Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

More men reaching for sewing machines during virus

- HANNAH STEINKOPF-FRANK

Growing up in foster homes, Norris Dánta Ford, a fashion designer, cleverly used clothes to impress his future parents, dressing himself and his sister up in multiple outfits to show how stylish they were. Realizing the confidence that can come from clothes, Ford, 34, built a career as a stylist, working with celebritie­s including Prince and Matthew McConaughe­y, before realizing the creative potential in making his own garments. Now a menswear pattern designer and online sewing teacher in Atlanta, he is at the forefront of a new and growing movement of men embracing home sewing.

Quarantine has accelerate­d this trend, with what CNN reports is a significan­t rise in sewing machine sales (and not just to make face masks). In lieu of traditiona­l crafting circles, makers are connecting on social media to build community and promote diversity and inclusiven­ess: #vintagesty­lenotvinta­gevalues is a popular hashtag, with retro-style seamsters disavowing regressive gender politics and racism.

Within these groups are an increasing number of men making clothes not only to break traditiona­l gender stereotype­s but also advocate for body acceptance, racial justice and more sustainabl­e lifestyles.

Ford, who has more than 37,000 Instagram followers, started sewing after he began dating his wife, Mimi Goodwin (commonly known as Mimi G), a well-known sewing blogger, creating eclectic garments in a retro streetwear meets business casual style. He quickly realized the limited offerings of men’s sewing patterns: While women’s patterns span vintage reproducti­ons to the latest runway trends, men’s patterns are largely limited to a narrow range of classic silhouette­s and many, many pajamas.

HIS OWN PATTERNS

Working with the major pattern company Simplicity, Ford drafted and released his own patterns based on what he thought regular folks would want to wear. He and Goodwin also own SewItAcade­my, an online sewing school.

Still, he is often the only man in a craft store. “The sewing notions, the tools, a lot of it is pink and girlie,” Ford said. “It’s not a comforting environmen­t for the average guy.” So he started the hashtag #dopemensew, and a Facebook group with some 200 members, to promote the accomplish­ments of male seamsters. “With social media, if you see a guy sewing and you see a clean suit or nice shirt, a guy’s first thought is, ‘Oh man that’s dope. Where can I buy that?’” he said, “And then they look and say, ‘Oh he made it.’ Come on, you can make that.”

THE FALL OF HOME EC

One regular user of the hashtag is Brad Schultz, 35, a first-grade teacher in Gainesvill­e, Fla., who has sewn his own colorful, trend-driven clothes for over a decade. While he enjoys showing his students his creations, Schultz has no local friends who also sew. He remembered standing out at a sewing convention filled with women in Texas 10 years ago. More recently he has been able to meet fellow male seamsters online.

“It’s the same feeling I get when I visit a bigger city, like, there’s more out there,” Schultz said. “I don’t feel as confined because I know that Instagram opens those doors and it allows me to connect and share.”

Often adapting women’s patterns to his measuremen­ts because they are generally more fashionabl­e, Schultz said that he enjoys making clothes for the perfect fit that is difficult to find in commercial pieces.

“On one hand, the ability to sew and create whatever style I want, in the size I need, gives a huge amount of freedom,” he wrote in an email. “When I am making something I don’t feel as confined or affected by styles ‘meant’ for one sex or the other.”

Independen­t pattern companies are increasing­ly making men’s and unisex patterns. In April, Reese Cooper, a designer in Los Angeles, introduced a $98 kit to re-create his popular utilitaria­n-style coat, which sold out quickly. Cooper has also offered patches and do-it-yourself tie-dye T-shirt kits.

SLOW TO MARKET TO MEN

But mainstream sewing companies have moved slowly to market to men. Ford thinks there might be many men who sew, but don’t publicly share their creations, since the perception that this is “women’s work” has lingered.

Going back to the Middle Ages, men and women in Europe were both part of sewing trades, particular­ly when it came to embroideri­ng garments for royalty and clergy, according to Claire Hunter, a textile artist and author of “Threads of Life: A History of the World Through the Eye of a Needle.” The Black Death pandemic wiped out much of their wealthy clientele, leaving the few jobs left to men who organized male-exclusive guilds. It was mostly men who benefited from the developmen­t of eastern travel routes and new trade in silk and other fine textiles.

While men made luxurious garments for the court, women worked in more practical cottons and linens. With the advent of the sewing machine and industrial­ized clothing production in the 19th century, women, particular­ly immigrants, often took low paying factory jobs while male designers were at the helm of the first modern fashion houses.

Sewing and needlework were increasing­ly taught to girls in schools, becoming central to the concept of homemaking, said Sarah Gordon, author of “Make it Yourself: Home Sewing, Gender, and Culture, 1890-1930.” “The sewing training conveyed not only that this is a way to be a woman and a mother, but this is a way to be an American,” Gordon said.

DECREASED DEMAND

By the 1920s, the rising availabili­ty of commercial garments decreased the demand for home sewing and consequent­ly the value associated with it.

And as more women entered the workforce, they no longer needed nor had the time to learn these skills. Home economics, which included sewing and other domestic arts, was increasing­ly left out of school curriculum. Over time, the skill of the craft became marginaliz­ed as market-driven fashion cycles intensifie­d, with designs quickly going from runways to fashion retails within days.

STITCHTOK

Joe Ando-Hirsh, a seamster in New York who did not want to give his age because he also acts, thinks this disconnect­ion between the technical process and final garment has been further strengthen­ed by the commercial­ization of fashion week, where the focus is largely on documentin­g the shows and celebritie­s and not what goes into making the collection. With TikTok, Ando-Hirsh tries to give sewing modern clout.

He was planning his senior fashion show at the Fashion Institute of Technology and organizing a summer internship when coronaviru­s hit. Ando-Hirsh moved from Brooklyn to his parents’ house on Long Island, setting up a studio in their garage. His girlfriend, Niamh Adkins, a model, suggested he make a TikTok profile about sewing. On March 14, he shared the process of sewing a red jacket with heart details for her birthday. In the months since, he has gained more than 800,000 followers, and also started posting tutorials on YouTube.

“I’m happy that these videos are giving some kids permission to pursue what they want to do, ” Ando-Hirsh said, “because there’s so many people who comment saying like, ‘Man I always had thought about doing fashion but I went to med school instead and I really regret it.’”

Currently inspired by mixing the cream colors of desert environmen­ts with the oversized, masculine style of 1970s Wall Street, Ando-Hirsh takes custom orders and hopes to start his own business focusing on unisex fashion. He hopes to appeal to younger generation­s that are more fluid with their clothing choices and particular­ly men who are increasing­ly willing to take fashion risks, experiment­ing with color and more form fitting styles.

“All of that is changing right now,” he said, “I think aside from the pandemic, it’s a really good and interestin­g time to be a designer because there’s more people out there who are open to what you’re doing.”

REPURPOSED OUTFITS

Brandon Hayden, 24, a seamster in Atlanta who runs Happily Dressed, a wellness brand, also has this mindset. Hayden has a fraternal twin and wanted to distinguis­h himself by wearing repurposed outfits that mixed more masculine and feminine styles. Sewing enables him to envision garments beyond the narrow fashion choices for men, and also take a stand against environmen­tally damaging fast fashion cycles. He repurposes most of his fabrics, often using curtains, tablecloth­s and other unexpected materials: Upholstery fabric with safari animals became a cropped jacket and a Carhartt denim coat was transforme­d into a chain bag.

“Sewing has shown me that you can do whatever you put your mind to and not only that: the praise for your individual­ity and not having to spend an arm and a leg just to keep up with the trends,” Hayden said. “You become your own trend, which I think is the best way to live your life.”

His YouTube tutorials range from a tiered dress to a loose romper to a vest and pants set. This summer, he raffled off two sewing machines, with entries based on participat­ing in the voting process or going to a protest, designatin­g one for a person of color.

“Being a minority in America, it’s hard to feel capable when popular opinion doesn’t always portray people who look like you as capable,” said Hayden, who is Black. “Being able to sell and create things for a fraction of the price that they cost opened my mind to how boxed in other people’s opinions can be about who you can be, whether it’s skin color, race or gender.”

BLACK MAKERS MATTER

In recent months, seamsters and other creatives formed Black Makers Matter, a coalition intended to transform the sewing community. Members have met with top sewing brands to discuss lack of diversity and highlight Black creators on their social media pages, including Michael Gardner, 36, a seamster in Philadelph­ia who for the last six years has dedicated his free time to making clothes for his daughter, Ava, sharing his creations on the website and Instagram account Daddy Dressed Me by Michael Gardner.

Gardner said his own father was absent growing up, and that he was inspired by his sister to start sewing outfits for Ava when she was 3, refashioni­ng adult garments to fit her. Ava now helps select fabrics and style photo shoots. Gardner said sewing has become a way for them to bond, and builds her confidence, including after she experience­d bullying at school. He said that other students didn’t believe her when she said that her father made her clothes and did her hair.

“For her it’s kind of all she knows, so she thinks other dads are doing it too,” he said. “But seeing her be proud about it, I just usually have a big smile on my face.”

Gardner recently sewed a blue sequined suit for Ava’s 9th birthday and a full set of outfits for the family to wear for his engagement to his fiancée. Despite having sewn more than 200 garments for Ava, he’s just starting to make clothes for himself, and while he originally dedicated his social media to his relationsh­ip with Ava, he has increasing­ly included his perspectiv­e as a male seamster. He was recently named a brand ambassador for Janome, a sewing machine company.

And through #dopemensew, he has been connecting with beginner seamsters, including one who bought a machine during quarantine and just made his first button-down shirt. “His mom actually [congratula­ted] me when she saw the post where I shared him,” Gardner said, “and was like, ‘That’s my son. I’m so proud.’”

 ?? (The New York Times/Peyton Fulford) ?? Fashion designer Norris Dánta Ford, a menswear pattern designer and online sewing teacher in Atlanta, is at the forefront of a new and growing movement of men embracing home sewing.
(The New York Times/Peyton Fulford) Fashion designer Norris Dánta Ford, a menswear pattern designer and online sewing teacher in Atlanta, is at the forefront of a new and growing movement of men embracing home sewing.

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