Regarding my wardrobe and phasing in handmade garments, I have thought about what I want to do.
I consider myself fortunate that I do not have to market myself for an arts grant or crowdfunding, or position a personal brand of any sort. I don't have to come up with a catch phrase or elevator pitch.
I was reading a free publication about local food and local food producers and processors, and really wished someone would do the same with clothing. A couple of people recently have said that we've had the national and international conversation about local, ethically-sourced, biodiverse, and nourishing food but we haven't had that conversation about textiles.
Onward to the plan.
Onward to the plan.
I am going to continue to avoid merino wool and synthetic dye, to avoid synthetic fibres, to prefer organic cotton over conventional, to prefer linen over cotton, to keep silk to a minimum if any, to prefer breed-specific wool with as much longwool as I can get, to buy some secondhand textiles, to seek out natural colour (i.e. from wool from black sheep), and to prefer materials that have travelled the least distance with exceptions for hemp and indigo. This suits my taste and also addresses a number of issues that I'm interested in such as increasing biodiversity, reducing pollution and erosion, fostering local economies and local capacity for processing or production, treating animals kindly, and reducing contact with materials that may harm the body like resins in superwash or petroleum-derived substances.
Assuming all is well with the mill, I will have five pounds of local white Romney wool spun for me into yarn. I was thinking two pounds of two ply for weaving and three pounds of three ply worsted weight for knitting, but maybe I should get all two ply.
I have signed up for a basic sewing class.
In a couple of months, I plan to try using a friend's knitting machine.
I have some weld that I ought to use. It is a lovely, lovely lemon yellow dye. I redid the madder but got a rusty orange-red that displeased me. The store-bought cashmere sweater is dyed a deep indigo, not evenly but good enough for me.
I bought yarn for two sweaters, undyed local Coopworth that never left the East Coast for processing. Some is 3 ply sport weight and some is 2 ply lace weight. This commits me to knitting lace, which is a bit worrisome given how aggravated I felt about knitting lace the first and only time I did it.
I learned about Quince & Co. yarn, which is entirely domestically sourced. Their bare 3 ply sport weight yarn interests me.
True to my record of loving fibre arts tools, I now want to custom order a clamp resist for dyeing and a block printing block. We shall see if I can afford them.
I love books too. I ordered some secondhand books about sewing, making clothes with handwoven yardage, and using knitting machines. I borrowed some as well. There is a fresh heap of books by the chesterfield.
I did some people watching at church, looking at their clothes, especially the detailing. I need to do some window shopping, the new season's clothing should be out. My sense of what's in style could use some sharpening.
I need to spend more time more regularly in thrift stores and consignment stores, and look at the racks for items to wear. I've been drawn to linen things that I would not wear but I keep in a box because I like them. My wardrobe is on the meagre side, by design and also because I am hard to please, hard to fit, and not fond of dressier styles.
For fun, I bought a piece of secondhand clothing to make over. It was very cheap. It will take some time to alter, but it will be fun to do. I won't want to wear the results, we will see what happens to it.
I repaired the metal catch on my shorts with pliers and am feeling smug.
I was with a small group of people I don't know that well and they started talking about clothes shopping, specifically buying lots of clothes from cheaper retailers. I didn't challenge them on the implications to workers or the environment, I got a bad reaction once when talking up the Buy Nothing Day campaign with a stranger. Then one of them started talking about the thrill of finding clothes in thrift stores. I fostered the conversation along those lines and found some of the others were thrift store enthusiasts. So that was fun.
I repaired the metal catch on my shorts with pliers and am feeling smug.
I was with a small group of people I don't know that well and they started talking about clothes shopping, specifically buying lots of clothes from cheaper retailers. I didn't challenge them on the implications to workers or the environment, I got a bad reaction once when talking up the Buy Nothing Day campaign with a stranger. Then one of them started talking about the thrill of finding clothes in thrift stores. I fostered the conversation along those lines and found some of the others were thrift store enthusiasts. So that was fun.
As I said, I don't have to worry about putting a label on this course of action. I was talking with someone and she said that once I have made handdyed, handwoven, or handknit clothes and wear them then the goal is that people would see and ask, and I would urge them to make their own. And I just felt that, no, this is not about activism. Or, I'm not about activism. Now, possibly I am kidding myself about this. I love to enable, I will give folks way more information than they need all about how to do this. I'll give them tools and supplies. I wore my "will knit for love" button to the store and the clerk asked me to teach her to knit. I said yes. You know my personal photo on this blog is my fist holding aloft a spindle as if to say freedom through handspinning. Still, I'm am doing this to clothe myself well just like I buy organic vegetables, dry organic rice, and rosemary garlic lamb sausage so I can eat well. I hope that makes sense. The difference is that few see my supper. And I don't eat organic or local or home-cooked food all the time.
One last thing, I have listened to the first episode of the podcast Woolful and quite like it.
One last thing, I have listened to the first episode of the podcast Woolful and quite like it.
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