Mary Haynor, president of Horizon Homecare and Hospice in Milwaukee, takes a can do attitude in life and her projects. She learned to sew when she was a child. Haynor recently created a show-stopping jacket she wore to the annual fundraising gala for Horizonโs Grief Resource Center.
โIt seems funny, but I tend to think that I can do anything,โ Haynor said. โI saw the picture of this fantastic jacket, and I just said, โIโm going to make that!'โ
Like many of her projects, Haynor created the pattern for the jacket by either piecing parts of patterns together or creating one on her own.
She first pieces the project together and then deconstructs it and re-makes it in the desired fabric.
Haynor grew up in a family with many children. She learned to sew by watching her mother who still, at 88 years of age, teaches crocheting and knitting classes.
Haynor started making some of her own clothes as a child, and has also made a few dresses for her children and her grandchildren. She has also created all of the drapery in her home.
โCustom drapery is really expensive,โ she said. โI tend to want things and so rather than going out and purchasing it, Iโll try to make it first.โ
According to Haynor, the key is not to be afraid of messing up.
โThere are a lot of talented people in the world, Iโm not unique in that,โ Haynor said. โIโm just not afraid of the fabric. Itโs just fabric. I watched my mother time and time again just start over. Thatโs an important trait that I learned from her. She taught me not to be afraid of the fabric; to try something and if it didnโt work to rip it apart and try something else.โ