Mending is an essential part of maintaining your handmade or slow-fashion wardrobe (or even your store-bought clothes!), and patching and darning are your key techniques. Cal will show you two different ways to patch a hole in woven or fine knit (t-shirt) garments: overlay and reverse applique, various stitches that work for each method, and when to use them.

Then we will mend a hole in a knitted garment (like a sweater or wool sock) with traditional darning. Whether you try to do it invisibly or artfully, you’ll extend the life of your favorite woolies by knowing how to darn them. Traditional darning works well for smaller holes or areas that are worn thin. You might have so much fun, you’ll actually be happy to see a new hole in your most-loved and worn garments!

Workshop Length: One 3-hour class

Skills: No prerequisite skills

Supplies:

Two items (woven or t-shirt) with holes to be patched

A sock, sweater, or other knit item with a small (<1″ across) hole to be darned

Small, sharp scissors

Scraps of woven and knit fabric for patches

Hand-sewing and tapestry needles in a few sizes

All-purpose, buttoncraft, or top-stitching thread

Embroidery floss (I suggest size 8 Perle Cotton)

Yarn

Pins

Note: Participants will receive a small kit with extra patches, needles, threads and darning yarn, so don’t feel a need to go out and buy a lot of supplies. Bring what you have! There will be extra materials and supplies to share. If you can’t decide on what to mend, you can bring some fabric scraps to practice the techniques

ABOUT CAL

CAL’S WEBSITE

Growing up in suburban Ohio, Cal Patch learned early on to make her own fun. As a budding entrepreneur, she could often be found hocking her wares (anything from painted-rock paperweights to woven ribbon barrettes) door to door from her hand-painted wagon. Patch credits her seventies childhood (the heyday of craft) with her unwavering allegiance to all things handmade.

In college, Cal chose to major in fashion design as a more practical alternative to art, rationalizing that “everyone wears clothes”. She moved to New York City in 1991 and soon landed her dream job as a designer for Urban Outfitters. Eventually Cal left to pursue her lifelong goal of opening a shop to sell both her own homespun creations and those of other young designers. Set in the then-remote Lower East Side, Patch 155 gained a following among women seeking to express their individual style rather than follow the latest trend.

After nearly 4 years of shopkeeping, Cal closed the store in early 2002 to co-found MAKE workshop, a hipster craft school, where she taught for five years. Content to let others do the selling, she still creates her line of one-of-a-kind clothing under the label ‘hodge podge’, which she sells in her Etsy shop, boutiques, and at craft fairs. She also does freelance design for various clothing companies as well as projects for artists, museums, and advertising. She has contributed designs to the books Made by Hand, Stitch‘n Bitch Crochet: the Happy Hooker, Mend It Better, Tease: 50 Inspired T-shirt Transformations, and Applique Your Way, written how-to articles for BUST and Budget Living magazines, and developed patterns for making, Knitty, PLY, Cutting Edge, Crochet Today, Sew Stylish, and Adorn. You can find her crochet patterns for sale on Ravelry.

In January 2009 Cal relocated from urban NYC to rural Ulster County, New York, to realize her dream of being a crafty farmer. She currently teaches sewing, crochet, pattern drafting, embroidery, and lots more in the Hudson Valley/Catskills region of NY state, as well as at retreats and shops around the U.S, as well as online. Her first book, Design-It-Yourself Clothes was published in September 2009.