#needleworkmonday | Sewing Retreat: How to Build a Consistent Sewing Practice

in #hive-1279113 years ago


IMG_20220407_161509_013.jpg

Leicestershire, UK, early April 2022, about 4.15pm

I was flipping through my feed one day last week when I came across an invitation to a sewing retreat. It was this weekend, for four days for an hour, and its purpose was to take some time out, a retreat, to learn how to build a consistent sewing practice, so that sewing becomes part of what you do, who you are.

It was about sewing because the woman who hosted it, Cathy Hay, is a seamstress and costumier. She had attended a similar workshop for fine artists, taught by a friend of hers, that was designed to help painters to develop their studio practice, to improve and develop their skills and become a (better) painter.

Cathy thought it would be great to have a similar programme for people, often women, who sew. The principles we learned on the retreat could be applied to any kind of creative practice, or any new thing that you want to bring into your life.

The retreat itself was a lovely experience. It started at 6pm UTC+1 (BST) and was a livestream, happening as you were watching it, with a chat box where everyone could leave comments for Cathy and each other. There were a few minutes at the beginning with everyone arriving and finding their way around the technology. I believe several hundred people took part, from all around the world. The livestream was also posted, so anyone who was asleep at the time could watch it later.

The different sessions of the retreat covered the five stages of creating a habit: building sewing or creative practice into your life so that it becomes a normal everyday thing, like cleaning your teeth. You don't really think about it, you just do it.

Five Stages of Habit Forming

WHY
This was about exploring why you want to build a consistent sewing practice in your life and about what it means to you. The focus was on the process - what is it like for you, when you are sewing - rather than the results of sewing or being driven by a deadline.

This part of the discussion became quite deep and spiritual, but essentially it was about becoming you, who you are, creating yourself and your future self and having an inner creative authority. In many ways, I found this the most interesting part of the retreat.

Another, more prosaic, way of looking at this stage was about setting goals and being accountable.

CUES, ANCHORS AND HABIT STACKING
These were the triggers for your sewing practice, the things that would make sewing practice automatic, a habit, that you do naturally as part of your life, in the same way that you clean your teeth before you go to bed. We talked about the following:

  • time - when might you fit sewing practice into your life? is it a set time, or do you have a floating cue (important for shift workers and carers, for example)? when would it be easy?
  • place - where would your sewing practice take place? was it always the same place? how did it need to be to make it easy for you to use?
  • cues - these included things like lighting a candle, preparing and drinking a beverage, having a special chair, or quilt or cushion, some healthy snacks.

We were encouraged to consider all the senses in creating cues - touch, taste, vision, hearing, smell - so that practice became associated with those specific smells, sounds and sights.

Another element to help build consistent practice was to stack this new habit with an existing one. So that when thing happened, maybe returning home after classes, that was the trigger for practice.

REWARDS
This was about creating rewards that were appropriate in this context (especially rewards that were healthy and contributed to a enriched life). Some were very simple but very effective:

  • positive feedback from friends and family.
  • community sharing, maybe through social media.
  • the sticker book: literally give yourself a gold star.
  • putting notes to your future self in a jar.
  • saving small amounts of money towards a material treat (a tool or yarn).

I wrote more about rewards and some of the challenges in yesterday's post. Mainly, it is about finding the right thing for you.

REFLECTION AND ADJUSTMENT
The last section was reflecting on your practice and how it is working, then thinking about what might need changing to make it easier and more deeply satisfying and to prevent your practice being derailed by life.

Two analogies were used to help explain the process - riding a bike and surfing - in both you have to constantly respond to your environment to maintain your balance and keep moving towards where you want to go. So, in your practice, you need to become both proficient and agile in responding to your environment, and just like riding a bike, perhaps even more so for surfing, to takes practice to become proficient.

This was really important because, just like riding a bike, you might not be very good at it at the beginning, but being kind to yourself, you get up and keep going (or maybe come back the next day and have another go). The discussion about reflection and adjusting kept circling back to the "why" - why do you want to develop a consistent sewing practice? What are your goals, what do you want for yourself, who do you want to be.

Thoughts About the Retreat

I really enjoyed this, taking an hour each day to sit and reflect. The timing was perfect for me, I usually come in from a walk about 5pm, so there was time to put away shopping and do some preparation for the evening meal, before sitting down with a cup of tea for an hour.

I was mainly knitting each day, quite slowly, I noticed last night. You were asked to bring a journal and pen and I made some notes. In the last session, I also lit a candle: it's made from soy oil with a wooden wick and smells of wood sage and seasalt. It sits on my table, but I don't always remember to light it.

There was a comments box during the live stream where participants were responding to Cathy or to each other. Many people were dealing with challenges, including living with ADHD, and there was lots of support for them from other commenters, some of whom were also living with similar challenges.

One of the best parts of the retreat for me was near the beginning of the first session where Cathy asked everyone how they were feeling. She helped everyone feel present, in the moment, where, regardless of what has happened in the past, or what may happen in the future, for this moment, we are mostly okay. I found that experience very liberating, both relaxing and energising, at the same time.

The last session is tonight, and all the recorded sessions will be available until Friday 29 April:
Retreat Day 1: The Power of Habit
Retreat Day 2: How to Stack Cues to Form New Habits
Retreat Day 3: Rewards are Powerful because they Satisfy Cravings
Retreat Day 4: Reflection is a vital part of achieving your goals

Screenshot (379).png


image.png

Three things newbies should do in their first week and, for most things, forever afterwards!

image.png

Sort:  

Think i need to do crochet everyday too @shanibeer ?

The idea is to work out the practice that works for you. You like to do your practice on a Sunday afternoon, I think? That's a very good arrangement 😍.

Every day may be a little hard, especially if you have other things that have to be done - studying or work or family and enjoying friends. But if you want to build in more time, maybe set aside an hour one evening in the week?

What do you think? 😍

Well that could be okay, i mean i usually spend my sunday for my crafts, and we would have more free times during the holiday season which will come soon in my country.. :)

😍

Hi @shanibeer,
Thank you for participating in the #teamuk curated tag. We have upvoted your quality content.
For more information visit our discord https://discord.gg/8CVx2Am

😍

As always you struck a chord… habit forming… sighhhhhhhh (and a laugh, not only a sigh) Habits (some) are still a topic for me and will perhaps remain for longer. And in contrary to my more -ahem- driven and hateful approach, I love to read about how you tackled this: sewing and habit forming. Which in my mind is already a kind of habit stacking, as you learned about the habit forming through the pleasurable topic of sewing.
I also find it inspiring that you so often find workshops, retreats, ideas etc to widen your (and your readers… I mean myself) horizon. This alone is very meaningful for me. It may help to come out of one's rut and open up possibilities.
For me there was again an instant realisation (I often had, but seldom work on): I only sew because I want the clothes. I want the clothes because they are a part of my identity. And sadly this identity is still deeply rooted in gender ideals, meaning I somehow delude myself that when I wear the right clothes I will be loved, which again has some not so nice connection into ideas of thinness, being young and abled-body…
This is different for knitting or crochet where I cherish the process.
I am super interested if you like to share some of your „whys“ for sewing and if these are the same to knit or crochet?

I was thinking about you especially during the first session 😘. I think you would enjoy it, if you have time to watch it before Friday when they will be taken down. The ideas take us to a different place, wherever we are starting from.

The second one - cues and habit stacking - is very practical.

The rewards one is more interesting. I have been thinking about intrinsic and extrinsic rewards. There is an intrinsic reward in doing, but there is also something about the external acknowledgement, whether that is building the sticker book or interaction from another person. I was thinking that needleworkmonday might be one source ... or perhaps it needs to be a little more formal, a group (or one and one other) making a commitment and then accounting for that each week?

The whys are so interesting, I am still thinking about them. The whys and the rewards are connected in some way, I think. I will be writing some other posts as I develop my thinking (but maybe not in needleworkmonday).

Do you have a group for your (artistic/creative) practice? I really liked the notion of the VISUALise mentoring group and the creative dialogue (the link is in in the Boro and Sashiko post).

I so want to watch… perhaps I need to investigate if its possible to download. I have a bit of time problems till the end of June, which is on the one hand fabulous (exhibition end of May, then deadline for Basquiat mid june and a application in June and another exhibition in July… if this only would bring money 😆) FOr the second half of the year there are no things so far… more time for watching, learning and sewing, but I would prefer some more projects.
Rewards are really an interesting topic. And not without problems as you mentioned. I think I often write that I am intensely driven by external validation, but am in the same moment critical of this external sources and always double guess praise/compliments etc. I fear I am a victim to the German „höher, weiter, besser“ (higher, faster, better) which is in my view tightly connected to capitalism and the idea that productivity is the only way to earn worth.
So… for me its always a tight rope between being accountable, challenge oneself to grow and learn and being content with being.
Cool… I omitted every answer to your questions (I am joking :-D)
As I am very interested in your thoughts I hope I do not miss your post about this topic 🙏

And with the group… right now I work either alone or with Silvi. I think in painting and sewing creatively I need concentration and the feeling of being not observed. THis is/was very different in dancing. There I worked nearly always with other people. I also am not a loner regarding organising exhibitions or projects. I always prefer to do it with other artists together. Only the painting/sculpting/sewing act… there I prefer to be alone.
Perhaps I feels much more accomplished in dancing as I feel in painting/sculpting… not sure. How is this for you?

Sorry long answer. I am still very exited about the studio although we do not know how long we can hold it. I will send you some photos on discord. But it is not finished, only so that I can work there :-D

You'll know when it is the right time to take on something new 😍.

Our sewing group is this week and I am going to ask about the next round of travelling books. I think I have written about it before: each participant has a sketchbook and decides their theme and then decorates their book and the first few pages accordingly ("rocks", "Basquiat", "flowers" etc). Each month, each book is passed to the next person in rotation and each participant has a month to respond to the theme of the sketchbook they have been given. They add a piece of work inspired by the theme and then write a little about it. The next month, all the books move on.

This year, I was thinking about joining. I had already been thinking about doing knitted samples, I thought it would be a good way (discipline?) to try out ideas inspired by different themes. Now I have done the retreat, I was thinking the travelling books would be a good way of building practice.

I put "Basquiat" as a joke because of your exhibition, but now I'm thinking that would be a good theme 😂

Wow!!! this is a real psychological approach to sewing!!! marvelous! I have not yet heard anyone suggest using this approach to needlework! certainly this practice will have a very positive effect on the nervous system and the creation of good, effective habits

I'm hoping so, I have bought a sticker book and some stickers!