For most of us, taking some time to unplug might look like cracking open a book or unrolling a yoga mat. For Brooklyn-based jewelry maker, textile designer and sewer Martha Moore Porter, unwinding means sitting down at her sewing machine and whipping up her own clothes.
“I view the entire process of making clothes for myself to be an act of caring for myself: my imagination, my brain, my busy hands,” says Porter. “It’s expressive, but there are rules and there’s always something new to learn.”
As a 2019 New Year’s resolution, Porter pledged to create her own clothes for an entire year. Initially, it was a personal challenge to encourage Porter to use her sewing machine more, but ultimately, it became a challenge to take time for herself, spending hours away from her phone.
A year before, in an earlier iteration of this challenge, Porter pledged to sew at least one garment a month. Some of these pieces were chronicled on her Instagram under her internet pseudonym Buried Diamond. By the end of the year she had far exceeded her expectations and ended up with 40 tops, dresses, skirts and more. Encouraged by her overwhelming success, Porter decided to take the plunge of pledging a yearlong ready-to-wear fast. A #RTWfast simply means that sewists (which, BTW, is a term that refers to someone who sews works of art) will abstain from buying premade clothing for a year. During this time, they can buy fabric and patterns to create clothing of their own and they can wear whatever is already hanging in their closet. But there are no trips to Zara to pick up a dress for that upcoming party or visits to J.Crew to find a blouse for a big interview.