Grandma’s sewing machine

Posted 12/27/18

Down South Down South

Back around 1965 a fashion craze swept through high school.

Cranberry, button-down shirts emerged as “the” shirt to have. Like other young …

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Grandma’s sewing machine

Posted

Down South Down South

Back around 1965 a fashion craze swept through high school.

Cranberry, button-down shirts emerged as “the” shirt to have. Like other young bucks, I had to have one.

Nothing’s worse than being a teenager out of step with fashion.

It became apparent my folks weren’t getting me a store-bought shirt.

Grandmom Poland said she would make me one, and she did. Made it on her Singer sewing machine.

The collar was a bit out of line and the buttonholes a tad large, but I loved that shirt and plumb wore it out.

Remember sewing? It used to part of family life. There was a time when women bought bolts of cloth and made clothes for the family.

It doesn’t seem that long ago that I watched Mom and Grandmom Poland pump the treadle and make that Singer sing.

The song would start slowly. Pressure on the foot peddle would rev it up, and that machine would hum right along.

I recall sewing’s rhythmic tune, seeing parchment-like paper etched with faint blue patterns, and hearing words like rickrack, facing, and gathering. I recall, too, the complex act of threading the machine and seeing all manner of machine accessories.

A wooden spool of thread sat on the spool pin, and adjusting the thread tension proved critical. Sewing seemed mechanical and magical. More than anything it seemed to be a labor of love.

I hope I told Grandmom how much I appreciated the shirt she made me, because it must have taken her days.

That brings me to a question. Do young people sew today? Do they pin patterns to cloth and cut fabric with the utmost care? Do they lovingly put an old Singer sewing machine to work and hear it sing its song?

My guess is they don’t. It takes too much time, and so old Singers sit idle. They collect dust like the ones here that I photographed in Carlton, Georgia.

And besides, just why should anyone sew these days? Plenty of stores sell clothes in a dizzying array of styles and sizes.

There was a time, though, when you had to make them yourself. There used to be a high school course called Home Economics where girls learned sewing and other practical skills. Those days are out of fashion now.

Change marches on, but even I learned to appreciate sewing’s practical side.

Granddad Poland wore overalls. He was short, so Grandmom would shorten new overalls’ legs and hem them to fit.

She’d sew one end of a discarded leg piece together, sew on a strap, and just like that I had a granite pebble bag for my slingshot. From that bag grew my love for camera bags, Pony Express-type bags, and leather luggage.

No, I doubt young women sew today, and I’ll admit that today’s husbands and beaus should be thankful that they don’t.

Few things are more painful than being dragged through cloth world. A trip to cloth world ’twas a fate worse than death.

Still, when I was a boy, few things made me happier than that cranberry, button-down collared shirt I wore in high school. Grandmom sewed it; and it marked the beginning of my love affair with fashion, Brooks Brothers, seersucker suits, bow ties, and more.

Today, whenever I see an old Singer sewing machine, which is rare, I think of Mom and Grandmom sewing clothes for us.

They weren’t store-bought, but they were made with love. And they fit just fine.

Now, homemade clothes are passé, and we’re that much more dependent on some seamstress we’ll never meet. Someone, no doubt, far away in another country. Someone else’s grandmother or more likely young daughter.

Like a seam-ripper, change gutted us of yet another custom, and old Singer sewing machines sing no more.

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