
Hueline Archives is a heart-centered archival practice that supports Black families and communities in preserving their histories and navigating grief. Rooted in study and reflection, Hueline is a space where people can honor loss and explore legacy through ritual and creativity. We ask: What rituals help us honor the people, places, and stories we carry? What does it mean to create space for ancestral grief to land and be held? Our work blends traditional archival methods with creative approaches to make memory work more accessible, personal, and liberatory.
Founded by Jasmine Clarke, HUEline began as an act of love and mourning—stewarding her late grandmother’s belongings and building a family archive in her honor. Today, it is a growing practice rooted in the belief that archives are not just repositories of the past, but living tools for connection, healing, reimagining, and liberation.
Jasmine is a Processing Archivist at Afro Charities, a member of the Earthseed Black Family Archive Project, and a WARC School fellow, where she continues to deepen her archival practice at the intersection of memory, grief, and creativity.