King & Bay collaborates with ConquerCovid19.ca to expand the #SOYBFaceMaskChallenge
As our #SOYBFaceMaskChallenge continues to grow, we find more groups aiming to make a difference.
As our #SOYBFaceMaskChallenge continues to grow, we find more groups aiming to make a difference.
There is a common analogy explaining the unintended consequences of doing something, no matter how small the doing is at the beginning. It is referred to as “The Butterfly Effect’ and goes like this.
[Toronto, ON] King & Bay, a Toronto-based custom clothier, has launched the #SOYBFaceMaskChallenge in response to government calls for businesses to step up and help mitigate the risk of depleted medical supplies during the ongoing COVID-19 crisis.
Here are a few photo of the face masks made in support of the #SOYBFaceMaskChallenge. Have photos of your face masks you'd like us to add? Click here.
Last week, Dr. Jeff Powis of Michael Garron Hospital raised a call for East York sewers to make face masks. For King & Bay, it was the perfect fit with our #SOYBFaceMaskChallenge.
In this video, Master Clothier Sushant Vachhar walks you through keeping your homemade face mask sanitary.
In this video, Master Clothier Sushant Vachhar explains how non-medical grade face masks can still help.
In this video, one of our Master Clothiers explains the #SOYBFaceMaskChallenge.
The call for assistance has gone out... and King & Bay is 'in' with a challenge to others to use the 'Shirt Off Your Back' to make face masks in support of community health.
If you've got an old shirt (or other cotton fabric) and a sewing machine, here are easy-to-follow directions for making face masks to support the Shirt off Your Back Face Mask Challenge.