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My Off The Grid Sewing Machine, Custom Masks and My Market Day Socks

September 13, 2020 by HatJunkie

Leslie modelling my straw braid hat.

Well, I have done it once again. Despite every best intention to write things down as they come to me, I have piled up the many things I want to tell you about and created a lot of clutter in my mind. And now I will have to pass my cluttered mind along to you. I have got to begin somewhere and it won’t be with the above photo. I just thought Leslie’s adorableness might draw you in. I’ll tell you about this talented girl later.

My Market Day Socks

I’ll begin at the literal bottom with My Pink Market Day Socks. Back in March when the reality of this pandemic was settling in I needed to knit something small and mostly mindless. I knit, I ripped, I knit, I ripped until finally I settled on a mostly stockinette sock with this beautiful little lace chain. Now, I know that there are 5 million sock patterns out there in the world and so many of them are free, but I think this little lace chain is totally worth the price of admission. You really have to knit it to understand what I mean. It’s so simple and cute and addictive and you’ll want to put it everywhere. It’s knit with Lichen and Lace 80/20 sock from The Mariner’s Daughter in Lunenburg. If you make an online purchase from them I will send you the knitting pattern for free. Just send me a copy of the invoice.

I’m currently designing this sweater and that same lace chain is climbing up the fronts. I hope to write this pattern up one day, but it takes months to write a pattern up properly. I love doing it, but finding the time is challenging.

Cone Flower Mask

Moving along to the opposite side of the body, I have been sewing a lot of masks these days. The last I left you I had made a batch and then sold them, but as I repeat a task I make new discoveries and I realized that with a few measurements I can easily customize the masks to fit your faces. The words: small, medium, and large can mean so many different things, so now, instead, you give me your measurements and I’ll do the figuring out for you. If you read the description of each mask you will see how to measure. I have actually been having a lot of fun sewing these masks because I am making them on my new, state of the art, off the grid sewing machine.

Behold my beautiful Singer treadle machine, circa 1910. This machine belonged to my great grandmother, Anna, who I was named after. Legend has it that she used it to sew men’s tuxedos. I’m also wondering if she sewed masks on it during the Spanish flu.

This beautiful machine came into my life many years ago courtesy of my Auntie Isa. I always remembered it in my Grandmother’s apartment in Montreal. She had it electrified. When I got it, it still had the motor on it, but about six years ago Tony had it restored to a treadle for me. At that time I tried to get the coordination, but I couldn’t figure it out. With orders in front of me I put it aside and just treated it as an object of beauty.

I’m sure you can all relate when I say that this pandemic has taken away the order of time. In the absence of structure I found myself letting one day flow into the next without any sense of accomplishment. I decided that I would demarcate the weekdays from the weekends by giving myself permission to garden, sew clothing, or take on other projects that I had filed under “no time for that”. So, a few Sundays ago I stared at my great grandmother’s machine, took a deep breath and took the plunge. A little oil, and a few Youtube videos later and I was treadling away like a pro.

Can I tell you a secret? It’s so much fun! It’s not hard and it’s as fast as my electric machines. The whole experience has really made me question this whole new fangled electricity thing. Alright, I will admit that electricity does have a place when it comes to things like light and heat and washing machines, but when it comes to can openers and sewing machines, it’s dumb. I have been sewing for 26 years and I have only just discovered this. The energy required to make my sewing machine work is the equivalent to gently rocking back and forth on a rocking chair. I think the treadle just needs a good marketing campaign to get it back into common use…Off the grid, energy efficient, green, burn calories while sewing…….

After the success of treadling on my Singer, I decided to tackle my antique Wilcox and Gibbs Chain Stitch Machine. This one takes a bit more foot power, but it sews beautifully. These old machines were built to last and built to be repaired. No planned obsolescence here. Can you tell I have a bit of a thing for old sewing machines?

That’s why I couldn’t say, no when my friend asked me if I wanted her aunt’s sewing machine from 1959. I tried to say, no. I swear I did, but I see these beauties like orphans. So, I took this one in and it got a bit crowded in my studio. I wanted to move it into the house, but it was causing a bit of marital strife. Tony started asking me questions like, will you take another sewing machine if someone asks? Like, what does that have to do with the price of milk? O.K. fine, I might have a problem.

So, this brings us full circle back to beautiful Leslie at the top of the page. Just when things were beginning to come to a head in the “just one more sewing machine” marital conversation, my friend Allyson came for a visit with her daughter, Leslie. Leslie has, completely on her own, taken up the hobby of sewing historical costumes. I mean Victorian dresses. She is teaching herself and doing an incredible job….all by hand. Not because of any allegiance to hand sewing, but because she doesn’t have a sewing machine. Are you thinking what I thought? You don’t have a sewing machine?…Would you like a sewing machine? She was so excited and I was so happy to pass along that beauty to a young girl with a passion for historical sewing. And we all lived happily ever after….

Wait, I am almost done organizing the clutter in my brain.

Denim Cap and Happy dots mask.

I would like to thank you all so much for my most successful Imaginary Craft Show (from my last post). I sold every single cap and more. I edited the caps section in my shop, so that you can now preorder one in your size. Click on the above photo to get there.

Scrappy Charlotte in denim

Making a batch of one type of hat and then posting them at once has been a very good way for me to keep myself motivated. I really can somehow convince myself that I have a deadline. Imaginary or not, it works. Currently, I am working on a batch of Charlotte hats. It’s slow going and happens in between filling orders, but as soon as I have enough to bring to the (imaginary) market I will let you know.

Hope you are all keeping well. Until next time..Happy Hatting.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Anna shoub, antique sewing machine, denim caps, hat shop, ladies hats, lunenburg, milliner, nova scotia, Nova Scotia craft, the hat junkie, treadle sewing machine, Wilcox and Gibbs sewing machine

Caps and Masks and a Make Believe Craft Show

August 10, 2020 by HatJunkie

Caps with Buttons for Holding Masks.

They are Here! They are finally here! And before I sail off into my typical long winded tangential tale of how I came to be making caps and masks I will first direct you right to the shop and then if you’d like to listen to me ramble you can meet me here afterwards.

Here are the caps. These caps are already made and ready to ship and have sizes. Please pay attention to the size before ordering. Most women will fit the medium size. If your head is very small then the small size is for you and if your head is quite large then choose large. Slightly smaller or larger than average should choose Medium. If you don’t end up with the cap of your dreams, I promise there will be more.

Click the photo to go to caps.

Upcycled Denim Cap with Buttons for a mask

Click the mask photo to head to masks. (more sizes and fabrics coming soon.)

Happy Flowers Face Mask

OK, Now for the rambling part…..I have never thought of myself as a cap girl. I have pretty much been waging a war against baseball caps for the past 27 years that I have been working as a milliner. Convincing women to throw away the baseball cap and don a pretty cloche instead has become something of a mission for me. And I probably would have left that opinion of mine unchallenged had it not been for a certain Pandemic.

Every solution begins with a problem……I would get to the post office, boxes in hand and then clumsily try to put my mask on behind my ears. My ears would project out from my head at a 90 degree angle, and then when my glasses would be completely steamed up they would fall off my face. I really started dreading my trips to the post office.

Then I saw an Instagram post from another milliner who was putting buttons on caps to hold the mask…no ears necessary. Seems this idea had been circulating in the millinery world for some time. I’m afraid I can’t credit the genius behind the buttons, but if anyone knows I will be sure to give credit where credit is due.

I made this straw cap at about the same time, but I really wasn’t thinking of masks. I just wanted to see if I could come up with a cap shape that I love.

My straw braid cap.

Mission accomplished. It’s a cap, but still feminine and kinda flappery. When I realized I could sew buttons onto the side I was doubly in love. I meant to sell this hat, but it ended up in my personal collection. I will happily make more if anyone is interested.

This has been my go to hat all summer. It is so easy to put the mask onto the buttons and I am no longer afraid of the post office.

But the thing with this hat is that it’s a bit of an investment. Such is the nature of sewing a hat from a braid that is 1/4 inch wide. So, the wheels in my head went round and round until I figured out the equivalent design in fabric and because I have been very focused on keeping used textiles out of land fill I decided to use upcycled denim. I’m also making them in hand dyed cotton canvas.

Now, usually I will make one hat and then put it on my website because I get excited by new designs. But I had to do things a bit differently this time. When word of this pandemic first got out, I wondered what the summer would look like in terms of visitors to my studio. In a good year I might have 6 visits a week. This year I have had 4…all summer. Don’t cry for me, Argentina. I have been enjoying my garden and our nearby lake and am way too comfortable with being a hermit, but it has been difficult to keep myself motivated to keep making hats. Summer is usually the time when I get to sell my more artistic one of a kind hats and the best thing about selling hats is that it gives me the excuse to make more. But in the absence of live customers and a studio filled with hats I was in danger of drifting into a slump.

So, I decided to play make believe. I told myself that I had a big craft show coming up and I needed to make as many caps as possible. I must say, I did a fine job of fooling myself. I have been a busy bee. I even managed to stress myself out about being busy. Sometimes Tony would have to remind me that it was OK to go swimming because my upcoming craft show was not real. I managed to make 10 caps. Well, 11 really. My neighbour, Kelly, walked away with one of them.

The other thing I have been resisting is making masks. There have been so many people making masks and for way too little money that I couldn’t really see how it would be feasible. I also hadn’t found a mask that I truly liked. But then I came across this pattern.

3D face mask designed by Japanese Sewing Books.

It’s brilliant. It seals around the face and also provides more breathing room. No more fogging glasses and no more suffocation on every inhale. Because I really believe in the design I am happily sewing them. There are 13 in my web shop right now, but there will be more soon. I will also make a larger size and a children’s size.

I hope you enjoy these last few weeks of summer. These beautiful days have been quite the gift. We will chat again soon.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Anna shoub, caps, denim caps, facemasks, flapper caps, hatjunkie, Japanese sewing books face mask, lunenburg, Made in Nova Scotia, nova scotia, sustainable fashion, the hat junkie, zero waste fashion

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