How have you spent the “safer-at-home,”
“shut-in,” “corona-quarantine,” or otherwise named stay-at-home season during
the period of heightened global COVID-19 health concern?
I’ve been making mask after mask after mask. So far, my personal mask-sewing endeavor has
produced 1,000+ masks. Recipients have included emergency responders, medical
professionals, nursing home staffs and residents, high-risk populations (mostly
locally), colleagues, book group members, family, friends, and various
professionals (such as the postal carrier, hairstylist, FedEx drivers, and
coworkers).
Where did I find the fabrics and supplies? I went
through hundreds of yards of personal fabric. OK, I may have been something of
a hoarder over the years. I’m still an avid sewer, it started early in my life.
My grandmother and mother both sewed, so I learned from the best. And I put
myself through graduate school by working in a fabric store, where I handily
applied my employee discount to plenty of yardages of pretty textiles.
Sewing my way through my
fabric stash, I even cut up some cotton sheets, a few sets of cotton curtains,
and some fancy leftover cotton decorator fabric from our past residence. Hey,
it doesn’t match this house, so why not use it?
Fabric designs vary with my supplies. |
What styles of masks have I made? I started with a mask pattern offered by Froedtert
Hospital / The Medical College of Wisconsin. This tie-style mask is easily
sterilized and holds up to countless washings. Eventually, I began making the
Deaconness Hospital style of mask, which as ties affixed to each side. Both the
Froedtert and Deaconness masks featured horizontal pleats (see below). By special request,
I also made several cloth masks with elastic ear loops, although these do not
usually last through hundreds of washings. But for basic non-professional
everyday use, they fit the bill fine.
Two different mask styles with pleats & ties. |
Where did my masks go? Many of the masks I made went directly to charitable
organizations. I gave boxes and bags filled with freshly sewn masks to a local
grassroots group that was collecting and distributing them locally. We even
stood in a parking lot one rainy spring day to hand out fabric masks for adults
and kids to families lined up in the cars for our city’s free school lunch
program. (Because schools were closed for the last few months of the academic
year, such practices have arisen all over town to meet many families’
nutritional needs.)
Eventually, I began
placing a big basket of home-sewn fabric masks by my front door, so folks could
stop by and pick out their favorites. A few people left something to help with
material costs, keeping me sewing. Some left a yard or so of fabric. A couple
left spools of thread.
Will people continue to wear masks out and about? Folks are debating the wearing of masks, but many
businesses still require masks for entry to their premises. Even those who don’t
feel they are fully on-board with the whole mask thing are finding the need to
obtain masks for access to several spots in their communities (perhaps even
their workplaces). As long as folks continue to request sewn masks, I will try
to keep making them, and I have a small inventory ready to go now. (Need a cloth mask, or even a small quantity of them? Email me for info. Masks are $10 shipped - Continental US only. Solely PayPal. Fabric designs vary, as these fly out quickly after I finish them.)
Overall, though, I have certainly scaled back in the past couple of
weeks. During the heat of the closed-in crisis, I was sewing 50-60 masks daily,
with two sewing machines loaded and at-the-ready. That’s a little tough to
sustain, as my professional and personal responsibilities are returning to a
normal level these days.
After all of this mask-making,
I guess I’m qualified to drink from this fun mug from CafePress. (Full disclosure: OK, I
created this imprint and wrote the poem. It also comes on tees, tops, caps, cups, magnets, and more. And I get a small commission from any orders.) Anyway, I just ordered it, and I hope it arrives
soon.
Image/s:
Personal photos – all rights reserved
Product promo photo – fair use
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