Monday, May 6, 2013

The Rag Trade..............

I'm not just a blogger.
John and I also have a fabric business - we represent European textile mills for the North American market.
It was a great business for a long time.....................until China took over the market and customers now, for the most part, " knock off " European patterns and have their clothing lines produced in China.

Montreal was Canada's equivalent to the U.S.'s Manhattan for the " schmatta " or " rag trade " as it used to be known in the industry.  The ironic thing is, it was called the rag trade when clothing was actually being produced in North America - when quality control meant something - when people took pride in the finished product - when a small piece of fabric sewn into the interior of a garment stating " made in Canada " or in your case " Made in the USA "  was a " given ",
Now that it's made in China or India -  and is clearly inferior ( in most cases - certainly not in all - but it's safe to say in most ) it's the Textile Industry.
I loved everything about this industry..............from the bolts of fabric to the design rooms - from the cutting rooms to the sewing tables.............but mostly I loved the atmosphere in the factories. In Montreal it was mostly Italian first generations that ran the factories and these people had such a sense of pride in the work they did.
They sang, they hummed, they screamed, they fought and they laughed. A lot.  They brought life to the old brick buildings that housed them.  They sat at their machines from 7.30 in the morning until 4.30 in the afternoon - making beautiful garments.  And through their efforts they bought homes - educated their children and took trips back to Italy. Often.  These people were the back bone of an amazing fast paced energized thriving industry.
I would sit in the office sometimes giggling away at their antics - as they forced home made delicious meals upon the young office staff.
Most of these companies were owned by 2nd and 3rd generation families - Jewish families - that started off as a tailor working from his cold water flat here in the city - fleeing from a war torn Europe - they worked until they were able to bring their families over - they worked until they were able to build their businesses up,  they hired hundreds of thousands of immigrants and were a real force in this city.
We actually had MILLS in this province - as I know many Southern States did - where North American fabric was made.

I'm in my 50's now - I know that everything changes - it's the way of the world - we must always be evolving  
as a people -  and as a planet - but I also know that some things simply shouldn't.  And that losing this sector was not a good thing.  Not a good thing at all. When hundreds of thousands -  millions actually - are left scrambling around looking for an alternative job because in the the middle of their earning years - their job is made redundant because a factory in India or China was able to to reduce production by 75%.  This is NOT evolution - this is regression.
For me this was the biggest sin committed against the North American people ( of both Countries ).
What built up our middle class was completely wiped out with both our governments standing idly by while companies scrambled to find cheaper methods of production.  This was not a " left " or " right " decision either - both sides of politics share equal blame in this.
Sears almost single handedly destroyed a company I worked at for many years - a 3 generation company - a thriving manufacturer of higher end ladies coats - while I worked there they employed 180 factory employees and well over 200 in total employees - ( and that amount was already almost half of what it had once been )  I took care of payroll and watched over the course of 10 years or so the dwindling names on my weekly list.
There were hundreds if not thousands of factories here in Montreal - and these were not the sweatshops of the old days - these were Union run clean honest factories that filled a social need of keeping people EMPLOYED.  Of keeping people with enough earning power to keep the rest of the spokes in the wheel turning...............to keep a city - a province - a country - a continent with a strong middle class base.

The company I worked at was forced to close it's doors - it just couldn't compete - and could not offer the same high quality by having the coats imported.  After 80 years - 3 generations - and a reputation as one of the best in North America - the doors closed - and the building now houses condos.  I watched as one by one people lined up to receive their last pay cheques - tears in their eyes taking them - tears in my eyes giving them - tears in the bosses eyes as they shook hands with them and thanked each one individually for the work they had done over the years.

This was a good thing?

I personally chose to not shop at Sears - I personally chose to boycott Walmart's - but at this stage I'd be walking around naked if I boycotted every business who prefers to resort to slave labor.  ( and I'd be driving around in a horse and buggy ) You simply can't beat a dead horse I suppose -

And you most certainly cannot beat a dead employee now can you?
After all at 14 cents an hour they're not such a great loss?
Even when it's 400 human beings - they can most definitely be replaced can't they?
Have a look at progress folks........................

BANGLADESH CLOTHING FACTORY COLLAPSES KILLING OVER 400 EMPLOYEES
Heartbreaking - on too many levels,
And it will fall into the archives of yesterday's news before we know it.
" MADE IN BANGLADESH "
" MADE IN INDIA "
" MADE IN CHINA "
For 14 cents an hour.


Saturday, May 4, 2013

Heart and Soul....................

Good morning everyone!

Finished at April's yesterday - so now I can show you the little " something - something " I did for her on her chairs......................
If you remember April collects hearts - lots and lots of hearts ( if you haven't seen her amazing collection - you can see them HERE )

So once I tore apart the old seats..................




There was enough hay in these chairs to keep a barn full of cows fed for a week I'm sure


John says - Uggghhh - that's our dining room table - do you have to do that there?
Suzan says - WELL I could use my imaginary workshop I suppose - or our bed - but that would be the only other alternative.............
Suzan says - We need to move - because that imaginary workshop has to become a reality at some point


Anyway - as I continued working an idea was born..................



I cut out 4 hearts from scraps left over


and stapled a heart to the bottom of each seat.....................

John says - I think that looks a little tacky
Suzan says- It has meaning for April John - I didn't do it on a whim
( well actually I did it do it on a whim - but it still has meaning ) 
And April loved them!

Ok - I don't have a clear picture of her parson chairs - but you can sort of make them out here


She decided to channel a little Sarah Richardson into the design - and decided to have them reupholstered in 2 fabrics ( I did not do these -  a little completely out of my league ) 

The seating part was covered in this gorgeous paisley


and the back was done in a very light " taupish " type of color - and MONOGRAMMED!!!!!!!!!!!
that's me screaming because I think it's just brilliant!


 you just know there's some monogramming that's going to be going on in my world from this day forward, right?


she brought the fabric into a lady that does this ( for next to nothing I might add ) and then brought it already monogrammed to the reupholsterer.

and they tie in beautifully with the 4 dining room chairs................


She has TASTE this new friend of mine.....................

So let's see - she started off with a dining room like this - a dining room set she had inherited from a beloved Aunt and couldn't bear to part with


and ended up with this



wood shelves replaced with glass in the China cabinet - and lighting installed by her hubby


and a little " thank you " for her business


This job took way longer than it should have - 
Between waiting for paint to arrive
Fabric taking a week to arrive
Reupholster taking longer than we thought  over a week
( sorry April - you know I have to protect my reputation here -2 of those weeks were completely 
out of my control lol ) 
These particular days I have to take complete responsiblity for
A mini crisis at my end
A doctors appointment at my end 
Me having to spend a day with with one of our mills................
Me drinking on the job ( HERE ) - but that was part April's fault too

IT'S FINALLY DONE 

And I really did put my heart and soul into this job :)


AND if all of the above hadn't happened - we wouldn't have gotten to know each other like we did
sometimes things happen for a reason...................and that was one of the nicest surprises to come out of this job.

Have a great rest of the weekend everyone!
Stay tuned, I spent most of Friday with Caroline - from Piorra Maison - so you get to come shopping with me - we are considering ( and that really is the only stage it's at - at this point ) doing an online shop from my blog - so you guys would actually get to SHOP instead of just looking at photos of all her beautiful things!  Thoughts?

Now excuse me - I'm going to make a tea and curl up with this beautiful birthday gift from Caroline
Friday was a beautiful day ( in the neighbourhood ) 


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