About this item
Imagine a world where every rip in a pair of jeans, every snag in a sweater, and every tear in a tea towel becomes an opportunity for one-of-a-kind creativity. With this fun introduction to unconventional mending techniques in a format that's half how-to guide, half idea book, anyone can give worn and torn items a new life. Start by learning hand-mending methods, including boro (an age-old Japanese mending technique) , embroidery, patching, and darning; then rev up the sewing machine for fast mends that put the pedal to the metal. With limited supplies, a limited budget, and limited time, anyone can create attention-grabbing details with visible mending--35 examples and more than 150 photos make it easy to get started!
About the Author
Jenny Wilding Cardon
Jenny Wilding Cardon has been creating with fabric since high school. Back then, she would design eccentric, rebellious items of clothing, and then make her friends wear them to school. After graduating from college in Utah with a degree in Women's Studies, Jenny spent three years with her husband in Seattle, where she quickly caught the quilting bug from her coworkers at book publisher Martingale.
Jenny worked as a copywriter for Martingale one day short of 10 years before giving up her position to be a stay-at-home mom. In 2011, she returned to Martingale as their content editor, and now spends most of her work time writing for Martingale's Stitch This! blog.
The birth of her first son inspired Jenny to write her first pattern collection, The Little Box of Baby Quilts (Martingale, 2007) . Her second, the book ReSew (Martingale, 2011) , paired her two creative outlets - thrifting and sewing. Jenny's designs have also appeared on the covers of Quilts and More and Quilt It for Kids magazines, as well as in McCall's Quilting and Simple
Quilts and Sewing.
Jenny lives on an acre in a Utah farming town with her husband of 18 years and their two sons, Jack and Charlie. Since the commute to the Washington-state-based Martingale office is 818.64 miles, the bosses typically allow her to work from home. Visit Jenny at RemadeNation.com.
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