Silver Seams

Antique sewing bits – awls and tomatoes

Fri, 12 Apr 2019

A canning jar containing tomato-shaped pincushions, and an antique tailor's awl.

As you can perhaps tell by the last entry, Iā€™ve been spending some times buried in notions and things. Iā€™ve been going through some of my late motherā€™s sewing supplies, adding them to mine where I can. Sometimes I can tell this isnā€™t the first time itā€™s happened.

The awl is probably a grandmotherā€™s, but I donā€™t know from which side of the family. The handle is natural ā€” bone, or perhaps ivory, and the spike has a good patina. I donā€™t know how long itā€™s been since it was used; I donā€™t remember ever seeing it when I sewed with my mother. I bought one of its descendants many years ago, plated metal with a plastic handle. Clover still makes those, but the current generationšŸ“¦ is slightly different, with a fancy grippy bit on the round-again handle.

An antique tailor's awl compared to a new one.

Itā€™s a tapered tailorā€™s awl, which Clover says is ā€œDesigned for pulling out corners.ā€ Certainly people use it as that, and as a sixth finger when sewing, but a straight awl will do the same. A tapered awl has two specific purposes Iā€™m aware of: punching holes in leather, and making holes in fabric without cutting threads. I got mine to do the latter: installing teddy bear eyes and joints. Safety eyes and joints have large plastic shanks, and if you cut a hole the joint can eventually tear out. This can even be the case with traditional wire-loop eyes and cotter-pin joints, if the fabric is close enough of a weave/knit.

I donā€™t know if my inherited one was originally ball-point or if itā€™s just worn down that much, but itā€™s not sharp at all now. The modern one is ā€œjust sharp enough to be sharp.ā€ Itā€™s meant to part the fibers when it can, but to go through if it has to. Donā€™t use it to push out corners, though ā€” it is meant to make holes and it will do so. (Ask me how I knowā€¦)

Three tomato-shaped pincushions, one with an attached "strawberry."

The tomato pincushions are a very universal thing. When I posted pictures of the first three on Mastodon and Instagram, a lot of the responses I got were along the lines of ā€œMy mother had one!ā€ Those three were, if I remember correctly, my motherā€™s (perhaps hers before her), my paternal grandmotherā€™s, and one from the drawers of my estate-sale treadle Singer. I sent the picture to my sister to ask when it rose to the level of a collection and she said ā€œthree,ā€ and then later that day another box of Momā€™s sewing stuff arrived from her, coincidentally containing number four (the difficult-to-see smaller one in the top of the jar). Iā€™m pretty sure there is at least one more in the earlier boxes that I havenā€™t fully sorted yet.

A lot of people asked about the ā€œstrawberryā€ attached to the apparently-oldest one: itā€™s full of emery sand, used to sharpen and de-rust pins and needles in the days before rust-resistant plating. Itā€™ll (eventually) strip the plating off, so if you have one you probably donā€™t need or want to use it. I still use the tomatoes themselves once in awhile, though my ā€œcannedā€ surplus now lives in one of the glass-fronted kitchen cabinets because that amuses me.

I do my best to use (and use up) the sewing tools and notions Iā€™ve inherited. Iā€™m not sure what my grandmothers would think of what sewing has become through the generations, but I like to think theyā€™d at least approve of their things still finding uses.


šŸ“¦: Technically, that's an affiliate link. I recommend showrooming on Amazon and buying somewhere else though.

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