Cathy Bratter misses faces.
She paints them over and over; smiling and serene, leaning close together on the canvas. No masks, no social distance. Just faces with mouths quirking up at the corners as if they're about to tell her something.
"A picture paints a thousand words," she said. "That has never been more true to me."
Bratter, a Minnetonka artist, communicates by lip reading. Or she did, before all the lips vanished behind masks.
COVID-19 has killed more than 80,000 Americans, and masks are one of the few things that can help slow the spread. But for thousands of Minnesotans with hearing loss, the masks are a barrier to communication that leaves them isolated and misunderstood.
Bratter, who lost hearing completely as an adult, has always navigated the hearing world with confidence and humor. Nothing prepared her for life as a lip reader with no reading material.
"I built a way of life for myself where I did not feel handicapped," she said. "Until now."
Until the virus came, and she found herself facing masked doctors, masked pharmacists, masked grocery store workers, masked post office clerks and masked passersby.