Sewing Makes a Comeback
EXCERPTED FROM: "It's Hip to Hem: Sewing Makes a Comeback As 'Project Runway,' Retro Fad Inspire a New Generation
By ANNE MARIE CHAKER
The Wall Street Journal - November 1, 2006; Page D1
Jennifer Culpepper, a hip Washington, D.C., 33-year-old who carries an iPod nano and uses a Mac laptop, has a new gadget on her holiday wish list: a sewing machine.
Ms. Culpepper, who recently learned to make a tote bag and a blouse at a six-week beginner's sewing class, is one of the young adults who are helping the craft of sewing make a comeback. She says she has realized "how creative it is, rather than it being one of those things that old ladies do."
Amid new interest among fashion-obsessed teens, as well as Gen-Xers settling down in their first homes, fabric stores that teach sewing are seeing their classes filling up and adding waiting lists. The renewed interest is also starting to give a boost to the sewing industry, which has struggled to stay afloat over the past few decades. Manufacturers are selling more sewing machines, and pattern companies, which have rolled out products geared to a hipper, more fashion-savvy set, report that those efforts are paying off in bigger sales.
The sewing trend piggybacks on broader interest in home arts, from knitting to cooking, that has been building in recent years. It hasn't hurt that women's fashions now favor personalization -- encouraging people to sew appliques on their jeans -- and vintage looks, which inspire hipsters to reconstruct thrift-store finds. TV has thrown another wild card into the mix in the past couple of years: "Project Runway," a reality show that showcases pattern-making and sewing, as fashion designers compete to display their work in New York.
Toby Haberman, owner of Haberman Fabrics of Royal Oak, Mich., says interest in sewing picked up in recent years. But in the past year, "Project Runway" "really blew it away," she says. "Whereas years ago if you made something you didn't want anyone to know, now I hear people say, 'Yes, I made that!'" She has capitalized on the trend by launching classes for kids and teens modeled on the show.
All this is making the demographics of sewing younger and more urban than at any time since the 1950s. In high-tech San Francisco, the Stitch Lounge, an urban sewing lounge where people can rent machines by the hour, reports a big surge in interest since it opened its doors two years ago. Hope Meng, one of three co-owners, thinks computer and BlackBerry-obsessed workers are yearning for something tactile and creative.
Judy Ni, a 28-year-old from Parsippany, N.J., started out as a knitter. Since last winter, she has taken four {sewing} classes. After starting with a portable tissue holder and progressing on to zippers, she recently took private lessons to learn how to design patterns that fit her own body. She says she was tired of fashions that seemed dull, repetitive -- and expensive. "Everyone's starting to look like clones of each other," she says. "Why pay $1,000 for something that everyone else has?"
By ANNE MARIE CHAKER
The Wall Street Journal - November 1, 2006; Page D1
Jennifer Culpepper, a hip Washington, D.C., 33-year-old who carries an iPod nano and uses a Mac laptop, has a new gadget on her holiday wish list: a sewing machine.
Ms. Culpepper, who recently learned to make a tote bag and a blouse at a six-week beginner's sewing class, is one of the young adults who are helping the craft of sewing make a comeback. She says she has realized "how creative it is, rather than it being one of those things that old ladies do."
Amid new interest among fashion-obsessed teens, as well as Gen-Xers settling down in their first homes, fabric stores that teach sewing are seeing their classes filling up and adding waiting lists. The renewed interest is also starting to give a boost to the sewing industry, which has struggled to stay afloat over the past few decades. Manufacturers are selling more sewing machines, and pattern companies, which have rolled out products geared to a hipper, more fashion-savvy set, report that those efforts are paying off in bigger sales.
The sewing trend piggybacks on broader interest in home arts, from knitting to cooking, that has been building in recent years. It hasn't hurt that women's fashions now favor personalization -- encouraging people to sew appliques on their jeans -- and vintage looks, which inspire hipsters to reconstruct thrift-store finds. TV has thrown another wild card into the mix in the past couple of years: "Project Runway," a reality show that showcases pattern-making and sewing, as fashion designers compete to display their work in New York.
Toby Haberman, owner of Haberman Fabrics of Royal Oak, Mich., says interest in sewing picked up in recent years. But in the past year, "Project Runway" "really blew it away," she says. "Whereas years ago if you made something you didn't want anyone to know, now I hear people say, 'Yes, I made that!'" She has capitalized on the trend by launching classes for kids and teens modeled on the show.
All this is making the demographics of sewing younger and more urban than at any time since the 1950s. In high-tech San Francisco, the Stitch Lounge, an urban sewing lounge where people can rent machines by the hour, reports a big surge in interest since it opened its doors two years ago. Hope Meng, one of three co-owners, thinks computer and BlackBerry-obsessed workers are yearning for something tactile and creative.
Judy Ni, a 28-year-old from Parsippany, N.J., started out as a knitter. Since last winter, she has taken four {sewing} classes. After starting with a portable tissue holder and progressing on to zippers, she recently took private lessons to learn how to design patterns that fit her own body. She says she was tired of fashions that seemed dull, repetitive -- and expensive. "Everyone's starting to look like clones of each other," she says. "Why pay $1,000 for something that everyone else has?"
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