I am just about to go upstairs to “The Studio,” our combined
painting and sewing room, to work on my third version of a classic tailored shirt.
November 3, 2015 will mark the second anniversary of my return to the sewing
machine since the disastrous mess of an apron I “made” in my eighth grade home
economics class in 1963.
There was a brief return in 1992 when I was inspired to make
curtains for a new lodging. I mentioned this to an adult violin student, as we
appraised my naked windows facing the street. The following week she
lugged a 1976 all-metal Singer sewing machine along the sidewalk, and thrust it
into my arms. “I bought it, I never used it, it’s yours,” she announced.
I enrolled in a beginners’ class at G Street Fabrics in Rockville, Maryland, where I was
thrillingly able to make a tote bag and a blouse. (The bag I still use;
the blouse I wore out.) I called my experience “Re-doing 8th Grade
Home Ec.” The important core of my success was learning to go slowly and carefully. In the class, I watched hurrying students
put a heavy foot on the machine pedal, stitch madly out of control, and then
rip out seams for hours. This was something I had done at age 12, not knowing
The Secret of Slow and Careful.
So, I made some curtains, put the sewing machine away, and
did not return to it until 2013.
What brought me back? Not curtains, and definitely not
aprons. There were a number of reasons. First of all, there was the issue of fit. I am 5’3” and small-boned. I am
also rather thin and somewhat awry in my proportions. I am thin because my diet
is 90% vegetables.Then, there are two ancient pins in my left ankle, causing me to
be a little lopsided. Also, playing the violin all my life has made my left
neck-to-shoulder territory shorter and more congested with muscle than my right
side. Ready to wear clothing just doesn’t fit properly. So, that was one reason
I decided to sew.
More compelling attractions were the seductive twins of
textiles and handwork. I have always loved fabrics, rugs, quilts, costumes, woolens, the Textile Museum in Washington D.C., the lace galleries in the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, the Costume Institute at the Met in
NYC, weavers in India, silks in Japan, cotton prints of the Kuna people of
Panama, etc. And handwork---which produces an amazing alpha-and-beta-wave combo---is
Big Pharma to me. Sewing can set off those brain waves until time disappears, and
I bliss out with concentration. Years
before, I crocheted and knitted, but stopped because I couldn’t stop. It was too
calming, too pleasant, too addictive, too opposite-of-me.
But I made the big decision to start sewing with the best
reason of all: it’s a reward! A reward for what? For eating healthfully,
exercising daily, taking my vitamins, seeing the doctor and dentist at
proper intervals, growing all the vegetables we eat all year long, taking care,
taking great care, every single day. One needs a Big Reward for all
that, so I gave it to myself, and set up a sewing section in “The Studio.”
As the second anniversary of my Sewing Reward approaches,
today I celebrate being able to
concentrate on the lovely pima cotton lawn shirt, my 30th garment, counting all of
the muslins (practice garments) I painstakingly stitched and fitted. So, I am
contemplating a reward for pursuing my reward: a new “Rolls Royce” up-to-date sewing
machine to replace my trusty “Model T” Singer. I’ve almost earned it.
The sewing section! Observe (left to right) pieces of shirt #3, shirt #2 on the dress form, and the 1976 Singer |