Posted Monday, Nov.
27, 2006
The coolest new
accessories for the
style savvy may be a
pincushion and a
pair of pinking
shears. Once
relegated to little
old ladies, the
frugal-minded and
neohippie
handicrafters,
sewing your own
clothes is back in
vogue. Inspired by
the desire for a
unique look and by
reality-TV shows
like Project Runway,
in which aspiring
designers compete
for an entrée into
the established
fashion world, more
young people are
trying their hand at
this traditional
domestic art. The
Home Sewing
Association
estimates that there
are about 35 million
sewing hobbyists in
the U.S., up from
roughly 30 million
in 2000, and annual
sales of Singer
machines have
doubled, to 3
million, since 1999.
And as sewing
regains popularity,
it's also evolving.
Since many new
sewers never learned
from their moms--who
were often too busy
earning a paycheck
to spend hours
cutting out patterns
on the dining-room
table--they're
looking outside the
home for guidance.
Sewing clubs on high
school and college
campuses are
flourishing, and
there are even
summer sewing camps
and after-school
classes for kids as
young as 9. Some
older newcomers are
heading to chic
urban sewing lounges
for classes on
making handbags,
lingerie and
cocktail dresses.
Others are joining
virtual sewing
circles on the
Internet, in which
strangers exchange
tips on the best hem
styles and where to
find inexpensive
fabric. (Try
Wal-Mart for prices
starting at $6 a
yard.) New
books--such as Sew
Subversive by the
founders of Stitch
Lounge in San
Francisco and the
upcoming S.E.W.: Sew
Everything Workshop
by Diana Rupp, due
out next year--give
step-by-step
instructions for all
kinds of projects,
from making a
raincoat for your
poodle to
transforming a
pillowcase into a
sundress. And while
some women are
starting with the
basics, cutting from
patterns or
stitching a seam,
others are
reinventing the
craft by altering
their old clothing
for a custom look.
For many, sewing
their own clothes is
a backlash against
the cookie-cutter,
mass-produced
clothing available
in stores. "People
are really
frustrated with the
state of fashion
now," says Aja
Johnson, 26, who
teaches sewing at
Spark Craft Studios
in Somerville,
Mass., which opened
in January 2005.
"They're really sick
of not being able to
find clothes they
like that fit them
the way they like,"
she says. What's
more, making your
own clothes now has
a special kind of
cachet, particularly
among
image-conscious
teenagers. "When
people say, 'Where
did you get that?'
it's like, 'Oh, I
made it,' and people
think that's really
cool," says Taylor
Ostertag, 14, who
stitched a pair of
pajama bottoms in
her high school
sewing club in
Oswego, Ill., using
a light green
flannel with a
Mickey and Minnie
Mouse print.
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One of the
hottest
trends is
reconstruction
or
refashioning,
in which
parts of
different
pieces of
clothing are
sewn
together to
make a
one-of-a-kind
T shirt,
skirt or
jacket.
Leslie
Kinson, 19,
a sophomore
at Colorado
College in
Colorado
Springs,
says she cut
out a
cross-stitch
pattern from
an old apron
and combined
it with lace
doilies and
an
embroidered
pink fabric
to make a
knee-length
skirt. Maria
Azarraga,
18, who
lives in
Leesburg,
Ga., sewed
together
parts of a
panda-print
sweater she
bought on
eBay with a
second
sweater from
Goodwill and
some faux
white fur
she found at
a fabric
store to
make a
black-and-white,
hooded wool
"bomber"
jacket. When
she posted
pictures to
the Sew Hip
community on
the site
LiveJournal.com
in early
November,
she got
raves from
other
members,
including
Shay Silver,
23, from
Potsdam,
N.Y., who
wrote, "That
is a
freaking
awesome
sweater."
Other
websites
like
joann.com
reprodepot.com
and
sewingpatterns
com make
it easy to
find
supplies,
while online
sewing
groups help
people with
niche
interests
find kindred
spirits. The
blog
Wardrobe
Refashion is
dedicated to
people who
choose to
use only
pre-owned
clothing in
fashioning
new styles
and designs.
The Dark
Threads
mailing list
on sfgoth.
com caters
to people
interested
in making
their own
Goth-style
clothes.
Robert
Blaque
joined the
group when
he was
learning to
make corsets
and costumes
to wear
onstage with
his San
Francisco--
based band,
Secret
Secret.
Although
Dark Threads
is a virtual
community,
Blaque says,
"there's a
really neat
friendship
among the
listees,"
some of whom
meet up to
go to fairs
or
participate
in AIDS
walks in the
Bay Area.
Those
seeking
real-world
contact on a
more regular
basis head
for sewing
lounges like
Make
Workshop on
Manhattan's
Lower East
Side and
First
Samples in
the hip SoCo
district of
Austin,
Texas, where
sewing
machines can
be rented by
the hour and
experienced
seamstresses
are
available to
share their
expertise.
At a recent
Saturday-morning
class for
beginners at
First
Samples,
most of the
first two
hours were
spent
learning how
sewing
machines
work--how to
thread, what
kind of
thread to
buy, how to
load a
bobbin, how
to load
needles and
clean
various
parts. The
attendees
ranged in
age from 25
to 46. "Any
other class
I took in
sewing was
so dull,"
says Lauren
McFarland,
the eldest
in the
group. "This
appeals to
younger
people, and
it's not
really
something
stuffy that
gray-hairs
are doing."
With
turquoise
walls and
elegant
touches like
the vase of
pink roses
and rosemary
on the
cutting
table, First
Samples
attracts
plenty of
career women
looking to
try
something
new. Owner
Shauna
Smith, who
opened the
lounge in
2005, says
she
initially
hoped it
would be a
place where
friends and
enthusiasts
could gather
and sew
together,
much like
the "Stitch
'n' Bitch"
knitting
groups that
were popular
a few years
ago. But
teaching
classes and
renting out
workspaces
for $10 an
hour has
proved to be
a much
better
business
plan.
"People look
at sewing
differently
now," she
says. "It
doesn't
always save
you money,
but it does
empower
you."
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Wanchen
Chang,
34,
wasn't
looking
for
power
so
much
as a
skirt
that
fit.
She
enrolled
in
Smith's
beginners'
sewing
class
($120
for
nine
hours
spread
over
two
weekends)
because
she
has
such
a
hard
time
finding
clothes
for
her
petite
figure.
A
textbook
editor
by
day,
Chang
was
hooked
after
her
first
session.
Says
she:
"The
class
was
great.
We
ended
by
making
a
little
purse,
and
it
felt
great
to
walk
out
of
there
with
something
you
had
made."
That's
one
feeling
you'll
never
get
when
you're
heading
home
from
the
mall--no
matter
how
good
the
bargains
were
that
day.
With
reporting
by
With
reporting
by
Hilary
Hylton
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Austin |
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