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Make do and mend: As landfills grow, people opt for needle and thread

With prices on the rise, a new trend is catching on in the United States: mending.

Fixing your favorite clothes isn’t just practical and sustainable, its adherents say. It’s also enjoyable and an antidote to tech-laden lives. And in Massachusetts, it’s become a necessity. On Nov. 1, 2022, the state issued a ban on throwing textiles in the trash in what officials call the first statewide law of its kind.

Why We Wrote This

Could darning – or knitting – socks be more satisfying than buying new? More people are picking up needle and thread, rather than a credit card, to keep clothing out of landfills.

Instead of overloading landfills, menders aim to extend the life of clothing and transform perceptions around textiles.

“Studies have shown that people get the same sense of satisfaction or engagement from shopping for new things, as you do when you’re maintaining and repairing the things you already have,” says Kate Fletcher, a professor at the Royal Danish Academy in Copenhagen who coined the term “slow fashion.” 

Jessamy Kilcollins teaches classes on mending in the Boston area. A sustainable fashion course inspired her to start repairing and making her own clothes.

“There’s something I’m really enjoying about revitalizing clothes and a practice that … my ancestors did,” says one of her students, Jen Zehler. “There’s also something about sitting together in a circle and learning together.”

A giant brown table in the center of a room that smells faintly of paint and worn pine is strewn with colorful yarn. Students ranging from recent college graduates to retired professionals are perched on stools around it, needles poised, eyes fastened on their instructor dressed in bright red. 

“Can you do that again?” one asks. 

Jessamy Kilcollins teaches darning at the Eliot School of Fine and Applied Arts in the Boston neighborhood of Jamaica Plain. She holds up a snip of denim and a needle threaded with yarn to demonstrate her stitch. Mending, a way of repairing clothing and other textiles that was once the realm of seamstresses and Depression-era grandmas, is back in vogue. The students on this recent evening have brought items they want to not only breathe new life into but also keep out of landfills – sweaters with holes in the elbows, a thrifted pillow, a favorite pair of leggings worn from too many hours on the pickleball court. 

Why We Wrote This

Could darning – or knitting – socks be more satisfying than buying new? More people are picking up needle and thread, rather than a credit card, to keep clothing out of landfills.

“Where have you been all my life?” asks overall-clad Jen Zehler, laughing as she threads her needle, ready to fortify a hole in her leggings. 

The evening classroom provides a glimpse into a “slow fashion” trend that is catching on across the United States. Fixing your favorite clothes isn’t just practical and sustainable, its adherents say. It’s also enjoyable and an antidote to tech-laden and sped-up lives. And in Massachusetts, it’s become a necessity. In the fall of 2021, the Bay State released its final 2030 Solid Waste Master Plan with a goal of reducing waste statewide by 30%. On Nov. 1, 2022, Massachusetts issued a ban on throwing textiles in the trash, in what officials have said is the first time a state has implemented such a measure.

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff

In the “Mending by Hand: Visible Stitching” class in Boston, attendees use colorful thread to repair their garments.

Toni Columbo, a professional weaver in Boston, has witnessed an influx of customers wanting their clothes mended in the past few years especially as environmental awareness grows. Ms. Columbo, who has been mending for over four decades, started Invisible Reweaving in 1981 with her mother and sisters.

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