The Newsleaders
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Sartell – St. Stephen
    • St. Joseph
    • 2024 Elections
    • Police Blotter
    • Most Wanted
  • Opinion
    • Column
    • Editorial
    • Letter to the Editor
  • Community
    • Calendar
    • Criers
    • People
    • Public Notices
    • Sports & Activities Schedules
  • Obituaries
    • Obituary
    • Funerals/Visitations
  • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Submissions
  • Archives
    • Sartell-St. Stephen Archive
    • St. Joseph Archive
  • Advertise With Us
    • Print Advertising
    • Digital Advertising
    • Promotions
    • Pay My Invoice
  • Resource Guides
    • 2024 St. Joseph Annual Resource Guide
    • 2025 Sartell Spring Resource Guide
    • 2024 Sartell Fall Resource Guide
The Newsleaders
No Result
View All Result

CentraCare Woods Farmer Seed & Nursery Pediatric/Welch
Home Featured News

Nodo masks protect people here, there, everywhere

Dennis Dalman by Dennis Dalman
October 30, 2020
in Featured News, News, Sartell – St. Stephen
0
Nodo masks protect people here, there, everywhere

contributed photo Rosie Nodo shows one of her home-made masks from inside a plastic bag hanging on a shepherd's hook by her driveway at 609 - 2-1/2 St. S. in Sartell.

0
SHARES
1
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

by Dennis Dalman

news@thenewsleaders.com

A little kindness (in this case, a safety mask) can go a long, long way. It’s an exponential kindness, thanks to a Sartell woman who makes the masks by the thousands and gives them away.

Rosie Nodo has cut material and sewn together more than 2,000 masks since the Covid-19 pandemic began to spread in the United States last spring.

A long-time quilting enthusiast, Nodo had bundles and bundles of materials stored in every nook and cranny of her house. There were so many varieties of material for quilting in virtually every kind of color and design that Nodo had to buy very few extras for her ongoing project.

“This making of masks and giving them away is just one small way I can help in trying to get rid of this nasty virus,” Nodo said. “Some days I sew in my sewing room for nine or 10 hours, other days not so much.”

Nodo used to work for Dubow Textiles in East St. Cloud. After the virus began to creep into central Minnesota, Dubow asked Nodo if she’d like to make some masks. She made about 150 of them. A sister who lives in Buffalo and was also making masks, had given Nodo some further inspiration. And it’s been gangbusters ever since.

“I started making masks and then I just went wild with it,” she said.

At the end of her driveway, she placed a shepherd hook on which she hangs plastic bags filled with masks, free for the taking. Appreciative people sometimes leave money or thank-you notes.

One of them moved Nodo to tears. The note was from two little boys who scrawled on the note, “Thank you for the masks!” Then each of them scribbled and doodled on the note their names and self-portraits.

“I know some people can’t afford masks or just don’t know where to get them,” Nodo said. “So I’m glad I can help them out.”

As she continued her project week after week, Nodo became aware of the need for donating masks here, there and everywhere. She gave bunches of them to one of the Coborn’s grocery stores, to the House of Pizza, to a mental-health facility in Waite Park.

She also sent many in the mail – throughout Minnesota and as far away as Florida, Arizona and California where she has friends, relatives or acquaintances.

While making masks, the inner artist in Nodo is in full bloom, the way it is when she makes quilts. Some of her masks are made from wildly colorful fabrics; others are plain and more subdued. She also did lots of theme masks (Minnesota Twins, Vikings, The Wild) that were very popular. She just created a bunch of Halloween-themed masks (pumpkins, ghosts, etc.), and she is now fashioning masks with Thanksgiving and Christmas themes.

For her masks, Nodo uses three layers of material – flannel on the inside, cotton layers on the outside. She makes two pleats on each mask and includes an elastic string on the edge of the mask so that it can be tightened snugly against the chin and face by pulling on a bead attached to the string. She also sews a paper-clip device inside so the mask can fit securely on the bridge of the nose. She also makes special masks to fit smaller children’s faces.

Nodo admits, modestly, that she’s pretty good at sewing. Well, she ought to be, considering she took up sewing almost 50 years ago when she was pregnant with her first child. Her quilting hobby she began about 20 years ago.

Nodo and her husband, Ervin, a semi-retired contractor, have two daughters: Leah Their in Brooklyn Park and Amy Kahrs, who lives in California. The Nodos have one granddaughter, Madison, 13, who is Leah’s daughter. All are big fans of “Nodo Masks.”

Anyone who would like a Nodo mask can just drive up to the home’s driveway and take one from the shepherd hook. The Nodo residence is located at 609 2-1/2 St. S. in Sartell.

contributed photo
Rosie Nodo shows one of her home-made masks from inside a plastic bag hanging on a shepherd’s hook by her driveway at 609 – 2-1/2 St. S. in Sartell.
contributed photo
One of Rosie Nodo’s specialties is the “theme mask,” including ones she is making now for Thanksgiving and Christmas.
contributed photo
In her sewing room, Rosie Nodo creates one of the more than 2,000 anti-virus masks she has sewn and given to people who need them.

 

Previous Post

Lions battle buckthorn in park

Next Post

Hintgen beats Covid forces to build shed

Dennis Dalman

Dennis Dalman

Dalman was born and raised in South St. Cloud, graduated from St. Cloud Tech High School, then graduated from St. Cloud State University with a degree in English (emphasis on American and British literature) and mass communications (emphasis on print journalism). He studied in London, England for a year (1980-81) where he concentrated on British literature, political science, the history of Great Britain and wrote a book-length study of the British writer V.S. Naipaul. Dalman has been a reporter and weekly columnist for more than 30 years and worked for 16 of those years for the Alexandria Echo Press.

Next Post
Hintgen beats Covid forces to build shed

Hintgen beats Covid forces to build shed

Please login to join discussion

Rock on Trucks Autobody 2000 NIB - shared Pediatric Dentistry Pine Country Bank Quill & Disc Scherer Trucking Welch Dental Care Williams Dingmann

SJWOT Talamore 1 Talamore 2 Country Manor Country Manor - 2

Search

No Result
View All Result

Categories

Recent Posts

  • St. Augusta woman missing from Willmar area
  • Two-vehicle collision sends three to hospital
  • Tree-cutting mishap sends Eden Valley man to hospital
  • Regular school board meeting Sartell-St. Stephen public schools ISD 748
  • General notice to control or eradicate noxious weeds

City Links

Sartell
St. Joseph
St. Stephen

School District Links

Sartell-St. Stephen school district
St. Cloud school district

Chamber Links

Sartell Chamber
St. Joseph Chamber

Community

Calendar

Citizen Spotlight

Criers

People

Notices

Funerals/Visitions

Obituary

Police Blotter

Public Notices

Support Groups

About Us

Contact Us

News Tips

Submissions

Advertise With Us

Print Advertising

Digital Advertising

2024 Promotions

Local Advertising Rates

National Advertising Rates

© 2025 Newleaders

No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Sartell – St. Stephen
    • St. Joseph
    • 2024 Elections
    • Police Blotter
    • Most Wanted
  • Opinion
    • Column
    • Editorial
    • Letter to the Editor
  • Community
    • Calendar
    • Criers
    • People
    • Public Notices
    • Sports & Activities Schedules
  • Obituaries
    • Obituary
    • Funerals/Visitations
  • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Submissions
  • Archives
    • Sartell-St. Stephen Archive
    • St. Joseph Archive
  • Advertise With Us
    • Print Advertising
    • Digital Advertising
    • Promotions
    • Pay My Invoice
  • Resource Guides
    • 2024 St. Joseph Annual Resource Guide
    • 2025 Sartell Spring Resource Guide
    • 2024 Sartell Fall Resource Guide

© 2025 Newleaders