• Alternate Text
  • Loading

  • Holiday Gift Guide
  • Health Observed
  • Crossword
  • Contests
  • Newsletters
  • e-Newspaper App
  • Longboat
    • News
    • Cops Corner
    • Real Estate
    • Business
    • Neighbors
    • Opinion
  • East County
    • News
    • Real Estate
    • Business
    • Neighbors
    • Schools
    • Sports
    • Opinion
  • Sarasota
    • News
    • Cops Corner
    • Real Estate
    • Business
    • Neighbors
    • Schools
    • Sports
    • Opinion
    • Siesta Key
  • Arts + Entertainment
    • Eat + Drink
    • Arts + Culture
    • Reviews
    • Things To Do
    • Black Tie
    • Spotlight Partners
  • LWR Life
  • Galleries
  • More
    • Hurricane Season
    • Red Tide Map
    • Health Observed
    • Sand Bucket List
    • Calendar
    • Celebrations
    • Contests
    • Tributes
    • Submit a Celebration
    • Submit a Tribute
    • Public Notices
    • Classifieds
  • Longboat
    • Longboat
    • News
    • Cops Corner
    • Real Estate
    • Business
    • Neighbors
    • Opinion
  • East County
    • East County
    • News
    • Real Estate
    • Business
    • Neighbors
    • Schools
    • Sports
    • Opinion
  • Sarasota
    • Sarasota
    • News
    • Cops Corner
    • Real Estate
    • Business
    • Neighbors
    • Schools
    • Sports
    • Opinion
    • Siesta Key
  • Arts + Entertainment
    • Arts + Entertainment
    • Eat + Drink
    • Arts + Culture
    • Reviews
    • Things To Do
    • Black Tie
    • Spotlight Partners
  • LWR Life
  • Galleries
  • More
    • More
    • Hurricane Season
    • Red Tide Map
    • Health Observed
    • Sand Bucket List
    • Calendar
    • Celebrations
    • Contests
    • Tributes
    • Submit a Celebration
    • Submit a Tribute
    • Public Notices
    • Classifieds
  • Holiday Gift Guide
  • Health Observed
  • Crossword
  • Contests
  • Newsletters
  • e-Newspaper App

Sarasota woman uses grocery bags to make mats for the homeless

What once took Michele Penn 33 hours now takes eight.


  • By Kayleigh Omang
  • | 11:20 a.m. July 12, 2018
  • Sarasota
  • Neighbors
  • Share

Michele Penn had a longing to get involved with something she was passionate about. She just didn’t know what.

“I wanted the universe to put it in front of me,” Penn said. “Something I was passionate about to wake up every morning and do.”

Scrolling through Facebook a week later, Penn found what she was looking for – a video of elderly women in Ohio making mats for homeless people. The video showed tables of ladies laying out the grocery bags, cutting the bags to make the plarn (plastic yarn), crocheting them and then the finished product being given out to those who needed it.

“It touched me so much to hear the gratitude of these homeless people who were so appreciative that the ground was wet and they didn’t have to lie on the wet ground,” Penn said. “I saw that on Facebook and thought, ‘That’s it! I can learn how to do that.’”

Penn set out to learn how to make the mats from start to finish. After watching YouTube videos describing how to make the plarn and the steps to crochet with it, she began her first mat.

“I started doing it myself and was finding it’s pretty slow and I couldn’t do as many as I thought I could,” Penn said. “My first mat took me 33 hours.”

Just over a year later, Penn has completed her 33rd mat.

“33 is a big number for me — it’s my lucky number," Penn said. "I kept thinking, ‘When am I going to hit 33?' He (Jesus) did 33 miracles in the Bible.”

Now, what used to take Penn 33 hours only takes her eight. Neighbors drop their grocery bags off at her home, members of the community help her make the plarn and Penn teaches classes to get help with each of the steps.

The steps are relatively simple, so Penn has people of all ages helping her make mats, including school children and nursing home residents.

The process starts with grocery bags – about 500 bags for one mat. The bags are folded up and cut into three pieces. Those pieces are then tied together to make the plarn. That step is repeated to make a ball of plarn. Once the ball is made, it can be crocheted into a mat.

“It doesn’t matter if you can crochet, if you don’t finish it, give it to me.” Penn said. “Do what you can do, I don’t need everybody to do everything.”

Penn gives completed mats to Captain Andy Bailey at the Salvation Army. The nonprofit then distributes them to people who are usually considered chronically homeless, or those who refuse the Salvation Army’s services and prefer to stay outside due to reasons such as rules, regulations, accountability, mental illness, drug addiction or prostitution. Bailey said even though some people may refuse the Salvation Army’s services, Penn's mats opens the door for conversation about seeking help from the nonprofit in the future. The act of kindness goes a long way.

“While we are here, we have the opportunity to do good like she (Penn) does — take advantage of it,” Bailey said. “She is changing lives.”

For the homeless population, these mats are a way to stay off the ground, whether it's wet from rain or hot, dry pavement. The mats are also easy to clean off, lightweight for carrying and roll up with ease. A rolled-up mat also becomes a more cushy place to sit.

“It’s Him (Jesus) working through her to help ease the discomfort of others,” Bailey said of Penn's work.

The mats also help the environment because the mats are made of plastic bags that would otherwise be thrown away, ending up in a landfill or the ocean.

“It’s these kinds of things that really make a difference,” Bailey said. “It’s the little things.”

Penn keeps a mat in her car for when she sees a person in need.

“When I see someone who needs one, I explain that I make this,” Penn said. “They say ‘You’re giving this to me? I can have this to sleep on?’ It makes me feel really good knowing one-on-one that you’re helping them.”

To help speed up the process of making mats, Penn has started teaching classes. She goes to Goodwill, classrooms, the Boys & Girl Scouts, private residences, nursing homes and hosts classes in her own home. Recently, Penn hosted four of her friends, three of which had never seen the process before.

“(These mats) give people who are less fortunate than us a little comfort," Penn's friend Beth Fallon said. "We spend an hour each Monday (making mats) and if everyone did that, just a little time, doing anything, what a better place this world would be."

The more mats Penn makes, the more creative she gets with them. She has started visiting specific stores to get different colored bags.

“As long as I’m making them, I might as well be creative with them,” Penn said. “It makes it more fun for me, too.”

“She is doing the most good, she is a Salvation Army person whether she knows it or not,” Bailey said. “That’s what we say, that’s our motto, to do the most good with your time, money and resources. She is doing the most good.”

 

Michele Penn
Michele Penn
Michele learned to crochet in order to make the mats.
Michele learned to crochet in order to make the mats.
Bags are cut into three sections.
Bags are cut into three sections.
Michele Penn shows her friend Margo Bohaty where to cut the bags.
Michele Penn shows her friend Margo Bohaty where to cut the bags.
Michele Penn teaches classes in her home.
Michele Penn teaches classes in her home.
Michele shows how to tie the pieces of bag together.
Michele shows how to tie the pieces of bag together.
Suzanne Stacy and Lynn Clement tie the bags together to make plarn.
Suzanne Stacy and Lynn Clement tie the bags together to make plarn.
Michele Penn demonstrates the correct way to tying the bags together.
Michele Penn demonstrates the correct way to tying the bags together.
It takes 500 plastic bags to make one mat.
It takes 500 plastic bags to make one mat.
Michele teaches others in hopes that they will help her with a step in the process.
Michele teaches others in hopes that they will help her with a step in the process.
Michele Penn shows her friends a completed mat.
Michele Penn shows her friends a completed mat.
Margo Bohaty, Beth Fallon, Suzanne Stacy and Lynn Clement learn how to make the mats.
Margo Bohaty, Beth Fallon, Suzanne Stacy and Lynn Clement learn how to make the mats.
Michele Penn starts to crochet a new mat together.
Michele Penn starts to crochet a new mat together.
Once she has all the plarn, it takes about eight hours to crochet a mat.
Once she has all the plarn, it takes about eight hours to crochet a mat.
Michele Penn
Michele Penn
Michele leaves a note by her doorstep for neighbors to read when they drop off plastic bags.
Michele leaves a note by her doorstep for neighbors to read when they drop off plastic bags.
Michele's mats are given to Captain Andy Bailey, who has people who distribute them.
Michele's mats are given to Captain Andy Bailey, who has people who distribute them.
Michele smiles as she gives out a mat.
Michele smiles as she gives out a mat.
When Michele's mats are given out, they are also given a Bible.
When Michele's mats are given out, they are also given a Bible.
When Michele gives out a mat, she takes a photo of the receiver with his or her new mat. Courtesy Photo.
When Michele gives out a mat, she takes a photo of the receiver with his or her new mat. Courtesy Photo.

 

Latest News

Sarasota Police on Monday recovered a sunken, capsized boat from Hudson Bayou that had been swamped for more than three years.
  • December 6, 2025
Long-abandoned boat removed by Sarasota Police
Sarasota City Attorney Joe Polzak and City Auditor and Clerk Shayla Griggs during a meeting of the Sarasota City Commission.
  • December 5, 2025
Sarasota charter official evaluations begin this month
You'd better watch out: Tow-away zones set for Sarasota holiday parade
  • December 4, 2025
You'd better watch out: Tow-away zones set for Sarasota holiday parade
A satellite image of Hurricane Irma.
  • December 4, 2025
Hurricane season ends without Florida landfall

Sponsored Health Content

Sponsored Content

The best of Your Observer, delivered directly to your inbox

Get the latest in news, sports, schools, arts and things to do in Sarasota, Siesta Key, Longboat Key and East County.

Sign Up

Latest in Neighbors

Debi and Mike O'Leary take a look at the tree.
  • December 6, 2025
Sarasota annual tree lighting takes place at Selby Five Points
A rendering of Florida Studio Theatre's McGillicuddy Arts Plaza.
  • December 6, 2025
Florida Studio Theatre receives anonymous $1 million gift
The moon shines between a pair of "Florida Reindeer."
  • December 4, 2025
Holiday display at Selby Gardens boasts over 2 million lights
Shane Rawley poses for a photo on Dec. 2 at Shaner's Pizzeria with his three published books. From left: "A February Thaw: A Peter Cobb Adventure," "January Freeze: A Peter Cobb Adventure" and "Peter Cobb: Three Strikes You're Out."
  • December 4, 2025
Former MLB pitcher and local pizzeria owner is an author
Laura Oliff-Maxey and Barbara Braun
  • December 4, 2025
Mothers Helping Mothers strengthens its toy drive effort
Eighth grader Mikayla Ross works with teacher Joseph Conner.
  • December 4, 2025
Tutoring nonprofit helps raise students' success rates

App

Download the Your Observer app

Stay in the know with the latest local news. Any device, anytime, anywhere.

DOWNLOAD NOW

Contact

  • 1970 Main St.
  • Third Floor
  • Sarasota, FL 34236
  • Phone: 941-366-3468
  • FPN Verified

Extra, Extra!

  • Newsletters
  • App
  • Crossword
  • Contests

more

  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Classifieds
  • Advertise
  • Rack Locations
  • Jobs
  • Privacy Policy
  • Accessibility Options

sister sites

  • Business Observer
  • Jax Daily Record
  • Orange Observer
  • Accessibility Options
  • Copyright © 2025 Observer Media Group Inc., All Rights Reserved
Sign Up for Daily Headlines

A daily dose of news from Longboat Key, East County, Sarasota and Siesta Key.

Sign Up for In Case You Missed It

A Saturday dose of the week's top stories from Sarasota, Longboat Key and East County.


The Your Observer App is Here!

Get local news you can trust — now on your phone, tablet or laptop. Fast. Free. Easy to Use.
Stay informed, wherever you are.

Download Now