I can't keep up, I'm sorry. I never meant to go missing for so long without posting. I wouldn't be here at all if I hadn't had to dig in some old photos and got ahead with my Memory Mondays. For no reason I can fatham, I feel like I am running backwards in life.
Here is how I spent two days of my life.
My son is a police detective. Our town has decided to "change the colors" of our police department. Who knew police departments had "colors". All of his uniforms and jackets and accessories have insignia in the old colors - a brown background, green and black lettering, khaki accents. The new colors and grays and navys. This affects me how?
He usually wears street clothes. But due to personnel issues and the offer of additional pay for overtime (he needs a new roof) he was back in uniform for Memorial Day weekend. And he needed at least one shirt and one jacket to have the new insignia. Each sleeve on each garment requires the large badge looking thing and the sergant strips so that means 4 patches for each garment. And because he is my son, he waited until the last minute.
We started by using my seam ripper to remove all the machine stitching from the factory when the shirt and jacket were ordered. This took me quite a while.
Let me insert a special issue. I had cataract surgery recently. For my left eye I had a regular lens inserted. What I did not know was that it would worsen my close up vision when it corrected my distance vision. So when we did my right eye, I paid the big bucks (almost $2000) for the bifocal lens. Unfortunately I am always the "one in a million" and the lens improved but did not correct my vision. At this time I have different prescriptions for distance and for close up for each eye. I am wearing bifocals I bought on amazon that are the correct precription for my left eye but not my right eye and clear for distance which is my left eye but not my right eye. This means it is fun to see small details.
Back to day one. It took me all morning just to remove the old patches. The only good thing I can say is that the pin holes from the factory stitching left an imprint to line up the new patches.
I used long quilting pins to line up the first sleeve and decided maybe it would be easier to sew them on by hand. I used to be quite the handsewer. Well, the patches are heavily machine embroidered and have some kind of plastic coating on the back. My thinner needles were almost sharp enough to force throught the patch, but the needles would bend or break. And my thicker, stronger needles were not sharp enough to go through the patch.
By afternoon I gave up and went for our two hour walk. When I came back, I re-pinned the first sleeve and decided to use my sewing machine. I have not used my sewing machine in a long time. I had to wind a new bobbin in navy thread. I remembered how to do that. Then I had to thread the needle. I spent almost 20 minutes and could not get it threaded. I finally rigged my husbands shop lantern to shine on the needle and bobbin plate without blinding me and got the needle threaded. But the bobbin seemed jammed. 
Using the lantern along with a lamp and ceiling light to try to see what I am doing.
I spent all kinds of time trying to remove the bobbin holder. I looked on Youtube and chats . I was getting very frustrated. I finally googled troubleshooting my sewing machine model and was reminded that after you wind a new bobbin, you have to move one little piece back where it was before the bobbin will work. Duh. I knew that.
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| Taking a photo of the needle with my phone to enlarge it so I can see if there is thread in the needle. Because I did "sew" one patch on with an unthreaded needle. |
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| Picking out stitches and entire seams that have caught in the sides of the sleeves. |
The next day I was sure would go better. This shirt was short sleeved and would be easier to twist. I caught the sleeve on the first large patch and had to pick it and re-sew it. I repeated the same steps as the day before, sewing, picking and re-sewing both of the large patches and one of the smaller ones.
Then I pressed the jacket and the shirt, walked two miles and went to bed.When he picked them up I told him that I would like to offer to pay the cost of whatever a professional would like to charge to redo the patches in the new colors on all the other articles of clothing he has. How I ever survived two girl scouts and three boy scouts, I will never know.
And that was two days of my life. Ier thick and have a plastic coating on the back. Couldn't push a needle through




Oh wow! That same thing was discussed when I had cataract surgery but I went with the implant lens that corrected only my distant vision. My eyes don't see together anyway [since birth] so I don't have what everyone calls depth perception, but I can read, drive, and get along with that.
ReplyDeleteSo I have glasses that have graduated no see bifocals with the top of the glasses with no distance correction.
Often, I take the glasses off while driving.
Anyway.
You are such the best mom in the world to work on those patches. YES, send the rest to a pro, that is such hard work!
You're a good mom! Sounds like an ordeal. I haven't had my sewing machine out for years and would probably have the same issues!
ReplyDeleteKudos to you...super mom! With eyes that are not at 100% you put so much into those shirt sleeves, and yes, my typing said shit sleeves but I corrected it! I have various sewing projects, and certainly have failed at them with my tremors as well as eyes. So when a nice expensive purchase came along which is waaaaay to long and wide (maybe somewhere in China they think all Americans are the Hulk) I kept it, after throwing away the return mailer, and now need help from an expert!
ReplyDeleteWow, I can identify with your sewing saga. I recently had to hem some slacks I was shortening by hand because I couldn't thread the bobbin on my machine. I hope you show this post to your son so he'll understand why you suggested the professional sewer any future patches needed.
ReplyDeleteYes, he absolutely needs to take any others to a pro. He also owes mom a nice lunch.
ReplyDeleteMiss Merry... you are a saint IMO.
ReplyDeleteYou are an amazing Mom. I can just see all of the picking and resewing. I've been there and done that with Air Force uniforms. So frustrating. But you DID IT!!! Hurray. We're similar in eye stuff too. Back in the day I had lassie surgery to correct my astigmatisms in both eyes. The did one near sighted and one far sighted so I would never have to wear glasses again and could read and see far distances. Did it work? Nope. I had to have it redone "normal" and now I wear glasses all of the time. Hurray for modern medicine.
ReplyDeleteI hope today is better for you. We're in the Black Hills with Miss Piper but my back is spasming like crazy today so Papa and Piper went to a cave tour and to a hot springs swim without me. Not all is lost. I'm doing laundry and catching up on blogs. :-)
Blessings and hugs,
Betsy
Dear Miss Merry, you are amazing!
ReplyDeleteI recall those days when my husband went up a rank and all his uniforms needed to be done. No fun! Yes i would gladly pay someone to do them now but back then we could not afford it!
ReplyDeleteMiss Merry, so cool about your son being a police detective! As for all of this sewing... I think someone owes you a badge or two. 🙂
ReplyDeleteThose badges are the worst to sew..I know firsthand. You’re a super star. May is almost gone, wishing you a happy, healthy June! xo, Virginia
ReplyDeleteI continue to be in awe of how amazing you are. I think I would have used that iron on stuff that fuses fabrics and if that failed, super glue, especially since it was a one-day wear, then taken it to an "official" uniform fixer after. You are a very good mother.
ReplyDelete