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Do you have a closet full of clothes and nothing to wear?
Don’t make another garment until you inventory and clean out your closet.
I know that it is almost impossible to discard those beautiful garments you
have made with loving care; but if you are not going to wear them, at least
move them.
You will need six boxes to do the job properly. Label them Wash, Dry Clean,
Mend, Give Away or Sell, Store to Wear Again, and Store for Reference.
The Store-to-Wear-Again box is for those garments which you do not want to
discard but do not intend to wear anytime soon. This includes those outgrown
garments you plan to wear when you lose ten pounds. Ideally, you will hang
them in a spare closet, but who has a spare closet? Store them in an under-the-bed
box.
The Store-for-Reference box is for the garments you have made in a sewing
class that reflect your learning experiences.
Look at every garment in the closet honestly. Does it still fit? Is it in
style? Does it look worn? Is the color or fabric passé? Do you need it for
your life style? Do you plan to wear it this season? Place it in the appropriate
box or re-hang it.
Once you’ve cleaned your closet, take an inventory. Do you have a lot of unrelated
garments? Plan your new wardrobe to tie them together. Start with the item
or items that will update your wardrobe the most.
Decide which garments to make and which to buy. Sew the easy styles and buy
the difficult-to-make ones.
When you sew you don’t have to be a slave to fashion, but you do want to be
informed. Shop around—look at the ready-to-wear in the better stores. Are the
new colors and silhouettes flattering to you? If not, can you adapt them so
that you will look lovely and be fashionable?
While you are in a cleaning mood, go through the drawer, chest, closet, or
room where you store your hoard of beautiful fabrics. Some fabrics never go
out of style; others do. Unfortunately, an out-of-date fabric makes an out-of-date
outfit.
Have a garage sale or give away those lengths which you’ll never use. Be realistic—you
know some of them will never be in fashion again, and you can not make a fashionable
garment from a passé fabric; however, good-quality fabrics made of natural
fibers will eventually come back into vogue. If your tastes have changed, and
you’ve decided some of those lovely fabrics just aren’t for you, sell them.
If you can’t bear to part with your fabric collection, try to use it. Go through
it carefully at the be ginning of each season, select the pieces that can be
made into fashionable garments, make those garments before you buy any new fabric,
and don’t buy anything unless you’re going to sew it immediately. Last, but most
importantly, repeat to yourself, “I’ll never be a fabricholic again!” |