Did I teach 1st grade? I think you were my teacher.
How Did I Come to be a Spinner - 1981 Part 3
Clearly I was a seamstress and a weaver, but spinning did not intrigue me in the least. What I didn’t understand was my husband's point of view. He knew
1) nothing would keep me from attending this group.
How Did I Come to be a Spinner - 1981 Part 2
After my husband Rich had finished his seminary degree, we moved to his first ELCA Lutheran parish in Brandon, South Dakota, 1973.
I took a rigid heddle weaving class in nearby Sioux
Falls.
As an accomplished seamtress, weaving was
nothing short of amazing! That I could
create cloth, unbelievable! This colorful little mat was my first
night’s weaving, I was only to do an inch, instead I couldn't stop and had to re-warp the loom before next week's class.
How Did I Come to be a Spinner - 1981 Part 1
As many spinners students have heard me mention, it was not my plan. I just loved textiles, I've always loved the fabric store, and just the feel of any finished garment.
Born in North Carolina, in a southern family, my given name is Patsy Sue Goodman. It was always assumed I would know how to sew and would be a mom. I learned to sew early, made my father a button up shirt in fourth grade on the treadle sewing machine he had electrified.