The crooked daisy
The pink sweater Mansa wears in the portrait isn't a shop-bought piece. Keitumetse — her mother, a seamstress at a textile cooperative in Maun, Botswana — started knitting it during her pregnancy. Pastel pink wool, thick knit, round neck. She ran out of yarn halfway through and put it in a drawer. Seven years later, she found yarn in the same shade at a shop in Nata — three hours by road — and finished it over three months, knitting at night after putting Mansa to bed.
She embroidered the daisies on top: white petals, yellow center, like the gazanias that burst up in the Kalahari after the first rains. When she gave it to Mansa — a Saturday in June, unwrapped, no ceremony — Mansa looked at every daisy, touched an uneven stitch on the left collar where Keitumetse had changed needles seven years earlier, and asked: "Can I sew one?"
The last daisy, bottom left, is slightly crooked. Mansa sewed it. It's her favorite.







