Pattern making: A stitch in time?
A look at how one pattern maker in Chicago thinks about her profession.
Jen Beeman is a pattern maker based in Chicago. She runs the patternshop Grainline Studio.
Here’s how she describes her job:
“Nobody ever realizes that people are involved in the making of your clothes anymore. People just assume that it’s a machine that makes our clothes. We’re so removed from how our garments or products in general are made that they never assume that there’s a person who does that.
With pattern making, if you can imagine something you want to make, then you can make it because you have the tools to make the pattern to make that a reality. And that’s really exciting to me – the creativity.
What it involves is a large work table, brown paper, 90lb craft paper, rulers, and a pencil. That’s pretty much it.”
The Archer Button Up shirt is one of Grainline’s most popular patterns.
http://shop.grainlinestudio.com/product/archer-button-up-shirt
“[My job]’s going away because computers are making things more efficient. And you need less patternmakers to do the same amount of work and also things are getting outsourced overseas where the things are being made. But for me, it means that you need to be more creative and think outside the box to make it a viable career.
In 2009, I randomly started a blog and published my first pattern in, I think, 2010. And from there, it’s taken off. There are people in high school who buy them, and I’ve had people email me who are in their eighties. I’m just kind of flabbergasted that that many people are using my patterns and it is world-wide too which blows my mind.
I’ve thought a lot about what I would do if I couldn’t do patternmaking, and I honestly can’t come up with an answer. And I know that’s super lame. But I just really love what I’m doing. And I just know I’m really, really lucky to be able to do what I do.”
Hear more stories in our Disappearing Jobs series: