Sewing Labs stitches expanded identity as social media influencer with SINGER partnership

December 28, 2020  |  Austin Barnes

Eileen Bobowski, The Sewing Labs

Editor’s note: This article is underwritten by Plexpod — a progressive coworking platform offering next generation workspace for entrepreneurs, startups, and growth-stage companies of all sizes — but was independently produced by Startland News.

The art of sewing might have been forgotten by some, but it surely isn’t lost, Eileen Bobowski said as the SINGER Corporation needles a thread of growth for one of Kansas City’s highest-impact social enterprises.  

The Sewing Labs

“We’re wanting to teach people,” Bobowski, executive director of The Sewing Labs, said of the 2016-stitched effort, designed to support women experiencing poverty, addiction, incarceration, immigration or other struggles by equipping them with job skills training in the art of sewing. 

Click here to read the full story of The Sewing Lab’s beginnings — born out of Weave Gotcha Covered.

SINGER announced a partnership with The Sewing Labs earlier this month — landed largely by the operation’s philosophy that mending garments and other items holds health and wellness benefits. 

The partnership is expected to see the nonprofit support the creation of educational and marketing content in exchange for sewing machines, companion products, and scholarship dollars, Bobowski explained. 

“They work with a lot of influencers and they create video content with single, individual influencers, but they’ve never worked with a nonprofit organization before,” Bobowski said of the honor which will also show off The Sewing Labs newly opened space inside the Don Bosco Community Center.

“There’s an amazing community that gets built in a room where people are sitting next to each other and they’re creating and they’re sewing and the people in the room use that community to build each other up. It’s really magical what happens.”

Such a feeling will be captured as cameras roll in the new space, but what online viewers won’t see are the challenges The Sewing Lab worked to overcome amid the COVID-19 pandemic. 

“When we had to close our doors in March, we very organically found ourselves in the mask-making realm,” she said of what became the most common pandemic pivot among sewists and apparel companies, but which also required careful problem solving with lockdown encouraged and social distancing requirements in place. 

“We put together kits of all the materials you would need to make 12 masks. We put them in Ziploc bags with fabric, elastic, nose wires, and we pulled together our volunteers and students and our teachers and had people working safely at home sewing masks.”

The pandemic effect also spurred initial outreach between Bobowski and SINGER, ultimately leading to their newly forged partnership, she recalled. 

“I asked if they had any sewing machines they could donate back in April and they donated 30 refurbished machines to us and said, ‘Get these out to your stitchers who are sewing masks,’” Bobowski said of the correspondence, which soon saw her follow-up about potential partnership and collaborative opportunities.

“The thing that’s come out of this pandemic is the online push. We work with other nonprofits in town to host our classes [such as “Sewing is a Universal Language”] and they were wanting to get online and create content,” she explained. 

“In a weird way, we grew out of this pandemic. We continued the conversation and we came up with ideas.”

Click here to read about SINGER’s pandemic partnership with KC-based Rightfully Sewn.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by The Sewing Labs (@thesewinglabs)

Using curbside pickup procedures, The Sewing Labs saw 64,000 masks ordered and donated at the height of COVID’s first wave, Bobowski said, noting the experience has pushed the nonprofit to scale its efforts as sewing and creative arts — much like cooking and baking — became trendy overnight. 

“I don’t believe in coincidence, I think things happen for a reason in our world. … We’re grateful for the resurgence that exists and there’s been a really great resurgence for men as well. It’s not just for women,” she said. 

“We’ve had waiting lists lately for our [socially distant] classes and workshops. People feel like they have a purpose in life. The timing is so unique.”

Click here to learn more about The Sewing Labs and its mission.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2020 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Zach Pettet, Fountain City FinTech, nbkc

        Fountain City FinTech first cohort named; could draw coastal, international companies to KC

        By Tommy Felts | September 27, 2018

        A half-dozen companies from outside Kansas City earned spots among the first cohort of Fountain City FinTech, said Zach Pettet, hopeful the metro could attract the firms to stay or build long-term partnerships. “There’s a good chance that a number of firms will be putting down roots and creating jobs in Kansas City. We don’t…

        Big Data Summit returning to Techweek KC; organizer lauds refreshed content for 2018

        By Tommy Felts | September 27, 2018

        Enhanced leadership, along with the Big Data Summit Track, is bringing the “tech” back to Techweek KC, said Don Peterson. The Big Data Summit, Kansas City’s annual convergence of data, technology and analytics, founded by Peterson and the KC Big Data Group in 2012, had stopped working with Techweek KC after the 2016 event, he…

        Kim Naramore and Jillian Carlile, TravelHive

        Digital Sandbox KC mixes in Carroll’s Irish Bitters, TravelHive, iSocial and Grant Company

        By Tommy Felts | September 27, 2018

        After more than five years, Digital Sandbox KC’s proof-of-concept program continues to see a high volume of quality applicants with a wide range of concepts, said Jeff Shackelford. Four startups receiving project funding from Digital Sandbox KC were announced Thursday. Two of those awards are in partnership with Innovation Stockyard in St. Joseph, said Shackelford,…

        Flow Forward

        Fresh funding brings Flow Forward to $8M in capital; pushes startup closer to first human clinical trials

        By Tommy Felts | September 26, 2018

        An additional $1.2 million in Series A financing puts Fairway-based medical technology company Flow Forward closer to human clinical trials for hemodialysis patients, said Dr. Nicholas Franano. The new investment — from a group of investors, including Mid-America Angels — brings Flow Forward’s total funding raised to date to more than $8 million, said Franano,…