Way back in Time!
Sewing has existed for as long as people have made their own clothes. The first sewing used hides of animals and bones were made into needles to make clothes covering the body. A sewing pattern, as we know of it today, is a relatively recent invention, dating back to the 18th century. Primitive clothing was made by draping fabric on the body and sewing the form in place with hand sewing. This step became more sophisticated when the form was removed and traced onto paper for another usage. Thus the birth of a pattern. Paper is the main resource for patterns, but early patterns in factories were made from paperboard or a light weight cardboard to with-stand all the usage over and over. A common resource of paper in an early American household to create patterns was newspaper. Here is a Mother Clara story, I often tell in my vintage shows. Mother always wore the same style apron every day whether for work or special occasions and meals. All these aprons, of course, she made. After Mother entered her Eternal Rest and the chore of cleaning out the house was completed. There was wonderment about the pattern she used for making all those aprons. Rummaging through a sewing box one day, low and behold a folded up newspaper, was the pattern for the ever famous Mother Clara apron. Always thought it was from a commercial pattern company. No, it was from a 1959 Fairmont Sentinel paper! See below the actual newspaper pattern and mom’s creations.






