Upcoming Repair Events for December

Bring us your broken stuff! 

WNC Repair Cafe is settling down in the Asheville area for two more repair events in December.

We're back for another Sewing and Mending event on December 6, this time at the Leicester library at 1561 Alexander Rd in Leicester, NC.  We've got a great, enthusiastic group of skilled sewing volunteers ready to help guide you through sewing repairs of all kinds.  We'll also be collecting winter clothes for donation via AMCHC winter clothes drive. 

The following week, on Tuesday, December 13, we're back for another general repair event at the Asheville Tool Library at 80 Cowan Cove Rd in Asheville.  Here too, we've got a great group of volunteers with a very wide range of skills.  We're very excited about this collaboration!

Both events are from 5:00 to 8:00.  More info can be found here.  

 

Marc gluing up a wooden paddle for a visitor at the first Tool Library repair event.

Also, special thanks to Chris Link and the Southern Appalachian Highlands Conservancy for hosting the small engine maintenance workshop and repair event.  Over 20 people attended the workshop and learned about troubleshooting, tune up and winterizing small engine equipment.  Later, visitors stuck around for hands-on repair of chainsaws, string trimmers, lawnmowers and even a portable generator.  The community farm was a wonderful setting for this kind of event and we look forward to more of these kinds of collaborations in the future!

Chris demonstrating his method for diagnosing a chainsaw with starting trouble.



Small Engine Intensive and Repair Event at SAHC Farm

On the evening of Tuesday October 25, we will be at SAHC Community Farm for a special two-part repair event. Starting at 5:00, SAHC Farm manager and repair cafe volunteer Chris Link will lead a short small engine diagnostic, repair and maintenance demonstration, followed at 6:00 by a public repair event.   

SAHC Farm Manager Chris Link is captured here from a live demonstration at Living Web Farms.  This is a great opportunity to learn firsthand basic troubleshooting, repair and maintenance of small engines. 

The Southern Appalachian Highland Conservancy Community Farm is an "educational site and working farm; a continually evolving home for conservation projects and agricultural production."  This farm is an especially beautiful location, and we are very blessed to have these community partners that are as passionate as we are about sustainability and self-sufficiency!

We plan offer all kinds of repairs here - however we'll be especially well-equipped to hand small engines and the other farm/garden related jobs like sharpening, handle replacements, power tool repair and more of the repairs we haven't been able to do since our pre-covid events. 

Registration is encouraged.  Register here: https://appalachian.org/event/small-engine-maintenance-and-repair-cafe/

Basic supplies will be provided.  However, replacement parts will not be available.   Participants are encouraged to reach out via email at least one week in advance - if necessary, we may be able to help you with ordering replacement parts.


Volunteering at WNC Repair Cafe

 

Repair Cafes are events where you’ll find volunteers with tools and supplies, available to fix broken household objects while offering instruction in the form of hands on help. 

Volunteers at WNC Repair Cafe share a common concern for:

Helping​ ​a​ ​neighbor​:​ Restoring valuable material items at no cost of labor. 
Sharing skills: Teaching repair skills and encouraging hands-on learning
Sharing ​ideas:​ Sharing insight and appreciation of how things made, repaired, and disposed of. 
Diverting​ ​resources​ ​from​ ​the​ ​landfill:​ Engaging in practical action on waste reduction.
Build​ing ​resilient​ ​communities:​ Empowering our community with the skills and resources to prosper in a sustainable economy. 

How does it work?

Most volunteers offer some specialized expertise such as bicycle repair, electronics, appliances, furniture, sewing, small engines, etc.  Some volunteers just have a generalized knowledge of how things work and can manage many repairs.  No volunteer knows everything...and that's OK.  Repairs are often a collaborative process, where multiple volunteers may team up to take on challenging jobs. 

Part of what makes repair events exciting is that we don't always know what we're going to repair that night.  We keep a stock of common supplies (glues, cleaners, batteries, lamp sockets, etc) and we do have an array of specialty tools on hand.  It's not required, but it is recommended that volunteers bring their own common tools. 
 
Visitors will sign a waiver and check in their broken items at the front desk when they arrive.  Usually the organizer will match a particular repair job to the appropriate volunteer.  As the event gets busier, the organizer will keep a list of repair jobs in order of who was first in line.  When the volunteer becomes available and ready for the next repair they can then pick from the list which job they're most comfortable with.  We do have some slow nights and some busy nights, however, on average a volunteer may take on 3 or 4 repairs in a single night.
 
Sometimes items can't be fully repaired...that's OK too.  Best practice is to first collaborate with the organizer or another volunteer to see if they have a different approach.  If spare parts are needed, the organizer can usually help locate a vendor.  More often than necessary, items are not designed to be repaired at all and there is no safe or reliable way to do so.  Visitors know that there is no guarantee of successful repair.  Based on our prior events, we typically have an 80% successful repair rate. 
 
Education is central to our mission.  We think it's important that we rethink our consumption-driven economy, and as a volunteer, one way to approach this is helping to demystify the repair process.  Even when a successful repair of a particular item is not possible, we want to give visitors the confidence to consider repair when something else in their house needs fixing. 
 

Volunteers are Needed!

A reasonable ratio of volunteers to participants is essential to a successful night. If you have a
specific skill set or a general enthusiasm for sharing DIY knowledge, then please, we need your help!  Volunteers of all skill levels are greatly appreciated.

If you're interested, please let us know via email at WNCRepairCafe@gmail.com or call (828) 808-6417

West Asheville Library Sewing Event

Thanks to all who attended our inaugural sewing repair night at the West Asheville library!  Special thanks to our returning volunteers Gail and Anita, along with new volunteers Lucy and Lindsay. Very special thanks to the managing librarian Sherry, for whom without her persistence this would not have been possible. 

This event had a relaxed feel, with a focus on hands-on education.  Sewing repairs are unique in that with access to the right tools and education, nearly everyone really can do it.  Last night our volunteers took this to heart, guiding kids and adults alike through process of stitching stuffed animals, mending seams, threading machines, hemming pants, replacing worn-out elastic waistbands, sewing buttons, patching holes and attaching straps. 

Overall four volunteers helped fifteen adults and a gaggle of kids with an estimated 25 items.  We're thankful for this well-lit, clean, accessible space and we're looking forward to offering more sewing repair events in Asheville soon.  In the meantime, check out some photos from the September 20, 2022 event below:

 











Coming soon to the new Asheville Tool Library location

WNC Repair Cafe will host a repair event on the evening of Tuesday October 11 at the NEW Asheville Tool Library location at Smith Mill works in Asheville.  This is an especially exciting collaboration that we hope to nurture for many future events - Suffice to say we are very grateful we have made this connection!

WNC Repair Cafe co-founder and experienced toaster-oven repairman Christian Nolan is also a longtime volunteer with the Asheville Tool Library

"The Asheville Tool Library is a volunteer-powered, membership-based nonprofit that shares its tools and resources and offers educational opportunities to the Community of Western North Carolina."

 The Asheville Tool Library has been operating for several years in the south slope area of downtown Asheville.  Here, they've prospered with many dedicated volunteers and a thriving community of members.  They've also outgrown their space.  At the end of September, ATL is moving to Smith Mill works, an sustainable agribusiness entrepreneurship hub in west-west Asheville, located at 80 Cowan Cove Rd.  With the move comes a larger space to house tools, along with ample parking and a dedicated workshop area - all of the amenities necessary to support a thriving repair cafe. 

We're very excited to join ATL here in this new space on October 11, 2022, from 5:00 to 8:00 PM.  Check out the Events page for updates and please, read the House Rules.


Sewing Repairs at the Library

 

For three years WNC Repair Cafe has been hosted by our friends at Living Web Farms where our repair events typically cover a very broad range of all types of household repairs. Given the farm setting, our prior events naturally tended towards more farm and garden type jobs - think long-handled tool replacements, small engine tune-up, sharpening - those kind of rough jobs well-suited for calloused hands. Our workshop space was not particularly well-suited for the delicate work of sewing jobs, so it's no surprise that sewing jobs were few and far between. That's a big part of why we're so excited to be offering a special event that focuses exclusively on sewing jobs.

 

WNC Repair Cafe is teaming up with the West Asheville Public Library on the evening of September 20  to offer free sewing repairs.  The public is invited to bring in their worn out and damaged fabric items and work together with volunteers who specialize in all things fabric - from stitching, to mending, attaching buttons, fixing zippers and more. 


Thinking about attending?  You are encouraged to bring in clothing, but also consider other fabric repairs - worn-out favorite purse, stuffed animal, torn backpack strap, old work gloves, etc.  Have questions about your unique repair? Send us an email WNCRepairCafe@gmail.com before arriving. 


We'll also be collecting winter clothes for donation via AMCHC community clothing drive. I've been told that larger sizes are especially helpful. 

 

What is a Repair Cafe?

A Repair Cafe is a place where you’ll find volunteers with tools and supplies, available to fix broken objects while offering instruction in the form of hands on help.   This is a free program where you are encouraged to bring in your broken appliance, stuck zipper, rusty tools, old bicycle, dull pruning shears – whatever you can imagine – and work with our volunteers to make the necessary repairs to keep it running.

Repair Cafes across the world have helped build resilient communities by offering access to hands on experience in the art of repair.  At WNC Repair Cafe we’ll gather volunteers from the area for an evening of:

  • Helping a neighbor:  Restore valuable material items at no cost of labor.
  • Learning by doing:  Gain experience in practical hands-on skills.
  • Sharing ideas:  Gain insight and appreciation of how things made, repaired, and disposed of.
  • Diverting valuable resources from the landfill:  Engage in practical action on waste reduction.
  • Building resilient communities:  Empower our local community with the resources to prosper in a sustainable economy
 

 Repair Cafe in Practice

Repair Cafe Origins:

The first Repair Café was held in October 2009 in Amsterdam, and was so successful that founder Martine Postma continued organizing several Repair Café meetings at different locations in Amsterdam.  These caught the attention of more and more people and the media all over the country.  By 2010 she had founded the Repair Café Foundation.

Repair Café Foundation aims to a) reintroducing the art of repairing to the modern, local communities; b) retaining and spreading repair knowledge and skills; c) to promote social cohesion by bringing together neighbors from very different backgrounds and motives in a setting of inspiring and accessible meetings.

Fast forward to 2020, where globally there are now over two thousand repair cafes on six continents, notwithstanding similar models operating under different names or as standalone events.  At Repair Cafes around the world people are reminded that there is an alternative to a throwaway culture.