Better Life · Creative Life · Sewing

What Am I Sewing For?

Sewing in a different phase of life

This is the beginning of what I expect will be a series of posts over the next couple of months.

When I sit in my sewing room and look at my list of projects, boxes of patterns, and stack of fabric waiting to be sewn, something is nagging at me. I’m procrastinating in the sewing room and that’s a sign that something is off kilter.

I don’t have a plan for this series. What I have are questions — about how sewing fits into my life and about retirement, identity, creativity, and what happens when the structure of work disappears but the a lifetime of being focused on performance, metrics, and production does not.

I suspect I’m not alone in this. Many of us reach retirement and discover that the habits of productivity, output, and “being busy” don’t vanish overnight. They just shift to something else.

If you’ve navigated this — or are navigating it now — I would genuinely love to hear your experience. What changed? What surprised you? What felt freeing? What felt unexpectedly difficult?

I’m writing this as I figure it out.


It’s been about 2 1/2 years since I stopped working. I didn’t retire. I quit a job that was a horrible fit and I hoped that I would find another job that was fulfilling and wanted to hire someone with amazing skills and energy who happened to be over the age of sixty. That didn’t happen. There was no gold watch and thank you for a lifetime of work speech at the end of my career. A door slammed and the phone and email in-box went silent. I know a lot of others have had the same abrupt ending to forty or fifty years of meaningful work. It’s jarring and a shock to the system.

When I worked full-time, sewing filled the margins. It was what I looked forward to at the end of the day. It was a way to express my creativity. Of course, I dreamed of being able to spend days focused on sewing. But once I was able to sew all day, I pivoted from productive work to productive sewing. And all of those years of making plans, scheduling projects, creating goals, and reviewing progress moved from my paid job to my sewing practice.

There is always something on the cutting table. Project Boxes lined up in order of priority. A weekly schedule that includes milestones and deadlines.

And if there isn’t? There’s a faint sense that there should be. No – not a faint sense. It’s a compulsion. Because if I’m not sewing, I must just be wasting time.


Tension and Procrastination

Organisation and order. Scheduling. Progress charts. My work life has carried over into the sewing room.

Of course I have a process. Acquire fabric and/or patterns. Cull a list of things to be sewn in short order because there must be something ready for the sewing machine at all time. Create a schedule for the next couple of months. Two items a week is ideal. One is not enough. Plan tasks for every day. Miss a deadline. Rejigger everything. Beat myself up. Decide it’s a new season and I’ll worry about it next year. Put all into the closet. Start over.

The sewing room is never closed. It’s like the kitchen in a restaurant. The lights go out in the evening and back on again in the morning.

I don’t love this order that I’ve created for myself. The compulsion to make things just because I have a piece of fabric and/or a pattern. Not because I necessarily want to wear that garment but because I have the pattern and/or fabric and therefore it must be sewn. How ridiculous. Gosh – could I be any more high red? (This is from a personality test that is done in the workplace. Those who are high red are always very productive … tick tock … pitter patter, get at ‘er)

And of course all this is self-imposed. I have a sewing channel on YouTube. I make friendly commitments to keep posting. But honestly — who cares if I don’t? I don’t owe anyone anything (aside from actual sponsor commitments).

The pressure is self-created. Which means it could stop. Right now.

And yet — I don’t want to stop sewing. I just want sewing to be satisfying.

My last project was pants. They were technical — adjusting the pattern, careful topstitching, a proper fly zipper. I had to pay attention. And halfway through I thought: this is thoughtful and enjoyable.

Not productive. Not creating content. Not output.

Sewing a t-shirt does not feel that way. It feels like obligation … A leftover rule from when I did the Ready to Wear Fast and bought no ready to wear for twelve months. I have realised that I can just buy the damned t-shirt. There is no morally superiority that comes from sewing a t-shirt (using $35 worth of fabric) instead of buying one for $12.

That realization feels both rebellious and strangely freeing. I don’t need to sew all of my clothes. I can buy things. In all honesty, I feel a little ✨ giddy ✨when I think that. Like I’m about to get a second scoop of ice cream for free.

I can sew fewer garments and make them better.

I can take a class and improve a skill without producing a finished object for Instagram or YouTube.

I can let sewing be a pastime again.

Part of figuring out my post-work style, I suspect, is separating identity from output. I am not more valuable because I produce more garments.

Maybe I need to start asking:
– What is worth sewing?
– What actually adds to my wardrobe?
– What feels like joy instead of obligation?

I don’t have a tidy answer now. It’s going to take thought and I know that writing it down will help.

But I do know this: sewing is something I love. And I’d like to keep loving it.

Coming in Part 2 … how on earth do I figure out who I am and my style now that I can wear whatever I want?

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14 thoughts on “What Am I Sewing For?

  1. Have you thought of sewing for people in your community who may need it to help bring purpose to it? I started sewing as I have a child with dwarfism and she can’t wear shop bought clothes. It brings immense satisfaction compared to making something for myself. Just an idea

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    1. Thank you for reading, Jen! I am going to do some charity sewing this year. I’ve committed to making pet beds for April, and there are a few other organisations on my list of possibilities. It’s very rewarding, and I appreciate the reminder!

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  2. Good questions! One thing about sewing in retirement is that there is too much time. I try to establish a routine for my sewing projects. At present I set aside two 1/2 hour to 1 hour sewing sessions, in the mornings and evenings. I use a minute timer to remind me when time is up.

    I had been procrastinating about finishing a quilt. So I eventually decided to not work on it in my sewing room. Instead I set it up in the dining room. These days I apply the same routine of timed sewing sessions in the morning and evening, working only on the quilt. My reward for finishing the quilt will be returning to unfinished projects waiting for me in my sewing room.

    Marjorie

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  3. I hope you find the style of sewing your clothes which suits you. This is what you need and deserve. Good luck

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  4. This really resonates with me! It’s taken me 2 years to wear my “good clothes” when I feel like it. I default to saving them for a non-existent work week.

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    1. So glad you chimed in Sheila. It’s good to know that others are experiencing the same thing. Last year I bought two nice jackets that would be perfect for the office. Why!?!

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  5. Such great thoughts. Thanks for sharing. I’m not retired yet but I understand a little of what you’re sharing. When I take time off for a sewcation, and look forward to it endlessly, often I don’t end up feeling like sewing. But push on because I “should”

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    1. Thank you so much for your comment! When I was working, I was definitely the same way. My husband used to travel a lot and when he was gone on the weekend, I always planned to sew for 18 hours a day. But sometimes I just wanted to sit and enjoy the quiet – which I always felt was a wasted opportunity. We all have to be a bit kinder to ourselves. x

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  6. Janine,

    I was forced to retire over five years ago from a legal job where I had to generate “billable hours” — the most difficult adjustment I had to make to being retired was the “gotta be productive” mindset. I already sewed for pleasure. What that looked like for years was that I sewed one dress a year out of colorful, pretty fabric and the occasional pencil skirt. And I sewed bright Hawai’ian shirts for my husband.

    Later, my overall sewing goal was to create a retirement wardrobe that was different from my usual knit tops, utility pants and shorts. I rarely wore jackets, even on the job. I wasn’t interested in making my own jeans. I knew I wanted a more colorful, casual wardrobe. I had long ago let go of the idea that if I could sew something, I should.

    I began to create that retirement wardrobe when my husband and I went on a tour of England and I made a knit travel wardrobe which I entered in that year’s Pattern Review Matchy-Matchy Wardrobe Contest. I did realize later that the RTW ponte trousers were handy for dressier occasions but were not a component that I wanted to sew myself — Lands’ End and L.L. Bean were a good source that fit.

    In the last two years, I’ve settled on sewing knit tops, linen and corduroy pants, woven cotton shirts, and dresses that are comfortable for everyday wear. I recently sold my never-used bra pattern, although I had enjoyed the all-day class and loved the fit. I don’t want to use my precious sewing time to make underwear.

    During the last year+, I’ve taken a class on fitting button-up shirts and trousers. I’m focussing more on pattern drafting, which feeds my lifelong enjoyment of geometry. I travelled to Norway for a pattern making class with two PR friends and drafted a fun, twirly non-dressy skirt. I developed a Kwik Sew pattern into a padded shacket with quilted lining for my husband. I’ve started sewing for my adult granddaughter, my son, and daughter-in-law. I have a long and fluid list of projects that I’m excited about sewing. At the beginning of this year I began holding a free mending clinic at our local library. It’s so satisfying to share my sewing skills to help people.

    It’s taken five or six years since I officially retired to reach this lovely state of equilibrium where I sew when and what I want. I don’t pressure myself. If I feel like coloring on my tablet instead of a planned sewing project, it’s what I do. I thoroughly enjoy my sewing life.

    I hope my perspective helps you. Give yourself time and grace.

    Carol Lee Hopkins

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    1. Carol Lee, thank you so much for sharing your experiences. I am definitely of the ‘must be productive’ mindset and I find myself getting frustrated when I spend the day at the computer going down a rabbit hole when I could have produced ‘something’ so I have proof of my industriousness at the end of the day!

      I admire you for figuring out what you want to focus on – fitting and drafting – and then putting in the effort. This is one of those things that I have to spend some time pondering. What classes would be satisfying?

      Thank you again, I truly appreciate your perspective! You’ve given me plenty to think about.

      Janine

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  7. I can relate to the part about retiring before you’re ready. In my case restructuring drastically changed my job, and I got a horrible new boss. At 61, so I left and there weren’t great options out there for me. I think you’re asking all the right questions about retirement and the role of sewing in your life and I’m confident you’ll figure it out.

    I don’t know if this will be helpful . . . but I began retirement with this question: What do I want in my life and what DON’T I want in my life? Now I have a matrix of activities and what I loosely call “creative pursuits” is in there. For me, “creative pursuits” can be sewing, gardening, cooking a new recipe, or pottery. I like making things. I like engaging with the creative challenge–what am I envisioning and what’s the best way to do it? Less goal oriented, more about fun.

    I’ll be interested in hearing how your work though this major life change.

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  8. I retired last year and I feel happy that I don’t have to go to that job again. Sometimes we have to choose our sanity, our happiness. I have had trouble with not sewing everyday, but I don’t need to. I’m looking forward to living my life for Jehovah and not for a company or my sewing machine. I’m so glad I read your blog. Brenda

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