Thursday, April 30, 2020


BC Portrait photographer Anna Soriano turns making protective masks into a family affair

by Carlito Pablo on April 29th, 2020 STRAIGHT.COM

Anna Soriano learned how to sew as a young woman, which has come in handy during the pandemic.Photographer

As a portrait photographer, Anna Soriano shows people at their best.

With women, she likes to take it a notch higher through glamour. This is why she makes gowns for them to wear for the shoot.

“I want them to look like celebrities,” Soriano tells the Georgia Straight in a phone interview. “I want them to look like they just walked out of an Oscars awards night.”

Sewing is one of the survival skills she acquired as a young woman. When the COVID-19 pandemic hit and masks fell into short supply, the craft became useful for the South Surrey mom and realtor.

Soriano began making cloth face masks, and she donated dozens of her creations to a seniors’ assisted-living facility in White Rock, where there was a virus outbreak.

Word spread about what the Filipino woman was doing, and soon her friends were paying for her masks so they could also give away face coverings to frontline health workers across the Lower Mainland.

Soriano recalls that she started before the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in the U.S. and the Public Health Agency of Canada in April recommended the use of nonmedical masks to help contain the spread of the novel coronavirus.

“I knew that it would be a preventative measure,” she says.

Soriano relates that she always reminds the people receiving her masks that the face covering is just one way of protecting everyone’s health.

“You still have to wash your hands, and you don’t put your hands on your face,” she says.

In order to continue her personal donations of face masks to various institutions, Soriano sets aside a portion of what she gets from paying clients.

She has heard that a similar thing is being done by Winnie Tan, a personal fitness trainer and a common acquaintance with photographer-friend Dean Guzman, both also Filipinos.

Guzman provided the Straight with a copy of a letter from the Langley Food Bank, thanking the Tri-Cities-area-based Tan and family for their donation of cloth face masks to the facility.

“Your masks are wonderful and will help protect our staff as we are handing our food to the less fortunate,” the letter reads.

Winnie Tan models one of her favourite Pretty Wings mask creations.

As someone with an economics degree, Soriano observes that shortages in medical-grade masks and protective equipment during this pandemic have exposed the risk of relying on other countries to produce essential products.

“Why are we not making these ourselves?” she asks.

She has raised six children, and three of them are living at home with her. Her 86-year-old mother is also with them. They’re tight-knit, and making masks has become a family activity that has brought them even closer together.

According to Soriano, her children have learned to live simply during this pandemic. They have also acquired a greater appreciation of the value of charity.

“We enjoy what we’re doing,” Soriano says.

Follow Carlito Pablo on Twitter @carlitopablo

Vancouver fashion designer Jason Matlo moves into making face masks and visor units for volunteers
by Janet Smith on March 27th, 2020 STRAIGHT.COM

From bespoke clothing to assembled masks: Jason Matlo's gear for volunteers (left) contrasts with looks from his high-end Matlo Atelier (right).

He's created everything from high-end womenswear and menswear to stunning bridal gowns to atelier-based bespoke clothing, but now Vancouver fashion designer Jason Matlo is putting his skills to a new in-demand look: face mask and visor units.

Driven by a new Gofundme campaign, the gear will be directed to volunteers who are grocery shopping and making deliveries to those in isolation through MAV (Mutual AID Vancouver). Matlo is assembling the units with a team of volunteers, each living and working in isolation to avoid contamination

To date his project has made 71 face mask and visor units, with purchased supplies for an additional 100 units.

Until now, the units have been purchased by MAV volunteer. Funds raised on Matlo's campaign will go to reimburse them for their purchases, as well as purchase new supplies for assembly of one-time-use masks.

"Please note: we are purchasing supplies that ARE NOT deemed PPE, to ensure we are not taking away supplies from medical and health professionals who need them, and we ARE NOT distributing these to medical professionals as this is against current legislation and moral ethics," Matlo has clarified on the site.

Any proceeds left over from the assemblies will be donated to a Vancouver-focused COVID-19 relief charity.


For those concerned about visiting a doctor's office because of the pandemic, a telehealth provider can put them in contact with physicians and other health-care professionals

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