
Dear Jenny Pennywood Community,
It’s Sunday night, and I’m on the couch with a tequila + Squirt (iiykyk), and I feel like writing an unfiltered Mind Vacation about the new Studio Tee and the pay-what-you-want situation. So here we are.
OK, so the Studio Tee. Here’s what it was supposed to be: a broader step toward “patterned basics,” and a tee that felt inclusive across size and gender (we were calling it the Everybody Tee.) We significantly upped our usual production quantities so we could offer the shirt for wholesale, which was a big thing for us. I worked with a production manager in LA who came highly recommended and positioned himself as an expert. The samples looked great; we were excited, and I let myself take my eye off the ball for a sec. Production moved forward and was completed, and the box arrived for the photoshoot. Mistake #1: It was clear a shrink test hadn’t been done before it went to cut-and-sew, which was his job to do and that made the shirts boxier and less unisex than intended. I figured I could live with that, because who doesn’t love a boxy fit? But it went sideways when we realized that the single-needle stitch at the neckline, which worked perfectly in the sample, broke on many of the production shirts, and that was the moment our entire plan shifted. Fuck fuck fuck. I couldn’t roll these out for wholesale, nor would I try to sneak this broken thread thing by my customers. That would have been stressful and not in line with my standards. So we scrapped wholesale, and our solution was to be super transparent, do a pay-what-you-want thing, and move forward.
Pay-what-you-want feels good, and the shirts are selling, but still, fuck, you know. I love the tees and wear mine all the time. I took that broken stitch out with a pair of tweezers, washed it, and it’s perfectly imperfect, just like I like it. And really, the Jenny Pennywood vibe carries a certain amount of imperfectness, and so one could say that this batch of production is on brand, but I’m disappointed nonetheless. Plans freaking change, and it gets under my skin. Whhhyyyyy!!!!! Why can’t things just go as planned? I’ve realized that I have had to be fairly flexible in the work I do, but sometimes I just don’t want to bend. Does anyone else feel that way?
I have a feeling I’m not alone in my frustration, so let’s chat. Tell us all about how you had to bend, but didn’t want to, and how you dealt with it, felt about it, and what changed because of it. Drop it in the comments section. I’ll read through them and will pick a winner and a runner-up and send you a tee.
I want to hear all about it.
XO
JEN
43 comments
My daughter loves all of your products. I bought her socks for her birthday.
At age 71, I’ve done a lot of “bending” in my life, which just means I’ve had to adapt to situations that don’t seem ideal. Right now, I am adapting to working with a rescue dog who has a few issues (okay, he bit me, but it was my mistake because I was patting him when I should have left him alone). It has been hard because our last dog died suddenly and she was “the one.” I miss her every day and I know he’’s not meant to ‘replace’ her, so I am working hard to accept him, focus on his many good qualities and give him his best life. I still wish he was the kind of cuddle bug, I’d prefer and he has mellowed out over the almost 2 years we’ve had him, but I think I am more patient and understanding because of the work we have done with him.
About the t-shirts: I am a knitter and one of the biggest lessons I’ve learned lately is that mistakes will be made and its okay. I know look at mistakes as an opportunity to go deeper into understanding how a fabric is woven, even as I am silently cursing while ripping it out.
Finally, I love your work! My favorite socks, dinner napkins and dish towels have all been made by you. Thank you for your artistry!
I recently pieced and quilted a really intricate quilt. I was so proud. I used all my favorite fabrics and really spent a lot of time on it. After it was completely finished I washed it and started using it. Almost every quilting seam started to break with even the slightest stretch of the quilt. I was super bummed, but knew I could not redo an entire quilting on it. I just decided to let it go and let those stitches pop (probably bad thread batch or tension issue). I use the quilt all the time because I’m not as gentle with it now. It’s one of my favorites and gets the most use. Let’s look on the bright side and hope that whoever gets a tee shirt uses the crap out of it and doesn’t keep it “safe”.
I’m also trying to embrace perfect imperfection these days… definitely not in my nature but a worthwhile endeavor! Thank you for sharing.
Reading this reminded me of parenting, or life in general: rarely does it ever go according to my plan!
It’s cool to read about your shift though, and the tees do look great!
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