I've been sewing for 20 years. I started with hand quilting and in 2010 began to sew garments. Since then, I've had existential sewing crises every 18 months or so. Most of them have been fueled by projects gone wrong, but my recent interest in minimalism has introduced a new element of sturm to the drang. Or vice versa. #fancywords.
Am I sewing for the pleasure of making, or to produce ever more clothing? I mean, I realize that sewing inevitably results in stuff: muslin/toile, garment, and scraps scraps scraps. To say nothing of the environmental impact of making and transporting fabric.
Unlike quilt making, garment sewing is very much product-driven for me: a lot of the initial appeal lay in marrying pleasure to necessity: I'll sew my own clothes! But my style preferences could make it easy to overproduce---I'm more likely to emulate Eileen Fisher than Kate Spade. Simple silhouettes still require attention, but nowhere near the fuss and fiddling of gathers, floppy bows, and ruffles. Hats off to my fellow sewists who enjoy those things--I can barely get myself to do buttonholes.
So how do I temper my love of making things with my wish to live more simply? Perhaps by shifting my focus to making instead of producing:
Technical Practice. AKA extreme muslin-ing. When Peter of Male Pattern Boldness first started his blog, he sewed every day using old bed sheets and thrifted fabric, his creations ranging from cocktail dresses to men's underwear. This approach reminds me of my husband's dedication as a classical musician. He spends hours playing scales and etudes in addition to his concert repertoire, all in preparation for an ephemeral "product." I could practice on scraps in between projects to hone and stretch my skills (maybe including buttonholes).
Meditative Stitching. The Alabama Chanin method of sewing unites the zen of hand quilting with forgiveness of fitting jersey knits. For me, a heavenly combination. I took a class from Natalie Chanin in Denver recently and the high sustained me through the 8-hour drive back to Albuquerque. I feel myself drawn more and more to this kind of sewing and there are times when I'd like to jettison fitting pants, installing zippers, and matching grain lines in favor of hand-sewing bliss, Make Nine be damned. However, this statistic (via Fringe Association) makes me more determined than ever to produce some of what I need when ethical, local, and/or second-hand sourcing isn't feasible.
So it's probably more realistic to balance my focus instead of shifting it entirely. My closet purge and modules are proof that I have the luxury of taking my taking time on projects, from pattern choice to final product. And in between, I can enjoy the making.
Do you ever struggle with making vs. producing?
Showing posts with label product and process. Show all posts
Showing posts with label product and process. Show all posts
Monday, March 19, 2018
Thursday, January 18, 2018
My Year in Color
![]() |
Emily Quinton of Makelight has developed a free tool that will analyze your 2017 instagram feed and provide a graphic "report" of the predominant colors in your posts. Apparently my feed had a chronic sinus infection last year.
What is this palette reflects is *a lot* of resources (time, energy, money) spent on a project that sits abandoned in a basket. It was fun to work on in the moment, but I'm not particularly motivated to finish it (mostly because it would require at least $100 in additional materials and 15+ hours of sewing). In retrospect a coloring book or a jigsaw puzzle might have scratched the color-and-spatial-reasoning itch.
I doubt that I'll document my every project on Instagram, but I'll keep my color map in mind as I ask myself how I want to look back on 2018.
Sunday, December 31, 2017
goals
![]() |
photo: focus..damn it! |
Eating
-Just get back to normal. [Remember that a day with out Christmas cookies and bourbon-spiked eggnog does not equal starvation rations.]
Shopping
-Don't, at least until April. I have a relatively small amount of debt and there's no reason it shouldn't be paid off by the end of the first quarter.
-Exceptions: Fabric for the Jalie Eleonore pattern that's been sitting on my sewing table, and supplies (zipper and bias tape) to finish my in-progress Tamarack jacket. Which brings me to....
Creating
-Find that ever-elusive balance between product and process. I primarily wear neutrals, so maybe don't knit any more brightly-colored lace shawls.
![]() |
These only see the light of day when I open my closet. |
Instead focus on useful things, like this Tamarack:
![]() |
Quilting the back. |
Listening
-Pay attention and listen deeply. Notice when my mind wanders to my Ravelry queue or mountain of laundry or diet coke.
Onward and upward!
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)
-
My Make Nine has pretty much gone off the rails, but I still decided to make a summer "weekend" dress. This is the Given a ...
-
I first saw this fabric on @fancytigercrafts . They ran out of it pretty quickly, so I was thrilled to see it pop up at Stone Mountain ...
-
This is yet another view of Jalie 2806, this time with gathered foldover and banded hem. The material is sproing-y ITY knit from Cali...