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When friends from Europe or South America visit me, they always comment
on how inexpensive clothing is here compared to back home. Levi jeans
that cost us $30, for example, cost around $100 in Paris. Well, if clothing
is that cheap here in the United States, why would people sew, especially
if they are busier than ever?
Here’s one answer: We have moved away from sewing the necessities of
life and have started to sew life’s little luxuries.
WHY PEOPLE SEW THESE DAYS
Luxury is a hand-embroidered tablecloth that took Grandma months to
cross-stitch.
Luxury is the fine hand-sewn buttonhole of a designer
dress. Luxury is the monogram on the bath towel or the shirt cuff.
It used to be if you wanted luxury you had two choices: develop the
skill to produce the luxury yourself or pay someone big bucks to do
it for you.
How about you? Do you have the money to buy these luxuries
or are you saving for your child’s college tuition? Do you have the
skill to make your own lace or to hand-sew your buttonholes? And if
you have the skill, do you have the time to do these things?
Sewing machines to the rescue! A modern sewing machine can put a lot
of luxury into your life very quickly. You can buy a set of rather ordinary
napkins and automatically and exquisitely monogram them in a few hours
with a sewing machine’s embroidery feature. Buy a set of bath towels
or a silk blouse and monogram them. Buy a linen suit and embroider your
own design on the pocket.
Suddenly the utilitarian sewing machine that made a school uniform,
mended a torn blue jean, and made a slipcover for the bedroom chair
is now more than ever a versatile tool in the hands of a fabric artist.
As the chart below shows, the world of sewing is changing fast. What
will the next trend be? Will quilting continue to be the rage? Will
sewing for the home increase as we cocoon? Will a new fabric like Polar
fleece change the sewing scene?
Before I discuss choosing and buying a sewing machine, ask yourself
which of the following kinds of sewing you do or would like to do. The
answers may save you from making a bad choice and wasting a lot of money.
Sewing to save money
Although their number is dwindling, many people still sew to save money,
especially if they are sewing upscale clothing. For example, you probably
wouldn’t save money sewing your own sweat suit because the pattern,
fabric, and time would cost you more than buying a good one on sale
in any department store. But if you wanted a designer evening dress
or a wedding dress, you could probably save a lot of money by making
it yourself. You can also save on children’s clothing because you need
little fabric, and you can build in “growth” hems that allow the child
to wear the garment longer.
Designing a unique look
My Aunt Jane makes her own clothes because she likes to have control
over how she looks. She chooses the fabric, notions, and styles that
please her, and she does not limit herself to the choices she finds
in department stores. Constructing fine garments from scratch or significantly
modifying a pattern requires accomplished sewing and tailoring skills
and lots of practice and time. But you’ll never find yourself wearing
the same dress as the hostess!
Sewing special-fit clothing
Mr. and Ms. Perfect America are the models you see in the advertisement
section of the Sunday paper or in the windows of your favorite department
stores: The men all have broad shoulders and 30-in. waists, and the
women all have perfect figures. Let’s face it (and sour grapes be damned):
These models are chosen for those ads because they represent what’s
“average.” Well, there are many of us out there with one shoulder higher
than the other who know that we don’t fit that mold. And that is why
we make our own clothes.
Mending
It used to be that people saved money by mending their clothes. When
I was in grade school, my grandmother taught me how to reverse my worn
and yellowed school-shirt collars to extend the life of the shirt. Nowadays,
I don’t mend shirts, jeans, or sweats to save money; I mend them because
I love them and don’t want to throw them out.
Embellishing
More and more people are turning to sewing to embellish and personalize
items they construct as well as items they purchase. What used to take
Grandma hours of handwork to accomplish can now be done in a flash with
the new household computerized sewing and embroidery machines.
Sewing for the home
Sewing well-made drapes and slipcovers is a skill that often requires
industrial sewing equipment, special sewing notions (twill tape, rivets,
hooks, and rods), and lots of cutting and ironing space. Nonetheless,
today homeowners are venturing beyond place mats and napkins to tackle
these tricky items as well. There are plenty of books on the market
to show you how to make swags, valances, poofs, and Roman shades. And
fabric stores have growing departments for home- decor notions.
Crafting
I once worked with a secretary who loved to make rabbit dolls. She
spent countless hours creating heirloom outfits for these stuffed creatures,
and if you were lucky enough to be in her office at the right time you
could buy one of these bunnies for a song and take it home. Other sewers
have taken to sewing family crests, seasonal banners to hang from the
front porch, wall hangings to hold jewelry, and myriad other items.
Sewing for relaxation
After a difficult day at home or the office, it’s nice to lose yourself
in a hobby that produces concrete, tangible results. As one woman once
told me, “I clean the house all day, but there isn’t much to show for
it. The family just expects it to be clean, and it always is. But when
I sew, I produce something that I can hold on to, that the family is
quick to compliment, and that gives me lasting satisfaction. That is
why I like to sew.”
Some people sew just to relax. They don’t quite care what they make,
or even if they finish anything, as long as they are sewing. While this
may seem pointless to some, these sewers may have discovered an important
key to a happy life: Studies have shown that sewing reduces stress.
Quilting
The popularity of quilting has fueled American sewing-machine sales
for quite a few years, and now Europeans are catching the quilting bug
as well. I’m lucky to be invited to teach a course in international
business at a public university in France every year so I get to keep
one eye on the sewing world in Europe. Imagine how astonished I was
last year to discover that Le Patchwork has taken France by storm; every
French city has a patchwork store and a patchwork club. It’s trés a
la mode.
Sewing gifts
Calico tops for jam jars, gift bags for bottles of vintage wine, purses,
Polar fleece moccasins and gloves, hats, tablecloths, napkins, and ties
are all the rage as people turn to personalizing ho-hum gifts. And things
are getting pretty personal, too: It seems like the pattern companies
can’t keep up with the demand from people wanting to sew and give boxer
shorts.
Sewing as a business
Micro - sewing studios are springing up all over the country. These
aren’t businesses that hem pants and skirts and take in seams; they’re
studios that create, sew, and sell small quantities of unique clothing
items. Shoppers are screaming for something different than what is hanging
on the racks of every mall in America. The original results of these
studios—often sewn on ordinary household machines—are sold at upscale
boutiques, art fairs, and church bazaars.
YOUR SEWING TEMPERAMENT
No matter the category, the kinds of sewing you do and do well have
a lot to do with your sewing temperament. For example, do you have the
patience and skill it takes to do tailoring? Can you stand the repetitive
work required by quilting?
Have you ever thought about your sewing temperament? Over the years,
I have informally collected observations of my sewing friends, and I
find that they fall into several categories. These descriptions are
more astrology than science, but you may find that something in them
rings true for you. These portraits are intended to get you thinking
about your own preferences.
The perfectionist
You are a person who revels in getting things just right and is ready
to spend the time it takes to do just that. You love and strive for
perfection in your sewing. You like to sew finely tailored and designer
clothing, shirts, blouses, and elaborately pieced quilts that all require
attention to detail and fine execution.
Your sewing room is a model of efficiency. You buy nothing but the
best thread and fabric. You carefully plan your projects and take your
time finishing them. When you make a mistake, no matter how small, you
undo, rip out, and start again. You are a “foot” person because you
understand that precision sewing depends on using the right presser
foot. You are skeptical of sergers because they remind you of mass-produced
clothing. You will probably never sew the alphabet on your machine.
You hand-sew your buttonholes.
You are a fanatic about changing your needle and oiling your machine.
Your sewing machine is a high-quality, mechanical, European model with
few bells and whistles. You are a good candidate for a commercial machine,
which offers speed and many precision feet. You demand perfect straight
stitching and consider other stitches concessions to technique.
Like a skilled carpenter, you measure twice and cut once.
Your sewing idol is David Page Coffin.
The quickster
You are emotional, with very little patience and a quick rotary cutter.
You always buy much more yardage than you should need because you always
seem to need it all. You cut twice and measure once, even though a lot
of the time you measure accurately. But since you can’t believe you
got it right, you cut a second piece just in case.
You have a certain amount of creativity, but you have a hard time managing
the relationship between creativity and skill. You have started many
projects, but for one reason or another they always wind up as something
other than what they started out to be. Some of your projects have been
sitting around for a long time, and you are beginning to cannibalize
them to use as those little cutout circles for the tops of your homemade
jams and jellies.
Your sewing machine must have variable speed control since your impatience
can cause you speedy but poor-quality sewing.
You have limited time so you depend on shortcuts and tricks to make
what you want. Your best friends are the rotary cutter and the glue
stick. You make unlined jackets, use iron-on interfacing, and like to
make sarongs because they require only one pattern piece. You are in
love with your serger and use it almost to the exclusion of your sewing
machine. However, you turn to the latter when you have to do automatically
repeated buttonholes—although deep down you swear you can get away with
using Velcro instead of buttons.
You have a high-end sewing machine with all the bells and whistles
just in case. Each stitch has its own button. You have no time for embroidery,
and your quilts are limited to wall decorations or paper pattern piecing.
Your sewing space, if you can find it, is limited and probably located
in your kitchen.
Your sewing idol is Martha Stewart.
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Understanding Your Preferences—My Bambi Story
When I was seven, my brother and I begged my mother to buy us the then-wildly
popular paint-by-number sets. I’ll never forget the trip to the local
hobby shop where, much to my displeasure, my brother selected and received
a huge kit consisting of large Bambi-in-the woods scenes, 50 colors,
and single-hair brushes for the fine detail work Bambi’s eyelashes demanded.
I, on the other hand, was limited to much smaller and simpler pictures
that required seven or eight colors and two big brushes—not a Bambiesque
nuance in sight!
My mother knew me then, as she knows me now, when she said, “You know
how you are with these things. You will get them home and finish them
in an hour looking to go on to your next project. I’m not going to spend
that kind of money on something you won’t finish.”
Well, she was wrong. Very wrong! I finished those three little pictures
of snow-covered wooden bridges in Vermont in 45 minutes, not an hour,
and I didn’t have any trouble staying within the lines because I completely
ignored them. When I was done, my little paint-by-number abstract expressionist
works pleased me tremendously, but they only confirmed my mother’s assessment
of her child’s temperament. As she tried to find those little covered
bridges hiding in my brilliant paint strokes, she said, “I just don’t
understand why you won’t make them look like the pictures on the box.”
Of course, my brother’s Bambi master piece took three years to complete,
and for that fact alone it deserved the beautiful frame my mother bought.
It looked exactly like the picture on the box. (I was promised a similar
frame “when you can settle down and follow the instructions.”)
That was a long time ago, and my mother is still waiting for me to
settle down. But I understand the difference in the temperament between
people like my brother and me.
Now don’t misunderstand me. I can paint giant Bambi pictures just like
the ones on the box, but it bores me to do so. For work and pleasure,
I must and do perform tasks that require precision and care, but I much
more prefer the creative thinking and experimentation that precedes
those events. (Recently, I showed some experimental slashed- fabric
swatches to a friend who liked them but had to ask, “What are you going
to do with them?” For me, making the swatches was an end in itself.
For her, they were just the beginning of a project.)
Understanding your preferences is crucial to achieving success. It
helps you to understand and tolerate your limitations, to schedule your
time, to reward yourself, and to pick projects and tools that will complement
your sewing temperament.
--
The creative soul
You are a free spirit with lots of ideas—many, many more than you can
sew. You have a large bulletin board covered with clippings. You keep
everything because you never know when you’ll need it. You are a quilter
for sure because the quilt is your canvas; fabric and thread are your
media. Since you are incapable of categorizing anything because everything
belongs in more than one category, your sewing space appears to be dysfunctional
to everyone but you.
Commercial patterns leave you cold, but the Bonfit system that allows
you to “design your own” appeals to you. You collect fabric because
you love to experiment. In fact, you are currently working on six projects
just to see what will happen. You enjoy giving these experiments to
others even if they are half finished because you are bored with them.
You are definitely a top-of-the- line bells and whistles person. You
have every sewing tool imaginable and are a multiple-machine person.
You need to jump from project to project, machine to machine, just to
keep stimulated. You love all kinds of machines from treadle types to
high-end models, and you’ve got some of your best fabrics folded in
piles on top of them. You fall in love with the embellishment possibilities
of embroidery machines, but you quickly tire of the prepackaged designs
and the hands-off nature of it all. That’s not a problem for you because
you create your own designs on your computer and sew them out on your
top-of-the-line machine.
Your sewing idol is John Giordano.
The cheap and easy-does-it
You have a lot of things on your mind, so any pattern with more than
three or four pieces generates confusion. You subscribe to many magazines
with the words “Quick and Easy” in their titles. You are not too sure
of your sewing skills, but that’s all right because you’d rather use
glue. You love to make small projects for others. You buy cheap thread.
You have been known to put staples in the hems of your dresses and curtains.
Your sewing space is orderly since you have few gadgets—they always
break because they are poor quality—and you keep everything in a shoe
box. You are addicted to glue guns, iron-on items, pinking shears, and
felt.
Your sewing machine was made 20 years ago and is of questionable value.
You can’t remember when you cleaned it last. When your machine stops
functioning you will go to a discount store and replace it with the
least expensive model you can find.
You are definitely a candidate for sewing in groups where the coffee
and conversation keep you working on your project.
Your sewing idol is.. .What sewing idol?
Did you see yourself in my sewers’ horoscope? I’ve had fun with these
fortune-cookie-like stereotypes, but there is a gram of truth in every
fortune cookie. I see bits of myself in all of them, but the creative
soul fits me the best. Knowing this, I pick my projects carefully and
aim for success and satisfaction instead of frustration and disappointment.
It’s important to remember that even if you have a tendency to be like
one of the stereotypes I’ve created, you don’t have to be boxed in by
it, The thoughtful perfectionist can learn to get a bit wild with a
sewing project, and the quickster can complete a big, complicated project
if she tackles it in small parts.
When you think about buying a sewing machine, you should take your
sewing temperament into account: Do you want a machine that matches
your temperament or one that challenges it? Do you want a machine that
makes you better at what you already do or one that allows you to add
something new to your menu of sewing skills?
And finally, does your budget match your sewing temperament? For example,
if you are a perfectionist but only have $300 to spend, what kind of
machine should you buy?
What you want to sew should be compatible with what kind of sewer you
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