When I was a kid, sewing was one of those things they taught us in
school – but only the needle and thread version. When I was in my late
teens at university, I started watching Project Runway and decided I
wanted in on the action. I got a cut price sewing
machine, set it up on a table, and taught myself the basics – enough
that I was able to make my own Halloween costumes, but not tailor a
fancy jacket.
The books I’ve listed will help to get a total beginner or a lapsed learner back to the needle and thread and back to the sewing machine. Ever since I was a child I’ve only ever seen pictures of white sewing machinists and tailors – a problem that persists through the sale of sewing merchandise and advertising. The Huntswoman blog ran a great piece on this at the end of 2018, calling on Bernina, Singer, Brother and Janome among others, to increase the visibility of people of colour in their social media imaging. This problem also persists in book publishing on the topic, which is full of incredibly talented people, but very few representations of people of colour.
To that end, on top of the below books, it’s worth mentioning that there are a series of great bloggers of colour who dedicate their online time to sewing and pattern making for real women, featuring themselves in some incredibly photographs that are a total joy to browse through – try Mimi G for amazing patterns and That Black Chic for street style adaptations of patterns I remember as being incredibly boring in school.
http://www.vssewingmachine.com/sewing-machine-showroom-perambur/
The books I’ve listed will help to get a total beginner or a lapsed learner back to the needle and thread and back to the sewing machine. Ever since I was a child I’ve only ever seen pictures of white sewing machinists and tailors – a problem that persists through the sale of sewing merchandise and advertising. The Huntswoman blog ran a great piece on this at the end of 2018, calling on Bernina, Singer, Brother and Janome among others, to increase the visibility of people of colour in their social media imaging. This problem also persists in book publishing on the topic, which is full of incredibly talented people, but very few representations of people of colour.
To that end, on top of the below books, it’s worth mentioning that there are a series of great bloggers of colour who dedicate their online time to sewing and pattern making for real women, featuring themselves in some incredibly photographs that are a total joy to browse through – try Mimi G for amazing patterns and That Black Chic for street style adaptations of patterns I remember as being incredibly boring in school.
http://www.vssewingmachine.com/sewing-machine-showroom-perambur/
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