South Africans will mark World Creativity and Innovation Day on 18 April 2026 with a string of 67 Blankets for Nelson Mandela Day gatherings in Joburg, Cape Town and Gqeberha, as the blanket-making movement broadens its reach beyond its original annual focus. The events will bring knitters, crocheters and supporters together in three cities on the same day, with a further creative showcase set for White River later in the month.
The Joburg gathering will run at the Steyn City centre from 9 am to 3 pm and entry is free, with pop-up food available on site. In Cape Town, the event will take place at the Congregational Church in Claremont from 9 am to 1 pm, while Gqeberha will host a creativity picnic at the Pearson Conservatory in St George’s Park from 9:30 am to 12 pm, with entry set at one ball of wool.
67 Blankets for Nelson Mandela Day was founded by Carolyn Steyn in 2013, and over the years thousands of volunteers have knitted and crocheted blankets that have reached hospitals, shelters, schools and vulnerable communities across South Africa. The movement has grown from a simple idea into a nationwide network, and that scale is what gives this weekend’s gatherings their weight: they are not just social get-togethers, but part of a sustained effort that has kept blankets moving to people who need them.
The next chapter comes on 21 April, when White River’s Knitwits will unveil a Giant Easter Egg installation and host a creative display with artist guest speaker Felicity Bell. Annie Robinson Grealy has stepped in to head up operations, while Steyn remains closely involved at executive level, a handover that keeps the founder tied to the project even as the day-to-day work shifts.
For a movement built on volunteers, wool and steady public participation, the April events show how firmly it has outgrown a single day on the calendar. The question now is not whether people will still turn up, but how far the network can keep stretching while holding on to the spirit that made it matter in the first place.