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Bloomington-Normal, Illinois
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| LifeMonday, April 9, 2007 4:25 PM CDT |
Tie one on
Aprons coming back as women wrap themselves in nostalgia
She could use it to shoo flies clinging to a screen, signal a farmer for dinner or dry the salty tears of a child. Sometimes she'd use her apron to wipe away a bead of sweat, ward off a chill or catch her own tears as she waved goodbye to a husband or son going off to war. Maybe we shouldn't have given up our aprons, a symbol of warmth and security that tied us, ever so neatly, to our past. The sturdy material came in handy to dry your hands, open a tight Mason jar or dust a table on your way to answer the door, said 85-year-old Marian Harris of Normal, who has a dozen or more, including the muslin apron stitched 75 years ago in Bible school. "It was a necessity," she said. "People didn't do as much laundry then. People had to protect their clothes." Her favorite has a turquoise terry cloth towel sewn into the waistband. "This one was a handy one, especially if I was cooking for a crowd," she said, holding it up to her waist. Arms stiffened by arthritis can no longer reach around to tie it. A stack of aprons lay on her sofa. Each told a story. The fancy smocked lilac gingham, from her mother-in-law, told of a time when women pumped water from a nearby well. "She said she always put the pocket on the left side because the pump handle would catch on it on the right." Aprons were made from unraveled feed and flour sacks, along with dress remnants. Deep pockets held crumpled tissues, wooden clothespins, a pencil stub, stray marbles or a chain of safety pins. Apron archaeologist EllynAnne Geisel of Colorado doesn't think we've seen the last of aprons as women wrap themselves in the comfort of their homes again -- cooking, entertaining and picking up needlecrafts. She bought her first apron eight years ago at a thrift store. As she moved a hissing iron across the smooth fabric, she started wondering about the woman who'd wore it, what her life was like, how many children she had. Now she has 400 aprons, along with memories gathered from across the country, which she shares in "The Apron Book: Making, Wearing and Sharing a Bit of Cloth and Comfort" (Andrews McMeel, 2006 $16.95). The book traces the evolution of the apron and includes 95 color photos with enough gingham, ruffles and whimsical rickrack flowers to evoke a memory or two. The author's fascination with aprons led her to start designing and selling her own aprons on www.apronmemories.com. Two of them have been worn by Bree, played by Marcia Cross, on "Desperate Housewives." Aprons hit their heyday in the '50s, when modern household appliances gave women more free time to spend sewing. Happy homemakers were whipping up aprons for every occasion -- the holidays, bridge club, baby showers. When electricity came along, aprons started to fall off, Harris said. With a washer and dryer nearby, you didn't have to be as careful of splatters. And then something else came along -- pantsuits. You could still pull an apron over them, there was even a vest-like pattern designed for pants, but June Cleaver never would have approved. And during the women's movement of the '60s, women happily cut their apron strings and ran out into the workforce, Geisel said. "Women tossed them -- even those lovingly sewn by their own mothers and grandmothers -- straight into the giveaway bag." And the next generation came to know aprons as a junior high sewing project. Helen Leake of Lexington agrees with Geisel that aprons are making a comeback, not because of nostalgia but because they're practical. She still wears a feed sack apron and has used it as a potholder, gripping the handle of a cast iron skillet or pulling a roast from the oven. But the apron story she'll never forget was about a former neighbor, a widow in her '80s who kept eyeing the Corvette she allowed a young man to store in her garage. She wouldn't ask him for a ride but Leake did. He handed her the keys and she walked up to Esther Maas' front door and asked if she'd like to go for a spin. "She said, 'Should I take my apron off before I get in there?' We didn't go very far but she was thrilled to death, although she worried about her apron." Giving and storing themAprons are inexpensive gifts, and are easy to personalize. If you're lucky enough to still have your mother's or grandmother's apron, you can take steps to preserve it. Here are some tips from The Apron Book (Andrews McMeel, 2006 $16.95). • Have an apron party; hit the fabric store for inexpensive broadcloth and patterned fabrics, remnant bundles and hem tape, rickrack, felt, buttons and other accessories. Precut the pattern pieces for simple waist aprons cut out of different fabrics so guests can mix and match. Set up your iron and sewing machine. If your friends don't sew, provide a batch of bright white chef's aprons, fabric markers, a glue gun and decorative trimmings. • Make a handprint apron for mom or grandma using a crisp white chef's apron, fabric paints and pens. Wash, dry and iron the apron to preshrink it. Practice making handprints on scrap paper. When the handprint is dry, write the child's name and age next to it with a fabric pin. • Make a birthday apron, adding your child's handprint to it each year. • On a special occasion, set out an apron and invite guests to write a message. • Make a teen apron by decorating it with the pockets of a pair of his or her old jeans. • If there's a back yard chef in the family, decorate a chef's apron with recipes or packets of spicy rubs in the pocket. Pin on a gift certificate to a gourmet cooking store or meat shop. • "Tie One on Day" is celebrated the fourth Wednesday of November. On Thanksgiving Eve, wrap a loaf of bread in an apron, tuck a prayer or note of encouragement in the pocket and deliver it to someone who could use a lift. Storage tips • Do not starch aprons prior to storing them. • Store them flat, not folded. If you can't store them flat, roll them. If you must fold them, re-fold them at least twice a year, folded differently. • Place acid-free tissue paper between each apron and use more when folding or rolling them. Ask your local dry cleaner if you can buy some of the tissue paper. • Fabric needs to breathe, so store aprons in a drawer or archival quality storage box. Do not store them in plastic bins or bags. • Use herbal moth repellants to keep away cloth-eating insects. |
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