Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Seamstress. Share them with your friends on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or your personal blogs, and let the world be inspired by their powerful messages. Here are the Top 100 Seamstress Quotes And Sayings by 97 Authors including Candice Olson,Shakira,Desmond Dekker,Joseph Murray,Kelly Wearstler for you to enjoy and share.
I'm an interior designer, first and foremost. I can do one thing really well, and I'm going to stay in my little niche.
I consider myself a laborer, building my career brick over brick under the sun.
So, after school, I needed to learn a trade and started to work as a tailor.
At heart, I'm a reconstructive surgeon.
I'm a designer, which includes interiors, architecture, fashion, furniture, and lifestyle.
I started in college as a business major and finally transferred to home economics and studied making clothes.
tailor-made a job I'd like more.
Fashion is a good job for a young girl. I like clothes - I like to play with clothes. I like DIY; I like to make outfit.
Literally, my job is I make socks. That's all I do.
Basically, I would be happy with any profession where I got to be creative and make things.
It's a full time job with a part-time companion.
I'm an artist, a designer, a craftsman, interior designer, half-architect. There's no one name that fits me very well.
I like to work in costumes, makeup, and hair that allow me tremendous freedom.
Well, what is my job now?".
I like to do interior design, I love to quilt, I love to see different colors together, and I love to match things up.
I'm an assistant storyteller. It's like being a waiter or a gas-station attendant, but I'm waiting on six million people a week, if I'm lucky.
Horseman. I know you were born back when women were thought of as little more than brood mares and slaves, but it's the twenty-first century, and we can do anything a man does.
My trade is a lonely one. I'm a craftsman, if you like. It so happens that these days singers are better paid than blacksmiths.
In another life, I could be a personal shopper.
I could be a housewife ... I guess I've vacuumed a couple of times.
a history teacher. I work,
I work like a gardener.
I help design my own tennis clothes.
I can't sew, but I can spin one helluva yarn.
I am a mechanical techie. I can build things with my hands.
I'm a job creator.
I know clothing very well and I'm sure I will get into fashion eventually.
I used to be a hairdresser.
I'm a designer, I love it, and I haven't worked this hard to do bad work.
I design for the working girl.
I'd love to design bridal dresses.
I work with structure, but I go outside the box and give it my own spin. I adore the challenge of creating truly modern clothes - where a woman's personality and sense of style are realized.
I've always thought of myself as a businesswoman. I have the creative side, but I also have this business sense.
Painting it's a blind man profession. Painter is painting not what he sees but what he feels.
I moonlight as a singer.
I'd be just as happy being a midwife. That's my ideal job.
My mother was a washerwoman - or a woman that cleaned houses in Texas ... in Plano, Texas - who always loved poetry and always loved stories.
I am an artist, not a dressmaker.
Speak, what trade art thou?
Why, sir, a carpenter.
Where is thy leather apron and thy rule?
What does thou with thy best apparel on?
My mom was a medical photographer, but on the side, she did a before-and-after glam photography business in the house. She would do makeup and hair - and I was her assistant.
I'm just a guy who rolls up his sleeves and goes to work!
No apprenticeship has ever been thought necessary to qualify for husbandry, the great trade of the country. After what are called the fine arts, and the liberal professions, however, there is perhaps no trade which requires so great a variety of knowledge and experience.
As far back as I remember, and earlier, I was an artisan, a maker and doer. Mechanically minded, my parents said.
If I could have any job in the world I'd be a professional Cinderella.
We divide the roles of mystic, doctor, therapist, artist, herbalist, naturalist, and storyteller into separate, often inimical professions. In most other societies, there was one word, one job assignment, for somebody who was all these things at once.
This is exactly how I would describe my work: 'I get there, I put on the clothes, I leave it on the hanger, and I go home.' And that's what I do.
I love fashion, and I've always wanted to do costume design, but I'm in jeans and T-shirts most of the time.
My girlfriend is a fashion designer. She has her own company called Rachel Antonoff. She is doing a collaboration with Urban Outfitters right now, a shoe collaboration with Bass. She sells to Barneys, stuff like that.
I am a woman who came from the cotton fields of the South. From there I was promoted to the washtub. From there I was promoted to the cook kitchen. And from there I promoted myself into the business of manufacturing hair goods and preparations ... I have built my own factory on my own ground.
I came up the old-fashioned way - tea boy, cutter, focus-puller, cinematographer - but I wasn't myself old-fashioned.
My mom is a sculptress.
I'm an Egyptologist. I'm a remote sensing specialist, and I'm a space archaeologist.
You know, I'm still deciding what I'm going to be when I grow up.
I do not want to say I'm a product designer. I've been trying all my life to not be categorized, to learn something and then to forget about it.
Are you busy?" the caller would ask. "Yes I'm working." Sitting in my chair, cats nearby, I was reading a great book. That was my job this year, and it was a good one. The salary was nonexistent, but the satisfaction was daily and deep.
I was a blueberry picker, bindery worker, bookstore clerk and later manager, and a Realtor.
Some people are painters, and some are ballet dancers, and I'm a writer.
I knew fashion was going to be part of my job, so I thought I might as well have fun with it.
My mother's a secretary; my father's an electrician in a mining company.
I love designing costumes that I can actually construct, working to create an environment that people want to be in.
When you work on what you love, you have the best job in the world.
...Not an elegant tapestry but a serviceable quilt.
We all fantasize about work that uses our creativity, is self-directed, happens during the hours we choose, and occurs in an attractively lit setting with fascinating people - you know, jobs like women have on TV.
I love the plus (fashion) industry! It embraces a lot of women who would otherwise disappear into the background. I truly love what I do!
I went to school for clothing and textiles and thought this is what I was going to do. Then I started working in costumes and literally said, 'I don't know if I can take the actors.'
I'm a fashion designer. I don't want to be defined as someone's girlfriend.
I had a fundamental love of fashion, of products and accessories. I loved the merchandising side of it and understanding how to maximize sales.
Life: my favorite occupation.
Cosplay. Why you just said the magic word!
I'm more of a house painter.That's the way I work.
I am an industry.
I'm a painter, that's what I love to do first and foremost.
One of the best parts about my job is that I get to dress for red carpets and appearances, and I often forgo working with a stylist because fashion is half the fun of any event!
I had to learn to sew when I was growing up, because nothing else fitted me.
I wanted to be involved with fashion, though I didn't know what being a designer meant.
Work with love, it is to weave the cloth with threads drawn from your heart.
Job, requiring intellectual ability and acuity
If I could do it all again, I'd be a plumber.
My entire career, I've been a worker.
You're a painter. You're a baker. You like to sleep with the windows open. You never take sugar in your tea. And you always double-knot your shoelaces.
Back of the job-the dreamer Who's making the dream come true!
Jack of all trades, master of none, though often better than a master of one.
If I could have any job I would be a cat ... but that's not something I'm supposed to talk about in public.
I'm a writer slash designer slash TV personality.
I love a lot of things, and I'm pretty much obsessive about most things I do, whether it be gardening, or architecture, or music. I'd be an obsessive hairdresser.
I travel a lot, and I hunt for fabrics, then I have the tailor make me something.
I've been an assistant to a folklorist and a teacher. There may or may not have been some sandwich-making at a certain sub chain in my past as well.
I couldn't live if I wasn't a designer.
My wife runs the house much better than I could so I think she could be a linesman or a referee or even a football manager and that's the truth.
When you work behind the ropes, you know the heartbreaking stories behind their smiles; you see the pins and nauseating amount of hair products that glaze their heads; and you see the wedges (even flats) under their eternally beaded gowns.
I think I could be a cook. Everybody always says I'm good, though I think it's quite gruelling as a profession.
In a machine age, dressmaking is one of the last refuges of the human, the personal, the inimitable.
My mother is a Senior Casualty Claims Specialist I, which in layman's terms means the head insurance adjuster!
Architect. One who drafts a plan of your house, and plans a draft of your money.
My line of work makes you aware of the fragility of life. You can get up in the morning, eat your cornflakes, blow-dry your hair, go to work and end up dead.
One who dresses in rags that have been washed clean dresses cleanly to be sure, but raggedly nonetheless.
I worked as a singing, dancing busgirl in high school.
My job ranges from creating the initial overall theme of the season, to developing fabrics and sketching to sampling and fitting.
I just want to make beautiful, glamorous clothes.
I started out as an artist, and I continue to think of myself as an artist first, and a technologist and entrepreneur after that.