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Tampa Boutique Turns Fabric Scraps Into Masks After CDC Issues New Guidelines

Two women with blue and pink hair wearing masks stand at the entrance to their store behind a table covered with cloth masks.
Daylina Miller/WUSF Public Media
Leigh Anne Balzekas and Kristine Ownley of the Disco Dolls in Seminole Heights started making masks out of fabric scraps after the CDC issued new COVID-19 protection guidelines.

Companies around the country are switching gears to help out during the COVID-19 pandemic. Breweries and cosmetic companies are making hand sanitizer. General Motors, Ford and Tesla are making ventilators.

When the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recently recommended that people wear cloth masks in public settings, the Disco Dolls in Seminole Heights knew how they could help.

They had to close their fashion boutique, hair salon and art gallery because the smaller space made it difficult to keep customers six feet apart.

A table covered with brightly colored homemade cloth masks.
Credit Daylina Miller/WUSF Public Media
The masks are made mostly of organic bamboo material.

But they had a storeroom stacked with fabric scraps left over from fashion products, a byproduct of being a zero waste sustainable business. So they turned them into masks they're selling at cost for $2 – or more if you can spare it.

“We’re doing sliding scale," said owner and designer Leigh Anne Balzekas. “That's kind of what our labor cost is because we are utilizing our scraps, we're not purchasing new material, and we want everyone to be able to afford however many masks they need for their family, their loved ones.”

The CDC recommends everyone wear cloth face coverings in public settings where social distancing measures are hard to maintain - like the grocery store.

RELATED: Coronavirus FAQs: Is A Homemade Mask Effective? And What's The Best Way To Wear One?

The cloth face coverings are not surgical masks or N-95 respirators.  The CDC says those are critical supplies that must continue to be reserved for healthcare workers and other medical first responders.

These masks won't do much to prevent someone from getting the coronavirus, but can help them from spreading it if they're infected and don't know it.

CORONAVIRUS: Complete Coverage From WUSF And WUSF Public Media 

“We're in this time where we're all scared,” Balzekas said. “So having something that's comforting, and know that you can actively do something, even if it's just to prevent you from touching your own face. For me, I can wear this and I know, ‘Okay, something's different. I'm not just grocery shopping on a normal day.’”

The Disco Dolls have made 600 masks so far and have taken orders for 1,000 more. You can contact them online to place an order and get a pick-up date and time. Balzekas and the two other co-owners - Kristine Ownley and Beth Emery - can make about 65 masks a day. 

NEWSLETTER: Sign Up For Coronavirus Updates From Health News Florida

"I went with the pleated design because it seemed to be the easiest and the fastest to produce, but also the most versatile for different face types,” Balzekas said.

Most of their fashion products, including the masks, are made with organic bamboo jersey.

How to Wear a Cloth Face Covering – via the CDC:

  • fit snugly but comfortably against the side of the face
  • be secured with ties or ear loops
  • include multiple layers of fabric
  • allow for breathing without restriction
  • be able to be laundered and machine dried without damage or change to shape

The CDC also provides instructions online for how to make two versions of the masks at home.

U.S. Surgeon General Dr. Jerome Adams also shared a video about how to make one.

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I took my first photography class when I was 11. My stepmom begged a local group to let me into the adults-only class, and armed with a 35 mm disposable camera, I started my journey toward multimedia journalism.
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