I have a fool-proof system for mending clothes. Before I reveal it, however, let me tell you how I got there.
I grew up in an era when girls were taught to sew, in both 4-H and home economics class. Grandma Masters loved to sew and she would make pajamas for all her grandchildren. It was not surprising that I came to love clothing construction as well. I was never as good at it as Grandma was, but I did OK. As a teenager I made all my new dresses and blouses. (Pants are harder to make and were more easily bought.) When in college, I bought a used sewing machine for $10. I used it to make my wedding dress, and when I had children I would make their play clothes.
After I returned to work I had less time to sew, and by then it had become cheaper to buy clothes than to purchase the materials to make them. However, as my girls got older, I could make a much nicer prom or wedding dress than I could afford to buy.
Unfortunately, love of sewing does not equal love of mending. When the children were small and I did not work outside the home, I had the time and inclination to keep buttons sewn on and seams stitched. As a working mother, even if I’d had the inclination, I lacked the time.
That was when I developed my fool-proof mending system. I had a large basket to collect items in need of repair. I still have that basket. If you dig through it today, you will find a blouse I started to make before I gained weight, some pillow cases whose lace trim has come loose, and a few articles of clothing dating back to the 20th century.
I do not say that I never mended anything. Quite the contrary. If it was something that was immediately needed, it would get fixed in a timely manner. Otherwise, it would be tossed into the basket where it would eventually be buried under other garments. Occasionally I would go through my mending pile. If I was lucky, the children would have outgrown some of the clothes and they could be discarded. Some things would actually get repaired, but others would just have to wait. The mending basket became like a black hole. Some things might never be seen again.
My children eventually caught on to my system. One day, my teenage son brought me a shirt with a ripped seam. It would have taken only a minute to sew, but more time and energy than that were required to set up the sewing machine and wind a bobbin with the right colored thread. I was busy and not up to the effort. “Just put it on the mending pile,” I told him.
With a stricken look on his face, he replied, “But, Mama, I really liked that shirt!”
Hey, Pat! I have the very same basket at my house! If we keep them long enough just think of the sense of discovery our grandchildren and greatgrandchildren will have years from now.
Hugs, sister Sue
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As always,another great story! I love reading them!!
Love, Maryann
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Ha ha! I don’t remember if that was me or Ethan, but I do remember the mending pile, and we all knew whatever went into it was a lost cause. I don’t remember wearing homemade play clothes — most of what I wore seemed to be hand-me-downs from my cousins. I do still remember the square-dancing outfits my mom made for herself and my father: they were light-blue and white checked, and made for skinnier people than me!
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That particular shirt was Ethan’s, but you remember correctly that you were a victim as well.
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Loved readding this thank you
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