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DOD Employee Sews Compassion Into Face Masks for Coworkers, Friends

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When Defense Secretary Dr. Mark T. Esper directed Defense Department personnel to wear cloth face coverings when they can't maintain 6 feet of social distance at work, Defense Media Activity employees in Riverside, California, were already wearing them.

That's because a big-hearted woman with extraordinary sewing skills took the initiative to make them. Broadcast journalist Rolla Suttmiller sewed 160 cloth masks in a few days for her comrades, friends and neighbors at no cost to them. She started making them last week when Riverside County mandated that all essential service workers wear a cloth face covering as a COVID-19 preventive measure. 

A person wearing glasses wears a large face mask with flowers.
Mask Maker
Rolla Suttmiller, a broadcast journalist for the American Forces Network Broadcast Center, made cloth masks for her coworkers in Riverside, Calif., who are working 24/7 through the COVID-19 pandemic. Suttmiller volunteered her sewing skills, material and time to make 160 masks.
Credit: DOD
VIRIN: 200410-D-ZZ999-100

''I wanted to do it to protect myself at first,'' Suttmiller said. ''Then, I got a call from someone from work with an urgent request for masks for people in the building. ''I made 31 in four hours and brought them over the same day.''

Suttmiller has been sewing since she was 12, does crafts all the time, and belongs to a multitude of sewing and crafts groups.

A man wearing a face mask sits in front of a computer monitor.
Safety Mask
Kevin Davis, an editor at the American Forces Network Broadcast Center, sports a cloth mask sewn by a coworker as he continues his mission. Davis helps AFN provide the overseas military with morale-building TV entertainment, COVID-19 force protection messages, and live news.
Credit: DOD
VIRIN: 200410-D-ZZ999-2000

''I compiled a bit from all of them and did my own design with three layers,'' she explained.  ''If you go to the [Centers for Disease Control and Prevention] website, you’ll see they recommend a high-weave cotton. You want that for breathability.  But there are still tiny little holes in it. What I did is I have the decorative outer layer, a white layer that touches your face, and a middle layer called interfacing. It’s made of something denser that doesn’t let light transfer through.''

She decided to sew scores of masks because of three factors. ''I have thousands of pounds of fabric on hand, I have the skill, and, three, it would be immoral of me to not to put the two of these together and make them for people,'' she said.

A man wearing a face mask sits at a desk with  technical equipment.
Technologist Mask
Art Mistretta, a technologist at the American Forces Network Broadcast Center, wears a hand-sewn mask made by a coworker as he works. Mistretta is one of a team manning a telephone help desk that aids viewers to fix satellite reception issues.
Credit: DOD
VIRIN: 200410-D-ZZ999-400

Suttmiller sews compassion into every mask she stitches. 

''Those custom-made masks, made with such attention to detail with an assembly line of just her, are spectacular,'' coworker Roy Mason said.

Jordana Jacobs, a television master-control supervisor, laughed and said, ''She’s really got those Suzy Homemaker skills down, …and I love the design!''

A woman models a large, multicolored facemask.
Mask Model
Jordana Jacobs, a TV operations supervisor at the American Forces Network Broadcast Center, models a cloth mask sewn by a coworker. She wears the mask while continuing the mission of providing the overseas military with morale-building TV entertainment, COVID-19 force protection messages, and live news.
Credit: DOD
VIRIN: 200410-D-ZZ999-300

Suttmiller is continuing to make masks, already fielding improved versions with a narrow elastic band. One version has elastic loops that go over the ears, and another type ties behind the head.

While Suttmiller crafts face masks for teammates, she also continues to serve the overseas military, DOD civilians, and their family members. Suttmiller is a senior editor, creating quality television messages that inform viewers what's airing when on American Forces Network Television. AFN serves Americans serving in 168 different countries and territories and 200 Navy ships around the world.

(George A. Smith is assigned to the American Forces Network Broadcast Center.)

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