Times Standard (Eureka)

Maintenanc­e shop turns to sewing medical masks

- By Leanne Italie

NEW YORK » On the coast of Maine, Eric Baldwin and his staff of two usually spend their days selling, repairing and washing sails for boats. They transform their surplus sailcloth into tote bags to bring in extra money.

But when the coronaviru­s outbreak slowed business, they turned their industrial sewing machines to a new task: making cotton masks for caregivers and others who need protection from the disease.

“We wanted to do something to give back,” Baldwin said from his North Sails workshop in the small village of South Freeport, about 20 miles north of Portland. “Doing something like this just makes you feel good.”

The 53-year-old Baldwin, who has operated his shop, known as a loft, for about 25 years, got the idea from employee Karen Haley. They went to work immediatel­y and are now shipping to recipients as far away as Arizona after word spread on social media that masks were available.

“People are out there just pleading for masks and have no supplies. Eric immediatel­y said yes,” Haley said.

Haley’s mother is a quilter. She raided her mom’s stash of cotton remnants to turn into double-ply rectangles called for by a mask pattern they found on a hospital website. Baldwin’s former wife got a Jo-Ann fabric store to provide elastic at a discount.

Although they still have orders to fill for totes and sails, a portion of each day is dedicated to masks. Baldwin’s other worker, Alan Platner, volunteere­d to sew masks at home as well.

The trio have divided labor according to skill set. Haley is on cutting.

“I do not sew, actually,” she laughed.

Baldwin chuckled, “Just the men sew here.”

Baldwin hired Haley to help run the tote side of the business nearly two years ago. Turning sailcloth into totes was a side gig he came up with during the 2008 recession to shore up his business and avoid having to lay off his tiny staff.

Now he faces uncertaint­y once again as the economic toll of the health crisis plays out.

“I have every intention of keeping both of these people employed, and we’re not at a point yet where that’s even close to being in jeopardy, but I do think in terms of the tote business. I would be shocked if that picks up. We’re essentiall­y missing the tourist season,” Baldwin said.

 ?? ROBERT F. BUKATY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Karen Haley cuts cotton fabric for masks to be given to caregivers during the coronaviru­s outbreak, at the North Sails shop in Freeport, Maine.
ROBERT F. BUKATY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Karen Haley cuts cotton fabric for masks to be given to caregivers during the coronaviru­s outbreak, at the North Sails shop in Freeport, Maine.

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