Follow
Share
Read More
This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Find Care & Housing
Ann Reid has a good suggestion in switching from sewing to crafting.  Wreaths are easy to make, and it's easy to put one together.    If you have a garden or access to grapevines, you can harvest them and help her wind them around the base to create the wreath.

Dry herbs or specific flowers (like Lunaria, oregano, sage, artemisias) and let her choose which to use in the wreaths.

Or take her to Michael's or JoAnn Fabrics to select artificial flowers.    I've never gone through that section of either store without having my spirits elevated.  Even if the flowers are artificial, the beauty is so inspirational.

An even easier project is to create an arrangement in a vase.   All you need is a good sized vase and flowers.   No sewing involved, but she could cut out a swatch of lovely fabric to match and tie it as a ribbon around the vase.
Helpful Answer (6)
Report

See if you can change her desire to sew something else besides the tiny doll clothes. Maybe show her a simple quilt block and get her to stitch those together. I would not remove the dolls or the machine because she still remembers those things as something she did quite well.

Or find a very simple toddler pattern and let her try that. Very few pieces, straight sewing lines, no gathering or detail. Just see where it goes
Helpful Answer (5)
Report

Is there something different she could do with the dolls? Tell each doll's story, written or recorded? Photograph them too? At the end of making the clothes, now might be the time to archive the achievement.
Helpful Answer (17)
Report
mek1951 Aug 2019
Brilliant!!!
(6)
Report
See 2 more replies
Thank you everyone for great suggestions.....sometimes we just get so bogged down with the day to day that seemingly clear alternatives are blurred with our own frustrations as well. Hopefully mom will expand her horizons and find enjoyment once again in her long lost hobby.
Helpful Answer (9)
Report

I sew, I know the peace and contentment that she is searching for. The creating of beautiful or useful items, the rhythm of the sewing machine, the mindless concentration that allows you the ability to think, the purpose, these are what sewing means for me, judging from responses I am not the only one that finds sewing beyond therapeutic.

What about you helping her with keeping track of items and threading the machine? Then encourage her to make lap throws or baby blankets that can be delivered to the neonatal ICU or to the AL you are hoping to get her in. She can do them as simple 2 sided throws or use scraps and sew them together randomly, which is pretty simple. Or make blankets for the local animal shelter? Lots of simple items that have a tremendous need and impact. Directing her to be helpful might be the change needed for her to switch gears. Just an idea.

Another thought, would she be willing to part with any dolls? If yes she could adopt a woman and children crisis home and make small throws and gift a doll and blanket for the little girls in the shelter, and make larger ones for the older girls who are oft times forgotten in these places.
Helpful Answer (12)
Report
my2cents Aug 2019
Good idea on the baby blankets - easy straight lines and bigger items without intricate detail and can convince her it is to help someone else.
(8)
Report
How about helping her focusing on the planning her projects and exploring other types of crafts. Fashion magazines to gather images. On line images of fabric that can be examined by enlargement.

YouTube offers many craft videos Some of them are doll related others cover other crafts that are fun to watch. Doll face makeovers, redesigning of clothes, as well as intricate finger nail art!
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

I have always LONGED to be able to sew, but I was so inept that MY FATHER had to make my dainty apron or I would still be in 7th grade today!

There are really delightful projects available in our local Walmart, that through the magic of Velcro, super glue, self stick fabric tape, iron-on appliqué and other such materials, can produce a finished product that even I am incapable of ruining, and look REALLY GOOD.

I haven’t seen any doll dresses specifically but you might find a substitute that can satisfy her creative heart without creating frustration.

I’d also try the local craft stores and dollar stores. Maybe she’d be willing to try to “help” YOU make an autumn wreath for your front door or Christmas ornaments for the Church Bazaar or how about making doll furniture (kits available) ??

If she’s willing to TRY something different, of course she’d be praised outlandishly for her project. Hopefully you can find something FUN for her!!
Helpful Answer (11)
Report
Countrymouse Aug 2019
FIVE DOLLARS A BUTTON!?!?!?!?

Sheesh! That's... $300 an hour! - as long as you concentrate and get a bit of a move on and don't drop any buttons on the floor.

Did she at least throw in the button for free?

I'm in the wrong job.
(2)
Report
I'm not a sewer but I am a knitter, and I feel bad for your mom. I also feel bad for you and your dad. Does your mom remember making all those dresses for her dolls? Would she let you take off one of the dresses, turn it inside out, and examine it? Might that be enough to keep her interested and away from the patterns?
Helpful Answer (10)
Report

I began sewing when I was 13, progressing into making suits.  There's an inherent peace and sense of accomplishment in sewing.  

What I'd try is something simple, like the "fidget blankets".  Let her select the fabric, cut it, select the thread too.  You can baste it for her, and if she can't follow that using the machine (which you could also thread for her), just let her do whatever she can.   Hand sewing might be easier, especially if her vision isn't that strong.   (As I aged I had to remove my glasses more frequently to get a good look at what I was doing!)

It's going to be hard to balance the frustration of noncomprehension with the past benefit of accomplishment, but sometimes just handling the fabric and caressing it creates satisfaction.   

Help her by putting the patterns in a place you can find, if she can't, by threading the machine needle, and by creating several different pincushions, some of which you'll keep handy for her when others can't be located.

But I do think that fidget blankets might work; there's no set pattern, stitching can be done by hand, and it doesn't matter what the finished product looks like.
Helpful Answer (9)
Report
MaryKathleen Aug 2019
I was thinking crazy quilts, but since she isn't a quilter probably wouldn't work.
(1)
Report
What a dilemma.I love to sew. I love to make Kimonos. And I can just FEEL what this would be like. Because you would WANT to do it and be unable. I wish I could advise. I hate like heck to think of taking it from her. But I hate the frustration of it for her. Is there anything like handstitching that might work, something else in really simple needlework, like rugbwork that you poke through the holes and tie?
My heart aches for her.
Helpful Answer (11)
Report
MaryKathleen Aug 2019
My heart aches for her too. I don't have dementia and at 85 I can't sew like I used to. It is so frustrating.
(1)
Report
Abby, your mom has dementia, yes? Trying to explain, rationally, something to a person with dementia is well nigh impossible.

I have two thoughts. One is to disappear the gowns, sewing machine and maybe the dolls. She'll be angry, but she may be less frustrated. Tell her that they were discovered to have bedbugs or something.

The other thing you might try is, if she's having a rational spell ( they DO happen) is to show her an article about poor brides in need of wedding gowns. Does she have some charitable instincts? Would she be happy to make others happy?
Helpful Answer (13)
Report

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter