Well worn Visible mending for the clothes you love

Skye Pennant

Book - 2024

Well Worn is a fresh and engaging clothing repair guide for anyone looking to explore visible mending to revitalize their wardrobe. Whether you are a stitching pro or have never picked up a needle and thread, this book will guide you every step of the way. Visible mending can be used to repair clothing in an intentional and creative way, using traditional techniques including patching, darning, and sashiko. Instead of hiding imperfections or repairs, you can transform your garment with gorgeous results. Inside these pages, you will learn to mend jeans, sweaters, t-shirts, socks, and more. Mending is not only a crafty creative outlet but a slow and therapeutc act--one that fights against wardrobe perfectionism as well as fast fashion. This t...horough but accessible guide is all about mending clothes you love, one slow stitch at a time.

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Subjects
Genres
Handbooks
Handbooks and manuals
Published
New York, NY : Princeton Architectural Press, a division of Chronicle Books LLC [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Skye Pennant (author)
Physical Description
144 pages : illustrations (some color) ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes further reading (page 144).
ISBN
9781797229690
  • Introduction
  • Sustainability: why mend clothes?
  • How to use this book
  • Understanding fabrics
  • Needles
  • Threads
  • Other supplies
  • Introduction to darning
  • Introduction to sashiko
  • Introduction to patching
  • Starting & finishing your repair
  • Troubleshooting: problems to look out for
  • Caring for your repairs
  • When not to mend: a note before we begin
  • 1. Jeans
  • 2. Sweaters & knitwear
  • 3. Shirts
  • 4. T-shirts
  • 5. Leggings
  • 6. Socks
  • 7. Jackets
  • 8. Delicate fabrics
  • Further reading & acknowledgements
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Textile artist Pennant debuts with a practical guide to repairing clothing in ways that emphasize the mending process. "The fashion industry is one of the top most polluting industries on the planet," Pennant writes, suggesting that extending the lifetime of clothes through mending constitutes a crucial means of reducing ecological harm. The detailed overview of tools and materials recommends choosing fabric patches "of a similar weight and fibre content" to the garment and needle sizes that correspond to the thickness of the thread. The handy projects mostly rely on hand sewing, showing how to repair a frayed collar on a shirt with a sashiko patch, mend worn-out cuffs with plain-weave darning, and cover up tears in a leather jacket with leather polka dots. A brief primer on darning, patching, and sashiko provides some helpful tips (sashiko stitches should be "about the length of a grain of rice" and readers should be sure to leave enough slack in the thread when darning to prevent puckering), but Pennant doesn't offer much guidance on how to actually perform the techniques. The wordy instructions and tendency to cover several steps in a single illustration will make it difficult for novices to follow along. This is best suited for experienced sewists with a penchant for sustainability. (May)

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Review by Library Journal Review

As more people become aware of the environmental costs of fast fashion, the movement to repair, reuse, and recycle worn clothing has expanded. Enter visible mending, the practice of creatively patching, darning, and embroidering damaged clothing. Textile artist Pennant provides an accessible overview of the most popular visible mending methods, and she gives plenty of tips and tricks for making sure the results are useful, along with numerous reminders to take it slow and check work often. Concepts, techniques, and tools are introduced in the first sections of the book. That's followed by projects that provide step-by-step guidance on how to repair holes, worn cuffs and collars, threadbare areas of clothing, and more. The projects are illustrated by both photos and drawings, which can, at times, be a bit challenging to parse. But the variety of the designs presents many practice opportunities, and examples of completed work give a sense of what is possible. How to handle delicate, stretchy, and nonwoven fabrics is covered too. The discussion of the origins of some techniques might encourage readers to explore further. VERDICT A solid how-to manual for mending techniques.--Rebecca Brody

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