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    <title>Kimberli Gibson</title>
    <link>https://universe.byu.edu/kimberli-gibson</link>
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    <lastBuildDate>Wed, 25 Mar 2026 18:25:07 GMT</lastBuildDate>
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      <title>BYU College of Nursing partners to make wigs for children with cancer</title>
      <link>https://universe.byu.edu/campus/byu-college-of-nursing-partners-to-make-wigs-for-children-with-cancer</link>
      <description>On Saturday, March 21, the BYU College of Nursing partnered with The Magic Yarn Project to make fairytale wigs for children with cancer.</description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 25 Mar 2026 18:25:07 GMT</pubDate>
      <author>Emily Walker</author>
      <guid>https://universe.byu.edu/campus/byu-college-of-nursing-partners-to-make-wigs-for-children-with-cancer</guid>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<html lang="en">                    <head>                <meta charset="utf-8">                <meta property="op:markup_version" content="v1.0">                                    <link rel="canonical" href="https://universe.byu.edu/campus/byu-college-of-nursing-partners-to-make-wigs-for-children-with-cancer">                                <meta property="fb:article_style" content="default">            </head>                            <body>                <article>                    <header>                                                                            <h1>BYU College of Nursing partners to make wigs for children with cancer</h1>                                                                            <h3 class="op-kicker">Rachel Mecham,Kimberli Gibson,Lani Vinzant,Ashley Henrickson,nursing,byu college of nursing,magic yarn project,service,cancer</h3>                                                                            <address>    <a rel="author" href="https://universe.byu.edu/emily-walker">        Emily Walker    </a></address>                                                                            <time class="op-published" dateTime="March 25, 12:25 PM">March 25, 12:25 PM</time>                                                                            <time class="op-modified" dateTime="March 25, 12:25 PM">March 25, 12:25 PM</time>                                            </header>                    <figure class="op-interactive"> <iframe src="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-woMNDBShO0" width="560" height="315"></iframe></figure><p>On Saturday, March 21, the BYU College of Nursing partnered with The Magic Yarn Project to make fairytale wigs for children with cancer.</p><p>Colorful yarn, crochet hooks and hundreds of helping hands came together at Brigham Young University, but the result was more than a craft  it was a way to help children with cancer feel seen, supported and special.</p><p>The Magic Yarn Project began in Provo, born from a friendship formed more than two decades ago.</p><p>"It just started off as a kind gift from a friend," said Rachel Mecham, mother to Lily, the first recipient of a Magic Yarn Wig. </p><p>Rachel Mecham and Holly Christensen became friends while in nursing school at BYU. After graduating, they stayed in touch. </p><p>When Rachels daughter Lily was diagnosed with cancer at two years old, Holly decided to help.</p><p>"She wanted to do something, and she thought, 'Oh, I'll make her a cute yarn wig,'" Mecham said. </p><p>A few months later, Holly began making more wigs, and the project quickly took off. </p><p>Ashley Henrickson, Utah chapter leader for The Magic Yarn Project, explained what this work means to her.</p><p>"This project, the meaning is joy, magic, to families and children suffering from cancer," Hendrickson said. </p><p>The Magic Yarn Project has now become a global effort.</p><p>"We are global, and we do deliver everywhere," Henrickson said.</p><p>At the event on Saturday, volunteers made hundreds of wigs for children facing cancer. </p><p>Lani VinZant, Utah event coordinator for The Magic Yarn Project, said the goal for the day was to make 150 wigs, but she estimates they made closer to 200. </p><p>That total contributes to the more than 50,000 wigs The Magic Yarn Project has donated. </p><p>Kimberli Gibson, communication manager for the BYU College of Nursing, described the process. </p><p>"Once we finish them, we deliver them to The Magic Yarn Project and they give them to the organizations and to the people that need them," Gibson said.</p><p>What began as a simple gesture of love has become a global source of joy for children in need.</p><p>"Something huge like this came from just a tiny spark," Mecham said. </p><p>For volunteers and recipients, each wig is a reminder that nobody fights cancer alone. Donations can be made <a href="https://themagicyarnproject.com/" target="_blank">online</a>. </p>                                    </article>            <script src="https://brightspotcdn.byu.edu/resource/00000173-da06-d043-a7ff-dece7d790000/_resource/brightspot/analytics/search/SiteSearchAnalytics.5eb1a8a326b06970c71b3a253fbeaa64.gz.js" data-bsp-contentid="0000019d-1bb5-d0c5-adfd-dff535ec0000"></script></body>            </html>]]></content:encoded>
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