In lockdown, thousands of people began making their own clothes for the first time – a movement born of creativity and conscious consumption

My foot hovers nervously over the sewing machine pedal. I am cautiously working my way through a sew-it-yourself kit produced by Pattern Project, a “microfactory” startup in south London. It has pioneered a laser-cutting machine that can cut patterns on demand, with minimal waste. The pieces for the dropped-sleeve dress that I am sewing have been snipped to my precise measurements by a zippy little laser, which whizzes over the crisp Irish linen, scorching faint seam guides into the fabric so I know exactly where to sew.

Pattern Project’s founders, Shruti Grover, 34, and Simon Johnson, 35 – partners in life and in business – are seeking funding for their first shop. A “22nd-century” vision of fashion, says Grover, it will hold no stock, but will sell custom-fit clothing that is laser-cut in front of you within minutes, out of local, ethical and sustainable fabrics – and then sewn by you.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

UK households face record 54% energy bill rise as price cap is lifted

Move by Ofgem means millions likely to be driven into fuel poverty…

Deep impact: the underwater photographers bringing the ocean’s silent struggle to life

Kerim Sabuncuoğlu – just one winner in this year’s Ocean photography awards…

Teenage girl who pretended to be boy for sex duped second girl, court told

Georgia Bilham, 21, is on trial in Chester for 17 sexual offences…