Today she's shared some amazing musings with us.
...
Lately, I’ve been thinking about the lack of people my age who sew (awesome people in blog land aside). It struck me at sewing expo last month that #1 I was probably a good 15+ years below the average age of the other expo attendees and #2 garment sewers were clearly in the minority.
The fact is, I believe a basic knowledge of sewing and garment construction are important life skills, admittedly these are skills I am only beginning to acquire.
I think the lack of young adults that are able to sew on a button, hem a skirt, or even construct a garment has contributed to our disposable clothing culture and all the problems associated with that in terms of the environment, human rights, personal finances, and even personal sense of style/self image.
Besides all those heavy reasons, garment sewing is fun. It’s extremely liberating to know I can choose a fabric and pattern and put them together to create something that nobody else has, and was exactly what I wanted.
We could probably spend a lot of time analyzing the various reasons for the decline of at home garment construction- home ec no longer being required in school, cheap clothing from Old Navy, lack of exposure to everyday sewing (to name a few), but that’s not a topic I’m looking to dig into today, and I have a feeling I’d be preaching to the choir anyway.
The thing that interests me, is what happens from here. What small thing can I do to get my daughters thinking about what’s involved with creating the clothes in their closets?
Of course they see me working in the sewing room, but seeing is very different from doing. I could sit my older daughter down at the machine and walk her through the basics, but she’s only 8, and I’ve only been sewing for a year. Sewing hasn’t been part of her background, and I don’t want her to get discouraged when she sits down at a machine and a dress doesn’t magically appear 2 days later. I want her to know what to expect of the process before she makes that first stitch. Even if my daughters never want to learn, I want them to understand how their clothing came to be. It’s not something I gave much thought to before I started sewing, but this is not at all an automated process. Everything you wear represents time and effort that someone spent at a cutting table, a sewing machine, or a serger. In the long term, I hope that I’m teaching my daughters to be empathetic, good global citizens, and conscious consumers. In the short term, maybe they’ll appreciate their clothes more and not leave them in a pile on the floor.
Since this has been on my mind, when my 8 year old daughter came home with a paper doll and an assignment to dress up the doll to represent my child’s heritage, I immediately saw an opportunity to start getting my point across.
“Would you like to raid my fabric scraps to use on the project?” You would have thought I was offering her tickets to One Direction, she was that excited.
THERE'S SO MUCH MORE! CLICK TO READ HOW YOU CAN INVOLVE YOUR CHILDREN IN SEWING.
When I was in high school (cough cough) years ago one of our classes was home EC. We learned to sew and because of that class I had the basics to build on and ended up knowing how to sew most anything. It's sad that things like sewing and cooking (Homemaking classes) are not offered in school like they used to be.I think our kids suffer because of our society trying to not be sexist.
ReplyDeleteYou pay a level of your every day MasterCard deals relying on the volume. The installments, as clarified above, are extremely advantageous to make as they happen consequently. check cashing san diego
ReplyDeleteهدف اولیه سئو کسب جایگاه بهتر در گوگل است ولی هدف اصلی باید افزایش مخاطب واقعی سایت باشد که منجر به افزایش فروش می شود. در اینجاست که نقش و اهمیت یک مشاور سئو نمایان می شود. https://seopars.net
ReplyDelete