Call & Times

Sewing is back in vogue

Pandemic has home sewing machines humming again

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When the pandemic shut down businesses in midMarch, people who ran sewing stores, sold sewing machines and did workshops were in a panic about how they would stay afloat.

“Then the mask thing happened,” says Heather *rant, e[ecutive director of the Strategic Sewing & 4uilting Summit.

“The mask thing” began in early April after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommende­d that people wear face coverings when going out in public to slow the spread of the novel coronaviru­s. They were not suggesting the hospital-grade variety which were in short supply and were needed for health-care workers) but basic cloth masks that could be sewn at home.

“People dragged machines out of their closets or went online to buy new ones,” *rant says, and stores started selling out of sewing machines, dark fabrics and elastic.

Bryan Morris, co-owner of the four Washington, DC-area Brothers Sew & Vac stores, says each of his stores was getting 10 or 20 calls a day from people looking to buy or repair sewing machines. “I was also getting calls from some medical facilities looking for people to sew masks,” he says. Even now, he says, demand hasn’t slowed down.

As the stay-at-home weeks wore on, novice and e[pert sewers alike found themselves with more time to work on projects. “People were finishing quilts they had in a drawer for years,” *rant says.

Mathew Boudreau[, who lives outside of Portland, 2re., designs fabrics and gives classes all over the country. He has started finishing projects, such as crocheting afghans, that he had never had time to get to. “It was a way not to have to think,” he says. “I didn’t want to come up with new projects. And I didn’t have to think of the pandemic for a bit.”

Singer, which sells 56 models of sewing machines ranging from $99 to $400, saw an immediate spike. “2ur business grew quickly during the pandemic, resulting in almost every model being out of stock in early April,” says Dean Brindle, chief marketing officer of SVP Worldwide, Singer’s parent company. Singer posted mask patterns, including ways to personali]e them with embroidery, upcycling ideas and sewing tutorials to its website and social media.

“We are continuing to look for opportunit­ies to engage with consumers differentl­y,” Brindle says, noting that the company has attracted younger customers and more male customers since the pandemic began, including boys who have taken up sewing to make masks. “5oughly 20 percent of our consumers have been men,” Brindle says.

At Bernina, the entry-level Bernette machine about $199) sold out in a few weeks, says Paul Ashworth, chief e[ecutive and president of Bernina of America. “Some people hauled out their 10-yearold machines and reali]ed they wanted new ones,” he says. “It created a whole snowball effect, and by the end of April, you really could not find a single sewing machine below $500 in the 8nited States,” he says. Today, there remain massive back orders for machines below $1,000. To reach new and younger sewers, he says the company started an Instagram TV channel to post tips.

As the need for masks e[ploded, sewers became rock stars.

Elisabeth Woo, a quilter from Irvine, Calif., had never sewn a face mask but quickly figured it out. “People came out of the woodwork, even people who hadn’t talked with you in ages. They said, µ

-oe Cunningham of San )rancisco, who has been quilting for 40 years, lost all of his teaching gigs and seminars for the rest of the year. Cunningham, whose quilts sell for about $9,500, does four-day retreats that can cost $1,400. After making more than 100 masks, he reali]ed he was going to have to restructur­e his business. He did a lecture and studio tour on =oom, and then he hosted his first online class. He was skeptical as to how many people would pay $35 for it, but he was thrilled that 268 people signed up for the webinar. “It’s not like I’m Elvis Presley,” he says, “but that’s a cheap workshop with me.”

He’s planning on more online work. “This pandemic could sure change my business,” he says. “This forced me to learn online teaching, and now I actually have more time to quilt.”

Meanwhile, non-sewers or novices also stepped up to the plate. Tiffany Cagle-Schrift, 39, a neurothera­pist in Winston-Salem, N.C., had mentioned to her husband that some day she might want to learn to sew, so he got her a restored 1960s Singer machine last Christmas. Her grandmothe­r, 88, a profession­al seamstress, was able to give her a few lessons after the holiday, but then she had a stroke. She’s on the mend now.) Cagle-Schrift didn’t go back to the machine until late March, when she reali]ed she needed to do something positive. “

It’s nothing new for people to turn or return) to sewing in uncertain times. “After the financial crash in 2008, a lot of people turned to sewing on )lickr to be inspired by what others were doing,” says Aneela Hoey, a British pattern maker and Instagram influencer whose business is Comfort Stitching. Now, she says, the community keeps growing as many makers share ideas on Instagram. She creates and writes books of patterns for sewing and embroidery and sells patterns for tote bags, organi]ing pouches and other functional items. “My patterns have been doing well during the pandemic; [other sewers] tag me and give a shoutout to my work,” she says.

Machine makers such as Bernina say parents are using entry-level machines to teach children to sew while stuck at home.

Latifah Saafir, 44, who has been sewing since she was 10, designs fabrics and patterns for children. “There’s not too much out there in product lines for kids, so parents are happy to find these,” says Saafir, who is co-founder of the Modern 4uilt *uild. She says stores have increased their orders of her designs, hearing from parents that they needed ways to keep kids occupied. “I have one customer who ordered three patterns directly from me so she could teach sewing to her grandkids on =oom,” she says. She herself has switched to =oom events for her lectures to quilt guilds and her classes.

Industry e[ecutives are betting people are not going to pack away their machines anytime soon. “People are not returning to life as normal for a while,” Brindle says. “We are already in month four, and a lot of people who did come back to sewing will continue.”

Like riding a bike, Woo says, “when you learn how to thread a sewing machine, you never forget it. The machine is like an old friend who is waiting for you to come back to it. I don’t know how many people will stick with it, but I think many will. It’s satisfying to have your own time and then have something tangible to show for it.

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 ?? Caroline Gutman ?? Joe Cunningham sewing masks.
Caroline Gutman Joe Cunningham sewing masks.
 ?? Photo by Tiffany Cagle-Schrift ?? March 2020 photo of Tiffany Cagle-Schrift’s restored 1960s Singer sewing machine, which was a gift from her husband last Christmas.
Photo by Tiffany Cagle-Schrift March 2020 photo of Tiffany Cagle-Schrift’s restored 1960s Singer sewing machine, which was a gift from her husband last Christmas.

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