Working -- Cathy Whitford
SHE IS
Anything but generic
YOU’D NEVER KNOW
The most unusual things Cathy Whitford has been asked to embroider are
wedding dresses and pillows.
Last summer, she received three requests from people wanting a
personal touch on their wedding dress. The customers picked their pattern
from Corki’s Embroidery’s stock designs, and Whitford got to work on her
four-head machine.
“You could never tell,” said the 35-year-old embroidery technician for
Corki’s in Newport Beach. “It looked like something you’d go and buy.”
TAKING IT PERSONALLY
For the past 4 1/2 years, Whitford has taken plain products and made
them personal with a logo, a name, a pattern, “whatever the customer
wants.”
“We do anything,” the Costa Mesa resident said. “It’s not your typical
shirt, jacket, hat-type of business.”
Her clients include the Newport Beach Fire Department; Nikki’s Flags,
which is next door; and race car drivers who need their race suits
personalized for their Nascar competitions.
For the Fire Department, Whitford has sewn names and titles and even
replaced titles after the wearer received a promotion.
The most difficult fabric to work with is cotton T-shirt material.
“It just doesn’t look as nice sometimes, and it makes the machine kind
of struggle,” she said.
The easiest items are polo shirts because they have that tight knit,
and nylon bags.
TWO VIRTUES
Whitford said the most challenging part of her job is dealing with
customers who think her job is simpler than it is. They’ll wonder why she
can’t just scan something on or sew something in.
“It’s a lot more complex than they’re aware of,” she said.
Whitford also named the two most important qualities an embroiderer
should have.
“Patience, because you’re working with machines, and the machines are
not always perfect,” she said. “And humor.”
* Story by Young Chang; photo by Greg Fry
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