Thursday, 12 July 2018

Why this is Important to me (2015)

The world doesn't need any more stuff.

When it comes to clothes, buying anything new always makes me feel uncomfortable. I don't like not knowing for sure that the machine workers aren't being exploited, how much waste and pollution was created, or how far it's traveled. I don't like that, often, the stitching will break or the print will fade long before it should, and that the material is often too flimsy to be used for anything else once holes do start to appear, because the company was trying to churn out a cheap product. These clothes aren't meant to last a long time, and aren't meant to be repaired.

This is why I love buying clothes from charity shops (and am increasingly irked that their rails are filling up with more and more of the aforementioned cheap fashion which is no use to anyone). Older, better made clothes have already stood the test of time. They may have already been mended or altered by their previous owner, and I find these personal touches bring a lot of character to a piece of clothing.

There's also the fact that I feel that it's breaking a chain. By buying from charity shops (or small vintage stores) we're supporting a good cause, and getting good products without giving money to dubious companies.


Something I wrote in 2015 but didn't title

Welcome!

For many years I have been fascinated by charity shops, vintage markets and carboot sales. I blame this on my mum, who as a single parent was always very clever with money when we were growing up. She's also a bit of a hoarder, which I have inherited too (this is ideal as when I was a teenager I got to wear the clothes she'd kept from the '60s and 70's, and now I can pass on my bang-on trend '90s clothes to my stepdaughter).

Not many of the things in my house are new. I love buying secondhand, when something has had a whole life before coming to me, and finding or inheriting other useful pieces.


A lot of my success with living this way is based on luck, for example I was able to furnish one flat entirely using furniture found left in the street. This is a lot easier if you live in a student-y area - where people are moving in and out of buildings and discarding their belongings fairly frequently - and where there is a culture of street furniture. There is also hard work involved, what with actually making the things.


I like working and being busy, but am not really motivated by money. I realised this while knitting a scarf, which took several hours - I wouldn't be able to earn enough (in a "proper" job) in the same amount of time to buy a hand knitted scarf of this quality. Unfortunately the world doesn't really function without a certain amount of cash, so hopefully the things I come up with can help stretch out what you do earn.

In this blog I intend to share some of my projects (where I take things which would otherwise be thrown away and make them useful again) and hope to inspire others to make and mend their own things too. I want to do reviews of charity shops and will post photos of my best/favourite finds, and will also be asking some  friends to write guest posts.
 

While these projects will be thrifty, I am mainly driven by recycling - bringing things right back from the brink of being thrown away.

I realise there are already lots of blogs with this sort of thing in them, so I will try to only post if I think I have something special to share. I will not post content just to have content.

Thank you for reading!
Hello!

I posted once, three years ago, and now I am back.

I've had several jobs in the meantime and am now at the start of a proper career. I got married to my bezzie mate. I'm still making something out of nothing.

Here's my Big Cartel store, which is currently filled only with dreams since I intend to make things for you, to order.

https://samssister.bigcartel.com/

and here's my updated Facebook page where I share colourful things

https://www.facebook.com/colourfooltextiles/

I'm also going to re-read some drafts I wrote but never published when I started this blog, and post them now...

Thanks for looking!

emma