Florida Country Magazine - October / November 2021

Page 16

COUNTRY ARTISTRY

MEET STEPHANIE JOHNS MASTERING THE FINE ART OF PATCHWORK DESIGN Written by: Kathy Ann Gregg Artist and photographer Brad Welborn capturing Stephanie Johns in a natural Florida setting

Johns learned about patchwork from her grandmother, Lillian, a member of the Brighton Seminole Indian Reservation near Okeechobee. Her maternal grandmother is from Ecuador, giving her a Hispanic heritage, as well. This relative specialized in tailoring and making alterations. Johns remembers time with both women, especially “being under and around their sewing machines.”

‘I SAT WITH MY ELDERS AND LISTENED’

Johns in 2002 began sewing as a hobby, attending a design school for fashion. She had an all-inclusive curriculum, learning to sketch and create a vision board, learning fashion history, which machine to use and why. “It was intense … and I loved every minute of it,” she says. Although she followed that design school experience by obtaining an associate degree at a non-vocational college, time spent with fashion and fabrics remained special. So, by 2013 her sewing craft became a priority, more than just a hobby. Purchasing a newer tabletop sewing machine, along with the necessary accessories— bobbins, spare needles, colored threads, and a few extra seam rippers—Johns then immersed herself in honing her sewing skills, spending countless hours researching different patchwork designs. “But most importantly,” she adds, “I sat with my elders and listened,

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soaking up any knowledge they felt to pass along to me.”

‘INSPIRATION COMES IN MANY FORMS’

And from that work and kinship has arisen a one-of-a-kind boutique business—Simply Savage Steffs. She calls herself a Seminole seamstress, making Seminole patchwork clothing for babies through 3XL. While her specialty is women’s skirts and dresses, she has a new category called Graduate Stoles/Queen Sashes. And she has also created patchwork designs on towels, blankets and handbags, flower vases, kitchen canisters and silverware sorters. But, she adds, “I do not make jackets.” “My inspiration comes in many forms,” Johns says in describing her passion. “As I am an artist … and fabric is my medium.” Stephanie Johns will look at an item and envision transforming it with patchwork. She works from customer photographs, for instance, translating a picture into a beautiful Seminole patchwork clothing item. “I’m almost always designing or sewing an item in my head, so I may seem distracted at times,” she says, laughing. Stephanie Johns is also proud of her patchwork designs of awareness ribbons, the various colors and meanings such as pink for breast cancer. Each item produced is unique, as she works with exact customer specifications. Pricing is based on the type of item, how intricate the patchwork design is, the fabric, which can need stabilizing, as some stretch, or lined so as not to be transparent. And sewing with beaded or sequin fabrics can break needles, requiring a slower pace of work.

PHOTO AND ARTWORK BY BRAD WELBORN

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tephanie Johns loved to spend time with her grandmothers. From these women she inherited a love of traditional Seminole dress and a passion for creating clothing—as well as other items—with a patchwork design.


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