Tags
Coming of Age, Elna sewing machine, Handmade, Nostalgia, Original poetry, Poetry, Prom dress, Sewing, Sewing pattern, Sewing room, Simplicity 9825

Simplicity 9825 by Joan Currie
I taught myself to sew
in my teenage years,
on my mother’s Elna machine
in a corner of our basement.
The sewing room was a hodgepodge
of fabric and notions
left there for us to take.
Abandoned pattern pieces
lay scattered across the big
Formica counter
beside boxes of straight pins,
thimbles, pinking shears,
measuring tapes.
Three deep drawers held
a jumble of thread spools,
button and snap cards, lace,
sequins in narrow tubes,
bits of tailor’s chalk.
The cupboards were crammed
with tweeds from the woolen mills,
velvets, tulle, corduroy,
and raw silk from her travels.
On Saturday afternoons
I slipped downstairs
with a Simplicity pattern
and my transistor radio,
and entered
that pulsing, glorious world
where a flat piece of cloth
became my prom dress.