"...Visible mending makes a feature out of fixing worn or damaged fabric. According to Charlotte Jenner, who runs A Nest of Gentle Makers (opens in new tab), a crafting retreat in the New Forest, this is due to a backlash against the way we consume.
"People seem to want to mend clothes as they are reading more about the downside of 'fast fashion'," she says, "both in terms of using up the resources of the planet and also the poor treatment and conditions that many of the workers have to tolerate when making clothes for our consumption."
Kate Sekules (opens in new tab), a repair champion who runs an established visible mending website (opens in new tab), agrees that consumption culture has paved the way for the craft's popularity. "Clearly it's the craving for the handmade and unique in our culture, owing to the metastasising cancer of mass production," she says.
"If everything's the same, of course we start to want a different look, and nothing shows the individual hand more than visible mending."
How has this craft trend affected professional design? According to Sekules, whose book MEND! A Refashioning Manual and Manifesto will be published by Penguin in Summer 2020, visible mending has had a huge impact. She's seen a general swing to embellishment and detail in fashion design that's a reflection of visible mending...."
Thrifting, mending, and how to be sustainably fashionable by Jenn White (host) March 23, 2023 Buying new clothes can fix us, make us more stylish,... View full details
L’art retrouvé du raccommodage by Catherine Rollot March 12, 2023 The article is behind a paywall (click link in title to register); otherwise, read it... View full details