David Trebotich of Twice Nice Shoppe in Antioch, California, is making sure home sewers can get their projects done.
"I don't really sew and I know there is a lot of folks out there making masks who are wearing their machines out or breaking them. This is my part of the contribution to what everyone else is doing," Trebotich told KRON.
Trebotich is fixing the machines for free for anyone making face masks.
Trebotich isn’t alone trying to get machines into operating order.
Sun Sew Vac’s owner Robert Hines was planning on retiring this year, but business once again is thriving because of the pandemic.
"It's been crazy, probably the easiest word to describe how things have been," Hines told WRC.
Hines has a two-week backlog and he can’t keep new machines on the shelves.
In Wisconsin, Sew Much More not only has been getting calls for repairs, but also for supplies to make masks.
"I think for sewers it is a way of trying to help when they feel so helpless," Wendy Rieves told Spectrum News.
Sew Much More was allowed to remain in limited operation with machine curbside pickup and supply delivery.
Rieves told Spectrum News the shop is getting more requests for machine repairs because she thinks many people are using their machines for the first time in years.
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