Couverture de Check Your Thread: Sewing More Sustainably

Check Your Thread: Sewing More Sustainably

Check Your Thread: Sewing More Sustainably

De : Zoe Edwards
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- Do you love sewing, AND are passionate about fighting the climate and ecological crises? - Are you wondering if your sewing could be made more sustainable? - Do you want to enjoy your creative passion in a way that really reflects your values? Join Zoe Edwards, a sewing nerd and creator of Me-Made-May, on her journey to explore how to sew (and live!) more sustainably. In this podcast we discover ways to sew with sustainability in mind, by flexing our creativity and resourcefulness in new and exciting ways. Check Your Thread’s goal is to show that sewing more sustainably can be fun and fulfilling, (HOLD the side order of guilt, eco-snobbery and FOMO.) Topics covered include: -Mending and garment repair -Upcycling and refashioning -Natural fabric dyeing -Fibre and fabric selection -Slow stitching -Zero Waste sewing patterns -The social and political dimensions of sewing -Craft as activism Find out more... checkyourthread.com© 2025 Check Your Thread
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    Épisodes
    • #216 : Replay – No Small Business on a Dead Planet
      Feb 16 2026

      It seems like every day, another small craft business announces that it’s closing down. In this solo episode I’m looking at the causes. What can we do to both support small businesses AND buy less new stuff for the sake of our planet?

      Support the podcast over on Patreon!

      Image source: Tim Mossholder via Unsplash

      Find out more about the Last Sewist Standing challenge:

      • Ep. #118: Last Sewist Standing with Lise Bauer

      This Forbes article, ‘The Benefits Of Shopping Small All Year Long’ by Jim Granat, was really interesting.

      The shoplocaluk.org website has some more useful information.

      I used the definition of the cost of living crisis from this fuelgenie.co.uk article.

      Enjoy Gina Ferrari’s Substack.

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    • #215: How to Dress Kids More Sustainably with Izzie from ApparelXchange
      Feb 9 2026

      You’ll have heard me say it a ton of times before: sewing clothes yourself isn’t necessarily the most sustainable way to clothe yourself or your family. But obviously, you’ll be prizing my sewing machine out of my cold, dead hands. However, with literal mountains of existing garments already in the world, there are plenty of other ways to source clothing with a reduced environmental and social impact. In this episode, I speak with Izzie Eriksen, founding director of a Glasgow-based social enterprise called ApparelXchange, about the various ways we can clothe our young people more sustainably. We also hear what ApparelXchange is doing to tackle child poverty AND nurture their local community.

      Support the podcast over on Patreon!

      Izzie Eriksen is the founding director of Glasgow-based social enterprise ApparelXchange. Follow them on Instagram @apparelxchange.

      This episode is the sister to:

      • Ep. #206: How to Sew More Sustainably for Kids

      Photos from the ApparelXchange shop and warehouse:

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    • #214: Is Inclusivity Enough? – Kat Camfield with Frances from Sincere Studio
      Feb 2 2026

      Many of us experience the sewing and crafting communities as a welcoming haven in which we find self expression, safety and belonging. But just how inclusive are sewing spaces, both virtual and IRL? And how can we build them better? Guest host Kat Camfield is back with an incredible conversation with Frances Andonopoulos, the visionary behind a different kind of sewing school, Sincere Studio in Portland, Oregon. They discuss how Sincere Studio was built from the ground up with everybody and every body in mind, and why only the social enterprise model can work when creating a space that truly serves all members of a community.

      Support the podcast over on Patreon!

      Kat Camfield is a sewing teacher and sewing retreat organiser living in Victoria, Canada. You can follow Kat on Instagram @cooperativekatsews.

      Hear Kat on previous episodes of CYT:

      • Ep. #196: Eco Printing - Kat Camfield with Carly from Lorelei Textile Design
      • Ep. #200: Making Check Your Thread - with Zoe & Kat, Part 1
      • Ep. #201: Making Check Your Thread - with Zoe & Kat, Part 2
      • Ep. #204: The Sewing Machine, A Novel - Kat Camfield with Natalie Fergie

      Frances Andonopoulos is the founder of Sincere Studio in Portland, Oregon.

      You can follow them on Instagram @sincerestudiopdx.

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