

Who: Youth that are blind or have low vision between the ages of 14 and 18.
What: Weekend retreat for youth at Enchanted Hills Camp that include; ropes course, tree climbing, nature games and lots of opportunities for youth to think about how they advocate for themselves.
When: 1:00 pm Friday, March 1st through 6:00 pm Sunday, March 3rd
Where: The program will be at Enchanted Hills Camp in Napa CA with limited transit available from the Ed Roberts Campus for those that RSVP.
Cost: Thanks to a generous grant from the Sadie Meyer and Louis Cohn Foundation we are able to offer the entire weekend program for $50 per student.
RSVP: with Jamey Gump by Wednesday, February 27th at (415) 694-7372 or youth@lighthouse-sf.org.
Please remember students must submit ALL necessary paperwork and payment before one's spot in the trip will be confirmed.
If you are interested in signing up for this outing or have any questions, please contact Jamey Gump at (415) 694-7372 oryouth@lighthouse-sf.org.

Mar 2(2 events)

1:00 pm: YES: Learn, Connect, and Start Pitching! Startup Camp for Blind and Low Vision Youth


Mar 1 Mar 3

Youth Employment Series (YES) March 1-3, 2019 Learn, Connect, and Start Pitching!

--NOTE: Location has changed to LightHouse Headquarters due to rain (1155 Market St. San Francisco)

Startup Camp for Blind and Low Vision Youth In March, the LightHouse Youth Employment Series (YES) is excited to host Startup Camp where teams of blind/low vision students will be challenged to grow professionally and in friendly competition surrounded by the fun and exploratory spirit at Enchanted Hills Camp (EHC)! (Note, LightHouse will be offering transportation from the Ed Roberts Campus to EHC).

From Portland to Paris, the startup weekend model has provided an unparalleled level of opportunity for entrepreneurs of all ages. Since the program’s inception, the startup creed has forged connections between like-minded innovators and renowned business leaders, and fostered the formation of robust businesses. As high school students who have organized startup experiences globally, a similar accessible startup event will be held in Napa Valley, CA, in March 2019 to bring the startup energy and opportunity to blind and low vision youth! What makes this startup model remarkable is its relative simplicity. The program organizes participants’ time so as to put the emphasis on student creativity. After students gain exposure to the creative process on Friday night, they design and pitch their original business ideas to their peers. These proposals drive their weekend’s work. Once students join forces with peers interested in their proposed projects, they are assisted in their development of a range of business skills, such as marketing and prototyping, by industry professionals. The student-led teams chart their own path through the process, as they build toward a pitch to professionals on the final day. This is an empowering weekend to not only hone your skills, but to also network and build lasting relationships with blind and low vision peers, local business mentors, as well as have the opportunity to sustain your ideas with enriching prizes.

YES workshops are monthly weekend-long learning experiences emphasizing the vocational enrichment of low vision and blind youth, increasing and providing access to a multifaceted array of mentorship, employment readiness skills, and alternative accessible techniques.

Workshop Learning Objectives:
1. The Startup Camp will encourage students to bring an idea to life from beginning to end, practicing important work-readiness soft skills as they communicate and collaborate with their peers.
2. Youth will have the opportunity to refine their idea development process, to learn marketing and finance strategies, to prototype their innovative ideas, and to confidently pitch their concepts.
3. Transition-age youth will also elevate their attitude and confidence from meeting with successful blind mentors and coaches as they refine their prototype idea, broadening their exposure to different career fields and industries.
4. The over-night nature of the Startup Camp provides opportunities for students to refine their workplace readiness soft skills including effective social and professional communication and independent living all while building community with their blind and low vision peers.

Prerequisites and Things to Bring:
1. Based on program learning outcomes, participants should possess basic computer skills, be able to travel independently, as well as be open to creative energy and the spirit of teamwork
2. Bring a notetaking and research device or implement (braille note, pen, slate and stylus, phone with keyboard, laptop, etc.); you will be asked to complete activities electronically
3. Bring necessities you may need such as any orientation and mobility tools to travel safely, personal toiletries, money for transportation to and from the workshop, or personal medication
4. Recommended items to pack include closed-toe shoes, towels, and warm layers.

If you are interested in participating in the March YES Startup Camp, please:
1. Contact your Department of Rehabilitation counselor to discuss workshop attendance and authorization.
2. Confirm attendance with Ann Wai-Yee Kwong, Transition Program Specialist, by email at youth@lighthouse-sf.org or by phone at 415-694-7328. If you have any questions please contact youth@lighthouse-sf.org.

Please note, space for this program is limited to nine (9) students and workshop attendance must be confirmed one week prior.

1:00 pm: Youth Extreme Recreation Adventure: Rec in the Redwoods


Mar 1 Mar 3

Youth Extreme Recreation Adventure: Rec in the Redwoods
Friday, March 1st to Sunday, March 3rd

During the 2018 and 2019 school years, the LightHouse’s Youth Program will be hosting monthly extreme recreation activities and adventures for youth that are blind or have low vision. Those that sign up for these monthly outings will have opportunities to make new friends, meet mentors and develop life skills that will help them be successful in other aspects of life - all while enjoying the wonderful recreation options that the Bay Area and surrounding areas have to offer.

In March, the LightHouse Youth Program will be joining friends from the Adult Health and Wellness Program as well as Students from the YES program for a weekend of learning and growth at Enchanted Hills Camp. During this busy weekend, students will take part in a variety of fun and thought-provoking activities that will help them reflect on how they advocate for themselves during recreational activities and apply those advocacy skills in other aspects of life.
The weekend’s activities will start Friday evening with a campfire and some team building activities. Saturday, students will partake in a series of ropes course challenges, team building activities and climbing to the tops of some of the majestic trees at EHC with trained professionals. Our weekend will wrap up Sunday with a morning hike before we head back to the Bay Area.

Who: Youth that are blind or have low vision between the ages of 14 and 18.
What: Weekend retreat for youth at Enchanted Hills Camp that include; ropes course, tree climbing, nature games and lots of opportunities for youth to think about how they advocate for themselves.
When: 1:00 pm Friday, March 1st through 6:00 pm Sunday, March 3rd
Where: The program will be at Enchanted Hills Camp in Napa CA with limited transit available from the Ed Roberts Campus for those that RSVP.
Cost: Thanks to a generous grant from the Sadie Meyer and Louis Cohn Foundation we are able to offer the entire weekend program for $50 per student.
RSVP: with Jamey Gump by Wednesday, February 27th at (415) 694-7372 or youth@lighthouse-sf.org.
Please remember students must submit ALL necessary paperwork and payment before one's spot in the trip will be confirmed.
If you are interested in signing up for this outing or have any questions, please contact Jamey Gump at (415) 694-7372 oryouth@lighthouse-sf.org.

Mar 3(2 events)

1:00 pm: YES: Learn, Connect, and Start Pitching! Startup Camp for Blind and Low Vision Youth


Mar 1 Mar 3

Youth Employment Series (YES) March 1-3, 2019 Learn, Connect, and Start Pitching!

--NOTE: Location has changed to LightHouse Headquarters due to rain (1155 Market St. San Francisco)

Startup Camp for Blind and Low Vision Youth In March, the LightHouse Youth Employment Series (YES) is excited to host Startup Camp where teams of blind/low vision students will be challenged to grow professionally and in friendly competition surrounded by the fun and exploratory spirit at Enchanted Hills Camp (EHC)! (Note, LightHouse will be offering transportation from the Ed Roberts Campus to EHC).

From Portland to Paris, the startup weekend model has provided an unparalleled level of opportunity for entrepreneurs of all ages. Since the program’s inception, the startup creed has forged connections between like-minded innovators and renowned business leaders, and fostered the formation of robust businesses. As high school students who have organized startup experiences globally, a similar accessible startup event will be held in Napa Valley, CA, in March 2019 to bring the startup energy and opportunity to blind and low vision youth! What makes this startup model remarkable is its relative simplicity. The program organizes participants’ time so as to put the emphasis on student creativity. After students gain exposure to the creative process on Friday night, they design and pitch their original business ideas to their peers. These proposals drive their weekend’s work. Once students join forces with peers interested in their proposed projects, they are assisted in their development of a range of business skills, such as marketing and prototyping, by industry professionals. The student-led teams chart their own path through the process, as they build toward a pitch to professionals on the final day. This is an empowering weekend to not only hone your skills, but to also network and build lasting relationships with blind and low vision peers, local business mentors, as well as have the opportunity to sustain your ideas with enriching prizes.

YES workshops are monthly weekend-long learning experiences emphasizing the vocational enrichment of low vision and blind youth, increasing and providing access to a multifaceted array of mentorship, employment readiness skills, and alternative accessible techniques.

Workshop Learning Objectives:
1. The Startup Camp will encourage students to bring an idea to life from beginning to end, practicing important work-readiness soft skills as they communicate and collaborate with their peers.
2. Youth will have the opportunity to refine their idea development process, to learn marketing and finance strategies, to prototype their innovative ideas, and to confidently pitch their concepts.
3. Transition-age youth will also elevate their attitude and confidence from meeting with successful blind mentors and coaches as they refine their prototype idea, broadening their exposure to different career fields and industries.
4. The over-night nature of the Startup Camp provides opportunities for students to refine their workplace readiness soft skills including effective social and professional communication and independent living all while building community with their blind and low vision peers.

Prerequisites and Things to Bring:
1. Based on program learning outcomes, participants should possess basic computer skills, be able to travel independently, as well as be open to creative energy and the spirit of teamwork
2. Bring a notetaking and research device or implement (braille note, pen, slate and stylus, phone with keyboard, laptop, etc.); you will be asked to complete activities electronically
3. Bring necessities you may need such as any orientation and mobility tools to travel safely, personal toiletries, money for transportation to and from the workshop, or personal medication
4. Recommended items to pack include closed-toe shoes, towels, and warm layers.

If you are interested in participating in the March YES Startup Camp, please:
1. Contact your Department of Rehabilitation counselor to discuss workshop attendance and authorization.
2. Confirm attendance with Ann Wai-Yee Kwong, Transition Program Specialist, by email at youth@lighthouse-sf.org or by phone at 415-694-7328. If you have any questions please contact youth@lighthouse-sf.org.

Please note, space for this program is limited to nine (9) students and workshop attendance must be confirmed one week prior.

1:00 pm: Youth Extreme Recreation Adventure: Rec in the Redwoods


Mar 1 Mar 3

Youth Extreme Recreation Adventure: Rec in the Redwoods
Friday, March 1st to Sunday, March 3rd

During the 2018 and 2019 school years, the LightHouse’s Youth Program will be hosting monthly extreme recreation activities and adventures for youth that are blind or have low vision. Those that sign up for these monthly outings will have opportunities to make new friends, meet mentors and develop life skills that will help them be successful in other aspects of life - all while enjoying the wonderful recreation options that the Bay Area and surrounding areas have to offer.

In March, the LightHouse Youth Program will be joining friends from the Adult Health and Wellness Program as well as Students from the YES program for a weekend of learning and growth at Enchanted Hills Camp. During this busy weekend, students will take part in a variety of fun and thought-provoking activities that will help them reflect on how they advocate for themselves during recreational activities and apply those advocacy skills in other aspects of life.
The weekend’s activities will start Friday evening with a campfire and some team building activities. Saturday, students will partake in a series of ropes course challenges, team building activities and climbing to the tops of some of the majestic trees at EHC with trained professionals. Our weekend will wrap up Sunday with a morning hike before we head back to the Bay Area.

Who: Youth that are blind or have low vision between the ages of 14 and 18.
What: Weekend retreat for youth at Enchanted Hills Camp that include; ropes course, tree climbing, nature games and lots of opportunities for youth to think about how they advocate for themselves.
When: 1:00 pm Friday, March 1st through 6:00 pm Sunday, March 3rd
Where: The program will be at Enchanted Hills Camp in Napa CA with limited transit available from the Ed Roberts Campus for those that RSVP.
Cost: Thanks to a generous grant from the Sadie Meyer and Louis Cohn Foundation we are able to offer the entire weekend program for $50 per student.
RSVP: with Jamey Gump by Wednesday, February 27th at (415) 694-7372 or youth@lighthouse-sf.org.
Please remember students must submit ALL necessary paperwork and payment before one's spot in the trip will be confirmed.
If you are interested in signing up for this outing or have any questions, please contact Jamey Gump at (415) 694-7372 oryouth@lighthouse-sf.org.

Mar 4
Mar 5
Mar 6
Mar 7(1 event)

10:00 am: Knitting


Mar 7

Every week, our knitters gather to share their purls of wisdom and get in the loop on each other’s latest project, and usually end up in stitches spinning yarns. Whether you knit for pleasure, distraction or just practical economics, or you’ve never done it before and want to give it a try, there’s always room for another loom. Learn, refine, or teach a skill that makes your gift-giving budget lighter weight or support a student-led altruistic project like knitting chemo caps, beanies for babies, lap blankets or other creative applications.

For more info, needle Adult Program Coordinator Serena Olsen at solsen@lighthouse-sf.org or 415-694-7316.

Mar 8
Mar 9(1 event)

11:00 am: Museum Meanderings: The Contemporary Jewish Museum


Mar 9

Museum Meanderings: Contemporary Jewish Museum
Saturday, Mar. 9, 11 AM-2 PM 736 Mission St. San Francisco FREE

If you missed the special exhibit opening night in February, now is your chance to take in a great exhibit with a quality access experience. one guest per LightHouse community member and RSVP is required by Friday, March 8th. Contact Adult Program Coordinator Serena Olsen at solsen@lighthouse-sf.org or 415-694-7316. Access tour will be from 11 a.m. to noon, and you are free to enjoy the museum thereafter until it closes at 5 p.m.

About the exhibit: How do we depict “the self” if it is unknowable, inherently constructed and ever-changing? How does the concept of portraiture shift when categories are in crisis and visibility itself is problematic? Jewish thought on performed and fluid identity can be interpreted in the Book of Esther in the Hebrew Bible, an archetypal story of an empowered declaration of Jewish identity. Likewise, the Talmudic notion of svara is a potent entry-point to Jewish practices of self-determination, themes that animate Show Me as I Want to Be Seen. Taking the work of French Jewish artist and writer Claude Cahun (1894–1954) and her lifelong lover and collaborator Marcel Moore (1892–1972) as its starting point, Show Me as I Want to Be Seen examines the empowered representation of fluid and complex identity. Cahun (born Lucy Schwob) and Moore (born Suzanne Malherbe) were pioneers in their bold representations of an unfixed self. This exhibition positions their work in dialogue with ten contemporary artists working in painting, sculpture, photography, video, and 3-D animation. The contemporary artists in the exhibition—Nicole Eisenman, Rhonda Holberton, Hiwa K, Young Joon Kwak, Zanele Muholi, Toyin Ojih Odutola, Gabby Rosenberg, Tschabalala Self, Davina Semo, and Isabel Yellin—also address notions of the opaque, constructed, and shifting self. Show Me as I Want to Be Seen is organized by The Contemporary Jewish Museum and is curated by CJM Assistant Curator Natasha Matteson. The exhibition is accompanied by a 112-page, fully illustrated hardcover catalog published by The CJM with original contributions by Natasha Matteson, Rabbi Benay Lappe, and a newly-commissioned piece of fiction by Porpentine Charity Heartscape.

Mar 10
Mar 11
Mar 12
Mar 13
Mar 14(2 events)

10:00 am: Knitting


Mar 14

Every week, our knitters gather to share their purls of wisdom and get in the loop on each other’s latest project, and usually end up in stitches spinning yarns. Whether you knit for pleasure, distraction or just practical economics, or you’ve never done it before and want to give it a try, there’s always room for another loom. Learn, refine, or teach a skill that makes your gift-giving budget lighter weight or support a student-led altruistic project like knitting chemo caps, beanies for babies, lap blankets or other creative applications.

For more info, needle Adult Program Coordinator Serena Olsen at solsen@lighthouse-sf.org or 415-694-7316.

6:00 pm: Dancing in the Dark


Mar 14

Dancing in the Dark
Thursday, March 14, 6-8 p.m.
CounterPulse Theater 80 Turk St., San Francisco FREE

Gravity brings you down into the underbelly of CounterPulse for a multi-sensory durational performance experience in the Project Space. Jess Curtis and his team of international collaborators will share excerpts from their research into the intersections of movement, culture, sensory difference and physical diversity in live performance: inviting you into a full-body performance experience. Total duration for performance installation is 6-8 p.m. Come and go as you please. RSVP to LightHouse Adult Program Coordinator Serena Olsen at solsen@lighthouse-sf.org or 415-694-7316.

Dancing in the Dark is a part of To Be Free: CounterPulse Festival 2019. Visit counterpulse.org/tobefree for more details on the festival.

(in)Visible Credits: Choreographer: Jess Curtis Created and Performed by: Sherwood Chen, Gabriel Christian, Rachael Dichter, Sophia Nieses, Xenia Taniko, and Tiffany Taylor Sound by: Sam Hertz Extravisualing Consulting by: Georgina Kleege Philosophical Consulting by: Alva Noë (in)Visible is supported with funding from: MAP Fund, The Kenneth Rainin Foundation, The Fleishhacker Foundation, San Francisco Arts Commission, California Arts Council, Grants for the Arts, and National Endowment for the Arts.

Read more: Dancing in the Dark

Mar 15(1 event)

4:00 pm: Dinner and Bingo


Mar 15

Dinner and Bingo

Enjoy a community dinner and lots of rollicking bingo fun on the third Friday of each month at the LightHouse. RSVP by noon on the Tuesday prior and $7 covers your dinner (RSVP later or not at all and your dinner is $10). Braille and large print bingo cards make bingo accessible for everyone.   Bring a handful or two of coins for small-change competitiveness … we play a couple of nickel games, several dimes games, and after dessert, one quarter gets you three games – good company – good food – good fun! To RSVP, contact Adult Program Coordinator Serena Olsen at solsen@lighthouse-sf.org or 415-694-7316.

Mar 16
Mar 17
Mar 18
Mar 19
Mar 20
Mar 21(1 event)

10:00 am: Knitting


Mar 21

Every week, our knitters gather to share their purls of wisdom and get in the loop on each other’s latest project, and usually end up in stitches spinning yarns. Whether you knit for pleasure, distraction or just practical economics, or you’ve never done it before and want to give it a try, there’s always room for another loom. Learn, refine, or teach a skill that makes your gift-giving budget lighter weight or support a student-led altruistic project like knitting chemo caps, beanies for babies, lap blankets or other creative applications.

For more info, needle Adult Program Coordinator Serena Olsen at solsen@lighthouse-sf.org or 415-694-7316.

Mar 22
Mar 23
Mar 24
Mar 25
Mar 26
Mar 27
Mar 28(1 event)

10:00 am: Knitting


Mar 28

Every week, our knitters gather to share their purls of wisdom and get in the loop on each other’s latest project, and usually end up in stitches spinning yarns. Whether you knit for pleasure, distraction or just practical economics, or you’ve never done it before and want to give it a try, there’s always room for another loom. Learn, refine, or teach a skill that makes your gift-giving budget lighter weight or support a student-led altruistic project like knitting chemo caps, beanies for babies, lap blankets or other creative applications.

For more info, needle Adult Program Coordinator Serena Olsen at solsen@lighthouse-sf.org or 415-694-7316.

Mar 29
Mar 30
Mar 31
Apr 1
Apr 2
Apr 3
Apr 4(2 events)

10:00 am: Knitting


Apr 4

Every week, our knitters gather to share their purls of wisdom and get in the loop on each other’s latest project, and usually end up in stitches spinning yarns. Whether you knit for pleasure, distraction or just practical economics, or you’ve never done it before and want to give it a try, there’s always room for another loom. Learn, refine, or teach a skill that makes your gift-giving budget lighter weight or support a student-led altruistic project like knitting chemo caps, beanies for babies, lap blankets or other creative applications.

For more info, needle Adult Program Coordinator Serena Olsen at solsen@lighthouse-sf.org or 415-694-7316.

6:00 pm: Accessing the Arts: A Panel Discussion on Sensory Diversity and Performance


Apr 4

Accessing the Arts: A Panel Discussion on Sensory Diversity and Performance
Thursday, April 4, 6-8 p.m. FREE

The performing and other arts have long been thought of as out of reach for many in the disability community. The ADA has made physical access greater, and technologies like audio description or ASL interpretation, where available, have raised the bar on participation. How do we expand the scope of what access to the arts and full participation really mean and how do we make it a reality? Lighthouse for the Blind, Gravity Access Services, and Dancers' Group will be hosting a panel discussion and information session on access accommodation practices for live performance.

Panelists include: Author and Access Consultant Georgina Kleege; Gravity Artistic Director Jess Curtis; Blind dancer and access consultant Tiffany Taylor; Choreographer and Artistic Director of the Bay Area Deaf Dance Festival, Antoine Hunter; Assistant Director of the Deaf Dance Festival (and dancer) Zahna Simon; and LightHouse Adult Program Coordinator, Serena Olsen.

We invite all interested members of the disability and arts communities to be a part of this very important dialogue. Light refreshments will be available beginning at 6 p.m. and the panel discussion will start at 6:30, followed by time for Q&A. RSVP to Serena at solsen@lighthouse-sf.org or 415-694-7316.

Apr 5
Apr 6

The events for the upcoming week are read aloud on our event hotline every Friday, which can be accessed by calling 415-694-7325. For more information about visiting the Adaptations Store, head to our shop page.

The LightHouse is scent-free. Please abstain from wearing colognes, perfumes, or other scented products. Additionally, coffee must be securely lidded at all times and citrus should not be peeled on the premises. Thanks for supporting our efforts to respect chemical sensitivities!

SDS safety dataClick here for our cleaning product safety data sheets (SDS) and ingredient information.

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