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Sewing and patching kit: London 10/17 |
My small, portable hand-sewing kit is one thing I will never, ever travel without. In recent years I have started including a packet of patches as well. In addition to bits of varied material, I also have an assortment of one-of-a-kind patches I created using photo transfer paper and a bank of intriguing non-copyright images I have collected over the years. Fully armed and ready to stitch, I hit a very hospitable friend's house in London for a ten-day stay. She fed me wonderful food and showed me around the lesser-known neighborhoods of London, and I patched clothes for her and her family. Her glass-ceilinged dining room became my temporary sewing atelier.
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Sewing atelier |
The mending mania included one pair of ripped jeans for a son willing to embrace non-conventional repairs:
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Mended jeans |
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Close-up of mend: patched photo transfer image combined with under-mend and sashiko stitching. |
One reversible raincoat with holes in lower front (with additional patches added to balance the look):
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Back of coat with vertical patch |
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Close-up of sashiko stitching used on coat patches |
Two diaphanous cotton shawls for a pregnant daughter, incorporating ancient Chinese medical text image and ancient Arab monkey image.
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Two shawls with decorative (as opposed to functional) patches |
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Close-up: shawl patch |
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Close-up: shawl patch |
Four shirts worn and torn by my lovely hostess. I had already repaired earlier tears in some of these, so the end effect here in some cases is the result of cumulative patching.
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2 mended shirts |
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Close-up: patch using ancient Chinese medical text image and photo transfer |
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Patch using image from old Arab book and photo transfer |
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Patch using traditional Japanese sashiko stitching |
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Cumulative patching |
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Sashiko stitching for traditional Japanese Boro patching technique |
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Sashiko stitching |
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Patch using cloth photo transfer |
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Shirt with small previous sashiko patch |
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New patch using scrap of old Guatemalan cloth |
I am happy when I sew, and at this point in my life I cannot imagine traveling anywhere without a sewing kit and a supply of patches in hand. I believe the people wandering around the planet sporting one of my patches are happy also.
Use it up, wear it out, make it do or do without.