September Update
My name is** Nell Cox** and I am a third year Religion and Theology student at the University of Bristol. I found out about the Scrubbery through word of mouth at my local church All Saints Putney. Although I hadn’t sewn since I was taught by my grandmother at a young age I wanted the challenge and had the time over lockdown! Slowly but surely I made my way through pairs of scrubs improving each time through the clear instruction and advice of Rosie. I managed to build my confidence in sewing and started coming in to the Scrubbery to help around with any sewing bits needing doing. Like many others part of this organisation, this was a wonderful thing to go and do weekly.
I found out about the Scrubbery in a newsletter from our lovely MP, Fleur Anderson, and thought ahah! this is something I could do. This was during the second lockdown which I found much, much more difficult than the first. I’d done all the tasks I’d planned for the first lockdown and was feeling very fed up.
For various reasons, it took a while to make contact but I persevered and, once I’d fought my way through the technology and actually spoken to a real person, Rosie, it was fine. I think I started making scrubs about November, just before the Christmas that didn’t happen.
It’s been great. I feel useful and my machine sewing has improved no end. I’ve done a good bit of volunteering previously and usually it’s quite difficult getting accepted. The Scrubbery is different as everyone is so welcoming and helpful and I like that the real focus is getting the work out. I’m going on with regular sewing though I think it’s dreadful that it is still needed and I am getting a bit tired of making hats! *(Narrator: you will be pleased to know that just before we received Hilary’s text, we had moved her on to making some of the 300 rainbow scrunchies to go alongside 300 rainbow masks requested by Whipp’s Cross Hospital)*
Thank you, Rosie and Lucy, you’re doing a wonderful job and probably saved my sanity (such as it is) during winter 20/21. I’ve met some really interesting people.
Kitty Dawes, 95, has been working away to produce Trauma Teddies for distribution to the Ambulance Service and Refugee centres. The origins of trauma teddies is lost to time, but the idea is that they are knitted by volunteers and distributed to children who have suffered any kind of trauma. Many organisations around the world help organise the making and distribution of these. We mainly give them to ambulance and fire services.
Her mum taught her to knit when she was about 5 or 6 and she sewed at home on her mum’s sewing machine, which she still has, making loads of things, including a dresssing gown for her head mistress in a green satin type material with Italian quilting up the fronts and round the hem and sleeve cuffs, everyone in the class did a bit of it.
She is happy to receive wool donations. She uses DK double knitting wool, any colour.
Deliveries have been made to
The Shrubbery GP practice
The Royal London Hospital
St George’s University Hospital
University College London
Newham Hospital
We have continued to distribute wellbeing bags, and the response is always one of heartfelt thanks and gratefulness.
Many thanks to all of you who contributed so quickly and generously.
If you wish to contribute to the newsletter, or to tell the wider community about yourself, please ping Lettie at [lettieg@hotmail.com](mailto:lettieg@hotmail.com?subject=Scrubbery)
If you want to contribute to the wellbeing bags don’t forget to go to our [Amazon Shop](https://www.amazon.co.uk/hz/wishlist/ls/EQT46FR7LFPO?ref_=wl_share) and select the goodies you wish to purchase for the bags from the carefully selected items shown on our page
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