mmcnealy: (Me)
Birth, marriage and death, these things we have no control over. A guru from my favorite Bollywood film, Hum Aapke Hain Kaun...!

Once a week I go to my favorite thrift store down the road. It reliably has a selection of sewing fabrics and other good things. Sometimes I walk out with nothing, but other times I make a haul.

The fabric rack is the thing I love the most about this store. I navigate the fabric rack by touch rather than sight. My fingers trained from young childhood to feel the content of the fabric. I hunt for silk, wool, linen, ignoring the slick nylons and stiff cottons. I stick my hand into the hanging folds and rub them through my fingers like money... Some have good feelings that come with them. Treasured pieces of fabric that never got made into anything. Others are just blank nothings, others I pull my hand back from the negativity that can never be washed out.

Cotton, nylon, fleece, polyester... Then the back of my hand scrapes against the next hanging fold.. Hair Canvas!? My hand jumps to the next hanger and I pull it out. Two yards of hair canvas for a dollar fifty? It flies into the cart, and then I spy the old cardboard cutting mat, and it hits me, its the remnants of a woman's sewing room.

Someone, probably in a little brick ranch house or a split rambler, within a few miles of where I live, had been cleaning out their mother's sewing room because she's either passed on or is in a home... I imagine her children the same age as my parents, middle 50's, with the grandkids, going through her stuff, putting it in boxes. "Does anyone want this?" they ask hopefully... "Mom, nobody in the family sews, just put it in the box for the thrift store" says the kids, exasperated at the pile of mementos that their elders can't get rid of... so off it goes for a taxable donation.

I find nothing else interesting on the fabric rack, so I look in the thread and notions bins. There's a bag of wooden thread bobbins, and old buttons and two wooden sock darners. And I then know, she's gone. Either to a grave or to the mental prison of dementia.

So the hair canvas, the old cutting board and the bag of old notions came home with me. I wondered if the Kenmore sewing machine in the machine section was her's too... or the little music box that played the hauntingly happy melody. No, I don't think the music box was her's, too depressing.. I think she liked sunshine, happiness and productivity.

I'll be back at the thrift store on Monday, my regular day. I have a feeling that there's more goodies from her sewing room yet to be put out, and I think she'd want them to go to a loving home like mine. :)
mmcnealy: (Default)
In case you were wondering what was keeping me busy lately, here are two pictures.
Erich's waffenrock, almost finished!

This garment has more hours of hand sewing than any garment I've ever made so far. Every black/red piecing seam in the body and sleeves is invisibly quilted from the back side to stabilize the fabric. They body seams are handsewn to make sure that the lines matched up within a few threads if not exactly.
There's a whole invisible support layer to help give the slashes body. The black loop sleeves are all done by hand, every last stitch. All that's left now is the handstitching to join the sleeves to the body, joining the skirt to the body, taking the lining down on the inside, eyelets on the long loop sleeves so that they can lace in, hemming the skirt... Yes, a lot more handsewing! So far its all been worth it, I certainly could not have gotten the look I was going for without it.
The progress so far...

Henry, at the sewing machine, trying to speed up the project.
Helping Mama sew
mmcnealy: (Me)
From Blather blog

I like to achieve failure rather than let common sense bestow defeat on me. Who knows, maybe I'll accomplish what others think is impossible.
mmcnealy: (Me)
A while back, [livejournal.com profile] rectangularcat, said that she couldn't find a food grade wheat bran that would ferment properly to use for an indigo vat.

Well, I've solved that problem, and nearly started a house fire all at the same time....

It may surprise you all that I do actually research other periods and places besides 16th century Germany, amazing but true!

True confession time, I'm an infovore and I like collecting information. Google Books and I are old friends, especially for interesting reads like Miss Leslie's Lady's House-book; A manual of domestic economy containing approved directions and then she goes on to list just about anything and everything you could possibly want to do in a house in 1850.

One of the things she mentions is making a brick pincushion, and she specifically mentions how it is very helpful in hand sewing long seams. Hand sewing long seams is one of the biggest strains on my hands, having something heavy that I could pin the item to and use that to hold the fabric taut would greatly improve the speed and comfort of hand sewing.

The instructions basically say:
- Take a brick, cover it with fabric
- Make a bag slightly larger than the brick, stuff it with bran until it is hard.
- Sew the bag to the brick
- Sew green baize to the bottom of the brick
- Cover the the whole thing except the bottom with a pretty fabric so it looks nice.

Sounds simple enough, right? What could possibly go wrong?

Bricks, I have plenty of those in the yard, scrap fabric, check. At the advice of my friend at the fabric store, I got some really nice heavy cotton ticking, and left it unwashed. For the green baize, she recommended using green pool table felt.

Everything went fine until I tried to stuff the bag with bran, and the bran was impossible to control. So I decided to get smart, I got the bran damp and then stuffed it in the bag. It packed down nicely then, and I finished up the bag and sewing it to the brick.

I left it to dry out a few days, and then covered it with a red linen that I had around. I wasn't able to finish sewing the cover down all the way because Henry got squirrley, so I left the last 3" for another day.

The next day, I sat down to finish sewing the cover, and I put my hand on the top, and it was *HOT*.
"Oh, its just been sitting in the sun" said I.

Then I realized that the sun hadn't been shining through that window for hours. OOOPS.
I had unknowingly started a fermentation process with the bran when I got it wet. Now it was in an enclosed space, tightly compacted, and composting. It was also producing quite a lot of heat too....

I ripped the stitching off the cover and took the bag off the brick, cut it open and stuck my finger in, man that bran was super HOT! I've heard of compost spontaneous combusting before, so I threw the bag and bran away. I'll try the pincushion again, but with dry bran this time

I guess it was a good thing that I wasn't able to finish sewing the cover all in one day. It would have been pretty, errrm, amusing to call up the insurance adjuster and say "Hi, we had a house fire, it was caused by my pincushion"

May 2017

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