Woman restoring sewing machines for African colleges

woman restoring sewing machines for african colleges

Nikki Field's hobby of repairing sewing machines began during the pandemic

A woman who decided to teach herself to restore sewing machines is now repairing them for female entrepreneurs in Africa.

Nikki Field from Wiltshire's hobby started in lockdown, when she restored an old Singer treadle.

She now repairs at least one machine a week, and is involved with Hampshire charity, Tools For Self Reliance.

The charity sends sewing machines to women, often single mothers, in Malawi, Uganda and Zambia, where they are trained so they can start their own tailoring businesses.

woman restoring sewing machines for african colleges

Ms Field said she uses a lot of elbow grease during the repairs

Speaking about turning her hobby into charity work, Ms Field told the BBC: "They just need completely taking apart, and that can be a challenge with a machine like this one that maybe hasn't been taken apart for 50, 60 years.

"I get through a lot of WD40, I have blisters sometimes, and then you've also got to make sure it all goes back together without any missing bits.

"And if you're scared of spiders, don't think about it because there's nearly always something lurking somewhere."

Ms Field also mends sewing machines for paying customers, donating the proceeds to Tools For Self Reliance to help with increasing shipping costs.

'Really helped'

Nyimba Lumuno from Uganda said getting her own sewing machine has "really helped" her financial situation.

"I was just at home with my child and with no money," she said.

"After taking this training, it really helped me change the way I was looking at my life and it really helped me in terms of making my own money."

woman restoring sewing machines for african colleges

Women in African nations use the machines to kickstart their tailoring businesses

Sarah Ingleby, the CEO of Tools for Self Reliance, said the sewing machines the charity sends out to African nations stay with women throughout their journey to starting their own business.

"Obviously you can't learn to be a tailor without a sewing machine, so the provision includes sending machines so they've got machines to train on," Ms Ingleby said.

"When they've finished their training and they go out back to their communities and they start their own small businesses, they will take a sewing machine with them.

"They're not waiting to save money to buy a machine, the machine is there for them when they get set up and they can use them straight away to earn a living."

Follow BBC Wiltshire on Facebook, X, and Instagram. Send your story ideas to us on email or via WhatsApp on 0800 313 4630.

More on this story

Related internet links

OTHER NEWS

3 hrs ago

Lower electricity tariffs for non-domestic users from July 1

4 hrs ago

Bersatu man seeks court order to lift block on TikTok accounts

4 hrs ago

First Liberal MP calls on Justin Trudeau to step down

4 hrs ago

Reform UK activists' racial slur hurts, says Sunak

4 hrs ago

Mase Tells Story About the Time He Says Big L Almost Had Him Robbed

4 hrs ago

Tesla Is Spending $48 Billion on Elon Musk — What New Investors Should Know

4 hrs ago

Aer Lingus pilots set to begin strike action

4 hrs ago

Sarah Michelle Gellar Joins Cast of 'Dexter: Original Sin'

4 hrs ago

Cowboys teammate calls out Micah Parsons

4 hrs ago

DBKL to enforce new compound rates for traffic offences from July 1

4 hrs ago

No tourism site can cater exclusively for needs of a single religion, says Tiong

4 hrs ago

Deal or not, the hunt is on

4 hrs ago

Iran installs half of planned new centrifuges at Fordow, IAEA report says

4 hrs ago

Penang Hill cable car project takes off

4 hrs ago

International win for stilton 'like a cheese Oscar'

4 hrs ago

No plot, Dr M was supposed to transfer power, say PKR duo

5 hrs ago

Comedy Great Martin Mull, From Roseanne and Sabrina, Dead at 80

5 hrs ago

Will Smith Releases New Song 'You Can Make It': 'Music Has Always Been There for Me'

5 hrs ago

U.S. Select Team: Cooper Flagg, projected No. 1 pick in 2025 NBA Draft, makes roster for Olympic training camp

5 hrs ago

Potential Mets trade candidate has no interest in getting dealt

5 hrs ago

What do we need to know about new Boston Celtics wing Baylor Scheierman?

5 hrs ago

An emergency Phillies-White Sox trade for big bat with Harper, Schwarber on IL

5 hrs ago

MLB Insider: How losing Bryce Harper, Kyle Schwarber impacts Phillies' trade deadline

5 hrs ago

Spurs, Devonte’ Graham move back contract guarantee date

5 hrs ago

Mavericks beef up defense through trade for young guard

5 hrs ago

Navigating new seasons of social media trends

5 hrs ago

Martin Mull, Comic Actor of 'Clue,' 'Roseanne' and 'Arrested Development,' Dies at 80

5 hrs ago

AI deals between Microsoft and OpenAI, Google and Samsung, in EU crosshairs

5 hrs ago

Colman Domingo Says Late Chadwick Boseman "Worked Like a Tornado" While Filming ‘Ma Rainey's Black Bottom'

5 hrs ago

Sharks expected to sign former first-round forward to one-year extension

5 hrs ago

Two Hart Trophy futures we like for the NHL next season

5 hrs ago

Families say those detained in Bolivia coup try were 'tricked.' President says it's not his problem

5 hrs ago

Up to 125 Atlantic white-sided dolphins stranded in Cape Cod waters

5 hrs ago

PKR founding member Syed Husin Ali dies, aged 87

5 hrs ago

Gentle giants under threat

5 hrs ago

Veteran politician, academic Syed Husin Ali dies

5 hrs ago

Hiroyuki Fujita shoots 66 and leads by one through two rounds of the U.S. Senior Open

5 hrs ago

Students’ murals on cultural heritage brighten up 3rd Mile Jalan Ipoh

5 hrs ago

Express problems impacting mental health

5 hrs ago

Ready to spring into service from new base