Sewing up a little comfort
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Jeff Benson
Scissors snip and sewing machines surge around the clock. Every
night, the inside of Nancy Ervin’s Newport Beach home looks and
sounds more like a textile factory.
But it’s not an army of seamstresses haphazardly dropping loads of
scraps on the floor and creating a ruckus, carrying on until
midnight. There’s simply work to be done for Ervin’s daughter,
Nicole, and her daughter’s friend, Megan Toman.
In July, the 15-year-old incoming Newport Harbor High School
sophomores discovered how much fun sewing could be. Now, the two
self-employed volunteers are only six blankets short of their goal of
20, which they will personally deliver to a children’s organization,
Nicole said. Possibilities include Children’s Hospital of Orange
County and Orangewood Children’s Home in Orange, she said.
“There’s a poor little kid out there without anything to keep him
warm at night,” Nicole said. “There are people all over out there who
are less fortunate.”
The two are on a roll, whipping out a blanket in roughly six
hours, and they don’t see themselves closing shop at 20 blankets, or
at a single drop-off. As the charitable co-founders of “By Kids 4
Kids,” Nicole and Megan said they plan to piece together hundreds of
themed and colorful children’s blankets for at least another three
years -- until they graduate from high school.
“We pick out the fabrics we like, and we’ll cut 11 6-inch strips of two different fabrics for each one,” Megan said. “But the fun is
in choosing the fabric.”
Without jobs of their own, the teens found yard sales effective in
raising money to buy the necessary fabric. They’ve solicited hundreds
of dollars in donations from neighborhood residents; they’ve sent
thank-you letters to those who contributed; and they’ve recruited
their mothers to help them on their “assembly line.”
“They’re learning how they can be the most efficient,” Nancy Ervin
said. “We help out, too, because we enjoy it. They’re making a system
for how to assemble [the blankets], and now they can get three or
four people going at once -- sewing, pressing, folding and pinning.”
Megan’s mother, Janice Toman, said she’s pleased the girls are
giving time to support a worthy cause without expecting anything in
return.
“I’m thrilled,” Janice Toman said. “It’s just good experience, and
the girls work very well together. It’ll be rewarding when they turn
the blankets over.”
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