Thursday, April 15, 2010

The Sewing Machine Ref


I have a resident rotating with me this month who's trying to sew her daughter some dresses. She told me she took a class years ago because her mother made her, and she recently bought a Singer for $80 at Target. It seemed to be broken, though, because it would only sew a few stitches before jamming and breaking the thread. She actually hand-sewed a simple dress for her daughter when the machine broke. I told her to bring the machine to clinic and let me have a look before she took it to a shop (not that I'm a mechanical genius, but she didn't know what the feed-dogs were and said the top thread wouldn't pick up the bottom thread, so I figured we had a user-error).

So she set it up today and I saw she had the tension maxed out. She was also using the minimum stitch length. I fixed the settings and asked her to do a little stitching on the coverlet she's making. She put the bulk of the material behind the machine and fed it under the needle towards the front. (I didn't notice this because I was signing something, lest you think me negligent). When I did turn around I saw her sewing while pulling the fabric towards her with all her might! No wonder the machine was jamming! Can you imagine? (For non-sewers, the fabric feeds through from front to back.)

I immediately exclaimed "What are you doing to your poor machine?" (I didn't yell this, I've never yelled in my office.) I shooed her away from the poor Singer and told it I would never let her fight with it like that again. I let it know what a good and brave machine it had been, but that it's troubles were over. After some consoling and coaxing, the poor baby sewed a fine straight seam for me, then sobbed with relief. The resident looked on with amazement that the fabric literally walked itself through the machine while I gently guided it, not having to pull and tug. I let her sit down again and asked her to demonstrate the proper sewing technique. She actually finished sewing the thing before the first patient walked in the door, and was beaming with pride.

[Disclaimer: No patients were harmed or left waiting during this clinic.]

I did ask her permission to post her picture and to use it (like Katie's EKG pockets) in a future lecture, and she acquiesced after being threatened with a failing grade for the rotation....uh, I mean she was psyched about the other residents finding out that she sews! (I also told her that her mother should get her money back for those sewing lessons!)

12 comments:

Kitschy Coo said...

I think this is the very moment I realised I've become a proper sewing dork. I'm laughing my head off at the thought of her pulling it from the back :)

Ann Made Studio said...

You are a hero now :) and you have a friend for life ~ Good job ;)

KID, MD said...

That is awesome!! Why didn't I have cool attendings like you??? And go her for sewing during her residency. I didn't sew a stitch for the entire three years.

Sheila said...

That is awesome and glad to know that machine is no longer suffering...lol

marysews said...

But, hey, progress is good!

gwensews said...

OMG! Pulling that fabric forward through the machine is rather like pulling a baby up through your throat! Shees! You have now saved a sewing machine's life. You are my hero!

Dr. Fun (AKA Sister) said...

Yeah Gwen - ouch, right? But she's a much better doctor, and she's on the road to being a great seamstress now. The Singer will no longer tremble in fear at her approach!

What a day - saving a life here, a machine there...Momma needs a glass of wine!

winterpeachblog said...

This is the best story! I'm glad no patients were harmed :) Arlene

Pam said...

Wow! What a great story - that had to keep you laughing all day long:)

SewingRoots said...

Oh my gosh! I'm still a fairly novice sewist but reading this made me cringe on behalf of that poor machine! Thanks for the entertaining read!
Sony

sewistafashionista said...

I didn't know you could sew backwards! The machine was really doing quite a good job considering.

winterpeachblog said...

Thanks for your comment on the Mary Jane shoe pattern. If you want to give me your e-mail address I'll send you the pattern and you'll see why I had to stop at size 9. winterpeachetsy@gmail.com if you are interestsed. Arlene