‘It’s celebratory, it’s instructive, and it’s inspiring’
Few TV shows are as joyful as The Great British Sewing Bee. Georgia Humphreys hears from judges Patrick Grant and Esme Young, plus host Joe Lycett.
AFTER the first Covid-19 lockdown was enforced, entry-level sewing machines sold out across the country for months.
People realised just how helpful doing something crafty like sewing can be, not only to help pass the time, but also for our mental health.
A project called the Big Community Sew was even launched, by The Great British Sewing Bee’s Patrick Grant.
It encouraged thousands of people to make face masks for their friends and neighbours, and gowns and scrubs for NHS workers – and Grant got fellow Sewing Bee judge Esme Young, plus presenter Joe Lycett, involved too.
Now, as The Great British Sewing Bee returns to BBC One, we chat to Grant, Lycett and Young to find out what’s in store.
Emotional moments
This is the seventh series of the competition, which sees 12 of Britain’s best amateur sewers take on various creative challenges. Each episode has a different overall theme, and involves three tasks; the pattern challenge, a transformation challenge – where the contestants are given second-hand garments and must up-cycle them into a brand new outfit -and a final sewing challenge, which tests the contestants’ ability to create a made-to-measure outfit for a real life model.
So, how tough was it for the sewers this series?
“There were a lot of tears this year – more than normal,” muses Brummie comedian Lycett, 32. “Straight out of the gate, episode one, everyone’s crying!”
“I don’t know whether it was because we’ve been feeling so kind of lacking in fun clothing opportunities for the year, but there’s loads of fun party stuff, there’s lots of sparkle,” teases fashion designer Grant, who is director of bespoke tailors Norton & Sons of Savile Row.
As for the standard of the sewers this year, he notes: “In week one, Esme and I looked at each other and we were like, ‘Well this is going to be difficult’ because occasionally there are one or two that maybe aren’t quite as good as the others and you can see it quite early on… We set this first challenge and almost everybody absolutely nailed it.”
Ongoing success
There’s a reason so many of us like watching The Great British
Sewing Bee – it’s nice, warm TV.
“There’s a lot of telly that is based on the assumption that people want to see other people kind of put down, and we’re the opposite end of that spectrum,” suggests Grant.
Indeed, 72-year-old designer Young, who has enjoyed a sewing career spanning 50 years, admits she always feels “really sorry” for the first person to leave the competition.
“It’s awful to be that person – it’s awful to be evicted at all!” adds Grant.
Elaborating on why the show is such a hit, Bedfordshire-born Young – a teacher at London’s Central St Martin’s College – says: “I love how the sewers express their vision. They all have their own personalities, and that’s what they bring to the room.
“What we’re always looking for in students is who they are, and I think that’s something that happens on the Sewing Bee. It’s about them.”
“It’s celebratory, and it’s instructive, and it’s inspiring – and also there’s a lot of my professional life that we get to talk about,” follows Grant.
Personal life
We’ve talked about how much people have enjoyed using sewing machines during the pandemic, but what have the Sewing Bee team been getting up to at home over the last year?
“Well, I’ve made elderflower cordial,” says Young, recalling how she discovered elderflower trees while out on her daily walks.
“I tried to make some elderflower champagne, but I got terrified it would explode so I didn’t tighten the bottles enough – so it was just more elderflower cordial.”
Grant has been keeping himself sane by walking and cycling, but says he has spent most of the last year working.
At the end of March last year, he moved to Blackburn to run his factory Cookson and Clegg, which manufactures textiles.
“We’ve got big orders in for reusable gowns. Hopefully, there are some quite big changes to the way some of the NHS procurement happens. I think, certainly in our region, they are looking to try to continue to buy some product from the UK, which will help the textile and the garment sewing industry a little bit.”
The Great British Sewing Bee returns to BBC One on Wednesday, April 14