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| Hard to believe it's coming up 2023... | 
  On this occasion, I've got random notes at best. (As I piece this all
  together, forgive me if the result turns out to be less than cohesive!)
  
  
    
    
    
    
    
      
      
        
          
            
            
            
              
                
            
            
            
            
              
              
                
                  
              
              
              
            
            
              
              
            
            
            
            
              
            
            
            
            
            
              
                
            
            
            
              
              
              
                
              
              
                
                  
              
              
              
            
            
            
            
              
              
              
              
              
              
              
'Til next (year)...
                
                
                
                
               
            
          
        
      
    
  
    Usually, as the calendar is about to change over, I'll give myself
    permission to deviate from the subject of sewing and pontificate on major
    issues of the moment. This year, those issues have just been so wearying
    that I am frankly quite happy not to mention them. The world is a mess and
    the loudest voices are making it messier. Having never been one to put my
    head in the sand — figuratively speaking — I find myself increasingly
    envious of ostriches these days.
  
  
      So I opt to focus on my sewing journey and where it's taken me. As I
      complete year ten of my renewed passion for sewing, what does the road
      travelled look like?
    
    
      Not only that, the blogging part of this adventure has returned more back
      to me than I ever imagined it would. The process has yielded unexpected
      lessons and rewards both big and small.
    
    
        I have a vivid memory of the decision to start this little endeavour.
        Knowing — or maybe not knowing — the failure/success rate of new
        blogs, it was a bit of a scary commitment. On the other hand, there was
        also the distinct possibility that no one would even be aware of my blog
        in the first year or so to miss it if it didn't succeed. (Failure in
        isolation; I could handle that.)
      
      
              But the desire to share the sewing adventure that I had already
              embarked upon in the year previous — i.e, 2012, ten years ago —
              convinced me to go for it. Not only had I reconnected with a hobby
              that used to be an important part of my life, it had already led
              me to a surprising level of creativity.
            
            
            
              I like to call it being creative outside of the box, and it
              was something that I really wanted to convey to fellow sewers. It
              first happened to me in the summer of 2013, several months before
              this blog was born.
            
            |   | 
| Three of the test bags behind the Make it Yours Bag... | 
              I ended up designing a pattern and writing up a tutorial for a
              simple yet versatile purse, which ultimately became my
              Make it Yours Bag. By that time, I had already sewn up several bags and — tapping
              into my skills as a tech writer and documentation designer — found
              that it was a natural progression for me to develop a pattern of
              my own. Needless to say, when I started sewing again, this was
              not something that I saw on the horizon.
            
            
              So a secondary objective for starting the blog was for it to
              assist with selling that pattern. I knew that the (old)
              Craftsy marketplace was the ideal place to sell
              from, but having an online presence to establish an identity for
              myself was a necessary stepping stone. Because — to reiterate my
              original focus — my aim wasn't just to sell a pattern; I wanted to
              document the ongoing journey of my coming back to sewing, sharing
              lessons along the way and discovering innovative means to put it
              all into practice.
            
            
              That's been my motivation for the past decade. Luckily, when I
              started this blog in late 2013, I already had a year of that
              journey under my belt, so I wasn't stuck thinking about what to
              write on a weekly basis.
            
            
              Here's the project that started it all, the thing that I dropped
              needle into fabric on October 28, 2012 to do some real sewing for
              the first time in years: the Professional Tote.
            
            |   | 
| The project that started this adventure: the Professional Tote... | 
                Obviously, this pattern is fairly old, but I still see
                references to it in 2022, so for a variety of reasons, it
                remains popular. Personally, I'm thankful for it having been
                created, because if not, my friend in BC would not have taken a
                class to make the bag, in which case, I would never have seen it
                and this blog would literally not exist. (Aren't some cases of
                cause and effect
                just so totally mind-blowing??)
              
            
                In hindsight, I'm also grateful for the lessons learned from
                making this bag. (Learned them early, too, as described in
                this post.) How many times have you been drawn to a project that someone
                has made and instantly say,
                I must make this for myself! And then you dive right into
                it without further thought.
              
              
                It takes patience — and a willingness to delay gratification —
                to stop and ask oneself,
                how best can I make this to fit my needs? Let's just say
                that while I appreciated the making of the
                Professional Tote at that time in my life (it felt like
                an accomplishment as it's not exactly an easy pattern with which
                to slide back into sewing after decades away), the bag itself is
                not really suited to my needs. After using it once or twice,
                it's since become a container for my various handmade travel
                items. (You can see glimpses of my
                Yahtzee wallet,
                travel notebook, and
                sleep mask
                in the photo above.)
              
            
                The major lesson learned was that for most of my future bag
                projects, I would take the time to think about how to change
                them to make them fit my preferences. (Or to fit the
                availability of materials, which was always an ongoing challenge
                for me because I usually didn't have just the right amount of
                "whatever" on hand.) Over the years, I've tagged seventeen blog
                posts with the label "customizing patterns", which speak to the subject of doing just that. I hope to
                have demonstrated that it's not difficult to do and advantageous
                to attempt.
              
            
              And what about when something you want to sew doesn't exist as a
              pattern at all? Have I inspired any of you to put on your most
              powerful thinking caps to achieve your own
              MyTie? I'm not saying to make a similar bag out of a tie, but to come
              up with a solution when you can't find one anywhere else. When I
              first saw these little bags (check out posts labelled "the tie project"), no one was selling a pattern to make them. Therefore, I had
              to come up with my own.
            
            
              It turned out to be a major win-win, since my desire to make one
              was universally understood: it was a way to memorialize my late
              father. Turns out there are a lot of people who think converting a
              tie into a small purse or clutch is an ideal way to remember the
              special men in our lives.
            
            |  | 
| Successfully "copying" a desktop organizer... | 
              Ironically, my dad's only remaining neck tie never did get
              transformed into a mini bag, but the whole of my efforts to
              develop and release that pattern — which covered a rather intense
              three month period in 2014 — was in honour of him. (I believe I
              made six MyTies during that time, the most I've ever made
              of any one thing.)
            
            
              I repeated this immensely satisfying process of making something
              strictly from sight when I sewed up this
              desktop caddy/organizer in 2017. (I've thought several times about writing it up as a
              pattern for sale, but I truly think that my interest in developing
              patterns has waned.)
            
            
                Looking further along the road travelled upon, a major signpost
                would have to be the one that marked an unforeseen detour into
                the world of
                fabric design.
              
              
                For someone who wrote in late 2013 (about an experience that
                happened in 2012), "...three things that I previously didn't know: the existence
                  of Etsy, the fact that fabrics have "designers", and that
                  fabric designs have names", it was a bit of a leap that in April 2015, I would sell my
                first piece self-designed fabric. Obviously, another example of
                something that I had no expectation of doing when I restarted
                sewing.
              
              
                  In terms of rewards, it's an indescribable feeling to see what
                  other people create with my fabrics. (Note that while I've
                  sold other designs, I have not seen what has been made with
                  any of them apart from my
                  P&P fabrics.)
                
              |   | 
| Various projects made with my Pride & Prejudice fabric... | 
                Oh, and in quite a different variant of irony, the pandemic
                threw me a bit of a generous curve with respect to fabric sales:
                2020 was a "very good year" as everyone was busy buying fabric
                to make masks.
              
            
              Although the future is certainly unknown, it's been feeling like
              it's the right time to wind this up. Readership is down. (Not that
              I've ever been a numbers person, but I see my stats and they tell
              a story.) I suspect people are generally engaging less and less
              with blogs these days, which is unfortunate because it's still my
              preferred social platform.
            
            
              After the blogging stops, I won't stop sewing — I do have supplies
              to use up, after all, and the interest is still there. But I
              won't be pressured with a regular goal of making something with
              the point of sharing the result. On that front, it's seriously
              becoming a challenge to find things that I haven't seen ten times
              over when I scour the internet looking for inspiration.
            
            
                While I came into this journey focused on purses and bags, it's
                clear from the photo above — and the other photo near the top of
                this post — that I don't need any more of those. (And that's not
                even inclusive of all that I've made.) I mainly ignore new bag
                projects that I come across these days.
              
              
                A thought that's always been at the back of my mind is that when
                I run out of sewing related things to write about, it'll mean
                the end of this blog, for all practical purposes. I'm getting
                very close to that point.
              
              
                Do I have enough content to last me to the end of year ten? I
                truly don't know. But then, I've never known and yet here I am.
              
              'Til next (year)...







 
Always enjoy your blog missives!
ReplyDeleteMy sincere thanks for that!
DeleteI always look forward to your emails, brightens up my Saturdays. HNY to you and yours
ReplyDeleteWarms my heart to hear that. All the best in 2023 to you and yours as well.
DeleteI look forward to your blog posts because I always learn something new! I have a few of your projects in my “to do” pile.
ReplyDeleteThank you for the appreciation and good luck conquering your "to do" pile! ;-)
DeleteYour blog has become a regular part of my life, it reminds me that it’s Saturday (retirement has erased the necessity of knowing what day it is) and your unique sewing inventions are way beyond anything else about sewing online!!! I too have many of your patterns in my to-make pile and the tie bag will come in handy for the box of my fathers ties I’ve saved for over a decade! Happy New Year and thanks for being you! Marie
ReplyDeleteThanks for regularly expressing your kind thoughts for what I do here, Marie. It provides that "wind beneath my wings" that is very much needed during this part of the journey. (Please also know that whenever you get around to making those projects, I will be here to appreciate them if you send me photos!)
DeleteOh, and about retirement taking away your sense of time... my other half went upstairs yesterday night totally unaware that it was NYE! Happy new year, right? ;-)
Congratulations on a decade of blogging! And please don't stop completely. I enjoy your enquiring mind and problem solving strategies.
ReplyDeleteThank you much, but to be clear, I'm trying to achieve a decade of blogging... not quite there yet! But I promise not to put arbitrary limits around the possibility of update posts beyond "the end".
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