How to fill holes with starts.

Moths seem to have the same preference for cashmere than me, when it comes to clothes. The only difference is they eat it, and I wear it and try to keep up with their feast.

My past week was taken up a good bit by mending holes in some cashmere jumpers. Instead of just filling the holes pretending they where never there, I fill them up with little colourful stars. Maybe because I don’t have one of these cotton embroidery yarns in black. Or maybe because I would get bored very quickly. Mending a hole in the same colour, in the end doesn’t even show the result of your work. It just hides the mess up of the moths.

I choose to fill holes with stars instead of fixing errors of others.

After I had wrote about it on Monday. @glorydee asked me, how I do it. True, I am far from being the only one who has to deal with holes. Meanwhile she figured out how to turn the mistake of a hole into a new design. That made me think. Maybe it sound more glorious to write about new projects and things accomplished. But we all deal with the little things as well.

Fixing holes, fixing errors, replacing buttons, broken sips. You won’t notice a working sip as much as you won’t notice a fixed hole. You only notice these things when they don’t work, when they are annoying. All the while fixing them might take up as much time as sewing a beautiful dress, everybody compliments you for. So maybe we can find ways to fix these things in a way people could compliment you for as well? The work that went into it would be noticeable, if not for others, then at least for your own sense of accomplishment.

How to fill the holes with stars?

It is five points in a circle. You leave one out stitch into the next and go back one underneath.


Blue is on top and yellow underneath.

How do you show what you are doing? If you where sitting next to me I would just do it a few times in front of your eyes and talk you through the stitches. Then we would still sit next to each other and every time you might ask “And where now?” I’ll say “There and then there.” And in five minutes it would be clear.


You repeat the round, getting closer and closer to the middle with your stitches with each round, Until the star is full.

It is far easier to learn and do it, than to show it. Or maybe I just don’t have enough “primary teacher” inside me. Or you might be able to decode my attempts anyways. Or you could have just read through the words and photos and think about all the invisible work that happens behind a fixed thing.

Will you fill the holes in your clothes with stars?

Cheers for stopping by, have a great week!

All photos and words are owned by ©kesityu taken and written by myself.



0
0
0.000
7 comments
avatar
avatar

Thank you!!
(I think my new passion is self portraits through flowers😁)
At this occasion, I wanted to make you a compliment for your new lovely icon photo! Shame I can't see it a bit larger😊
❤️

0
0
0.000
avatar

This is lovely and there is something poetic about fixing something in such a way that the "scars" remain. They tell us the story, that this object has been used, that it had a purpose, and that it is still of use, hence our reason to fix it. Thank you so much for this wonderful post!

Maybe I should share this with @urban.scout so that she can fix my broken clothes! Just kidding, she would in any case appreciate this post.

Keep well, and thanks for sharing this with us!

0
0
0.000
avatar

Thank you, for your poetic understanding of these mending stars! Indeed so many times when I sew I can relate the technique or the practice to so many other things in life... or even to the one thing I need to understand in that moment. Funny how it works and beautiful how it is all connected.

You two keep well to, and let me know if there is any stars appearing all over your clothes:)

0
0
0.000
avatar

I am so sad, as my mother made a dress for my girlfriend, and I never took photographs of the process. In this coming week, I might post something related to the dress, but the process would have been so beautiful to capture.

Thank you so much, and that is so true. The poetic beauty in our interconnected and interdependent world is so, well, beautiful!

0
0
0.000
avatar

I think I also do not have enough primary school teacher spirit in me.
Thank you for this ,I definitely would want to make some stars.

0
0
0.000
avatar

...we have the seamstress or crochetess in us instead😁
Let me know how it goes for you, if you try!

0
0
0.000