Seven Amazing Visible Menders You’ll Wish You Followed Sooner

Visible mending is a quietly subversive craft. In some ways it is the antithesis of fast fashion – rejecting the notion of clothes as disposable and instead investing time and care into your garments, attempting to preserve them for as long as possible. 

Unlike its close friend invisible mending, visible mending celebrates the wear and tear that comes from loving your clothes down to their seams. It draws attention to and celebrates the act of mending. Like the oft-metaphorised Japanese practice of kintsugi, mending broken pottery with gold, visible mending transforms clothes into a unique work of art shaped by your life and love. 

The more you think about it, the nicer it gets, and it’s often quite pretty too, so here are some leaders in the visible mending movement to slip into your feed. May their posts entertain, educate and maybe even inspire you to pick up a needle and give it go yourself.


Lily Fulop

Lily Fulop – a designer, illustrator and author of Wear, Repair, Repurpose – runs an Instagram, called @mindful_mending, where she posts her own and a curated range of other peoples’ mends, makes and upcycles. It’s a great resource to see a wide range of clever and cute visible mending techniques and ideas, as well as a good starting point to find other makers’ accounts whose style you vibe with.    


Flora Collingwood-Norris

Ethical Scottish knitwear creator Flora Collingwood-Norris champions the art of visible mending as part of her waste reduction philosophy. Her work in the arena has been so popular that she has since published a book, Visible Creative Mending for Knitwear, and teaches mending courses in-person and online. Her Instagram (@visible_create_mending) showcases her serious skillz at saving sweaters. The woman turns darning into a darn art. 


Sashiko Story

Keiko and Atsushi, the mother and son team of traditional sashiko artisans behind the Instagram @sashikostory, regularly post pictures of their beautiful, intricate sashiko pieces. Atsushi, the son, speaks candidly about his mixed feelings regarding sashiko’s place in the visible mending movement, stressing that “sashiko is more than a trend”. He objects to people calling any mending “sashiko”, when it is in fact an artform with a specific cultural and historical practice that many people, like himself, have spent their whole life practising. This is an account that will inspire you to think critically as well as stitch thoughtfully. 


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Arounna Khounnoraj

Toronto-based maker, teacher and author of Visible Mending and Punch Needle, Arounna Khounnoraj, runs a sumptuous parade of an Instagram page at @bookhou. Think beautiful shots of her assorted projects, makes and mends, along with some tasty tips and tricks sprinkled throughout. Particularly enjoyable are her embroidery videos which are equally educational and enthralling.  


Kate Sekules

Kate Sekules is on the more punk rock side of the visible mending spectrum. A longtime proponent of ethical fashion and mending, she is also an author and academic studying a PhD in material culture and design history. She says her goal is to become a literal doctor of mending. Her book, Mend!: A Refashioning Manual and Manifesto, mixes the history and theory of mending with instructions, tutorials and mendspiration. Her Instagram (@visiblemend) offers a very similar cocktail of content, showing her own uniquely spirited mends.   


Katrina Rodabaugh

Katrina Rodabaugh is an artist and writer whose work explores the intersection of fibre arts, slow fashion and sustainability. Her writing has been published in many places, including the prestigious Peppermint (*wink wink*), and she has several books including Make Thrift Mend and Mending Matters. Katrina lives in a 200-year-old farmhouse in Hudson Valley, New York, where she grows flowers, herbs, fruits, vegetables and plants for her natural dyes, as well as tending chickens and honeybees. As well as sharing her brilliant work, her Instagram @katrinarodabaugh provides tantalising glimpses into those #lifestyle goals. 


Erin Lewis-Fitzgerald

Meet Erin Lewis-Fitzgerald – the maker, “repair artist” and author of Modern Mending. Her online shop modernmending.com is tragically shut right now, while she takes some well deserved maternity leave, but you can still get your fix via her Instagram: @erinlewisfitzgerald. Come for the #remadebyELF series – in which people send her their beloved if slightly broken clothes and she performs emergency mending to spruce them right back up – and stay for the adorable letterbox dioramas she sets up to celebrate timely events. Too cute! 


top image LILY FULOP

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Between 2000 to 2015, global clothing production doubled... while the duration of garment use decreased by 36%.⁠
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We are throwing away clothing at a faster rate than ever before. How can we tackle this problem?⁠
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✨️ WEAR⁠
Be an outfit repeater - wear your items of clothing as long as possible. Learn to style your garments in various ways. Loved clothing lasts.⁠
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✨️ SHARE⁠
If you really need to move it along, share the love with friends - hold a clothing exchange night! Or organise a timeshare with a friend where you swap a few favourite pieces of fashion. If you really can't find a new home for it, then donate to an op shop or charity.⁠
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✨️ CARE⁠
The care of your clothing – washing, drying and ironing – can account for approx 30% of a garment's total carbon footprint. Hand wash, line dry, wash in cold water, and only wash when necessary.⁠
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✨️ REPAIR⁠
Mending – and making – slows down fast fashion buying habits. Repairing used to be common practice, until disposable fashion took over. Extending the life of clothing by just nine months can reduce carbon, water, and waste footprints by 20–30%. Fixing doesn't need to just be utilitarian – get creative with visible mending!⁠
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*Fact from The United Nations Environment Programme⁠
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#PeppermintMagazine #WearShareCareRepair #SustainableFashion⁠
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Accessible to beginner and experienced sewists alike, its classic style makes this skirt a wardrobe staple and a pattern you can happily play on repeat. Curved front pockets and the fun exposed-zip detail at the centre back make this style pop! The Acacia is a blank canvas, awaiting inspiration – add contrast top stitching, trim the pockets with bias binding or even change the length. We’ve chosen the smooth, clean lines that come from facing the waist, with back darts to ensure a neat fit on the hip. *chef’s kiss*⁠
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This pattern was made with the support of the lovely folk at @WeftAndWarpFabrics 🫶🏼 The team at Weft and Warp graciously sent three sewists the fabric of their choice to whip up their own Acacia A-Line – the results are super sweet!⁠
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Head to our website to see the makes from @The.Sewcialite @HandmadeByCarolyn and @You_CanSew - link in bio!⁠
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#PeppermintAcaciaAlineSkirt #PeppermintPatterns #WeftAndWarpFabrics #MeMade
Polka dots for days…

We love this Tansey Top by @_Rubys_Threads_ - the ultimate simple but stylish top you need in your rotation now!

Pattern: #PeppermintTanseyTop 
Fabric: Japanese cotton @RawFibre

#MeMade #PeppermintPatterns
How's your long weekend going? Working hard on your PhD? 🪡✂️🧵⁠
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Image from JoellsLeatherWorks on @Etsy⁠
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#ProjectsHalfDone #SewingPile #ProjectPile
No ordinary wrap dress! 💃

Wrap dress wardrobe malfunction? Not with the Peppermint Waratah Wrap Dress pattern!⁠ We designed the Waratah to make sure this never happens.

Enjoy a few BTS videos from this super fun shoot. Maybe some inspo for Easter weekend sewing?

MODELS/SEWISTS: @Melt.Stitches, @KatieMakesADress @Tricky.Pockets⁠ @Laura_The_Maker 
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Head to the link in bio for the #PeppermintWaratahWrapDress 🪡⁠
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#PeppermintPatterns #SewingPattern #MeMade #WrapDress