How 50,000 face masks kept a Mount Pearl business afloat - Action News
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NLOur New Normal

How 50,000 face masks kept a Mount Pearl business afloat

If someone told Lori Wells, last October when she opened her clothing business, that she would spend the better part of a year making more than 50,000 face masks, she wouldnt have believed it.

Wells has made up to 500 masks a day and has had to hire seamstresses

Lori, left, and Kayla Wells are working around the clock to keep up with the demand of face masks. (Meg Roberts/CBC)

There have been big changes in our little corners of the world, due to theCOVID-19 pandemic and related restrictions. CBC Newfoundland and Labradoris exploring those changes in a series called Our New Normal.

If someone told Lori Wells, last Octoberwhen she opened her manufacturing textile company,that she would spend the better part of a year making more than 50,000 face masks, she wouldn't have believed it.

She had recently purchased a $100,000 press to create corporate uniforms, athletic jerseys, flags and more.

"It took off really fast. We were really busy," said Wells, owner of Karma's Kreations in Mount Pearl.

COVID made us stronger.- Kayla Wells

But about five months later,COVID-19 started circulating in Canada. People were no longer looking for jerseys and corporate wear, so operationsabruptly came to a stop.

Wells said she had to try something to keep her business and her staff afloat.

"I said one day to one of my seamstresses 'Let's make a few masks.'Just to keep us going, try to keep her employed, keep the funds rolling in," said Wells.

"That's when the madness started."

Lori Wells sits behind one the several sewing machines in her building. She says at one point she hired seven seamstresses to keep up with the orders. (Meg Roberts/CBC)

To get the project off the ground, Wells said,theyhad to come up with a mask design and material that would be breathable and washable.

They then came up with a system that would allow them to print the masks, then press, sew, cut, package and deliver them.

Wells saidit started off a bit slow they were producing about 30 masks a day but that soon changed.

"From there it went to 100 masks a day, 200 masks a day, 500 masks a day. At one point we had seven seamstresses sewing 12 hours a day."

As a result of so many orders, Wells said, her daily routine has become drastically busier; she says she sometimes works14-hour days or longer.

"It's the hardest job Ihave ever had in my whole life," she said.

But she is thankful they've had the opportunity to come up with a product that has done so well, and is thinking about other businessesthat haven't been as fortunate.

"I have had friends who have lost their businesses. Heartbreaking. I have watched them be in business for years and years and years. For us we are very lucky but for many they are not as lucky."

'Designer face wear'

Wells said she has also seen a shift in the way people view masks. At the beginning of the pandemic, she said, people were bitterly buying them because of safety protocols but now she has clients who come into the store several times a week looking for new patterns to match their outfits and different holidays.

She has even made custom masks for weddings and other events.

These are just some of the masks available for sale. (Karma's Kreations/Facebook)

"Now it's a fashion statement. It's no longer a mask. We don't even call them 'masks';we call them 'designer face wear.'"

Their growing popularity has even caught up with them outside the store.

"It's funny for usnow because we started off so small and now we go, 'Oh my God,that's our mask,' and people will say 'You're the mask ladies,' so for us it's great," said Wells.

Wells's daughter-in-law and business partner, Kayla, says they've been enjoying the experience.

"We are having a great time. We are having a blast," said Kayla Wells.

"COVID made us stronger."


Our New Normal

(CBC)

The COVID-19 pandemic has meant great changes in our daily lives. We'll be exploring them in Our New Normal, a series of segments you'll see here, onHere & Nowand on our current affairs shows.

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador