On magazines, blogs, algorithm noise, AI fakes, and finding your way back to the connections that truly matter.

It All Started With a Magazine

Remember waiting for your quilting magazine to arrive in the post or when we get to enjoy browsing them on the newsstand while we do grocery shopping? Flipping open those pages — the scent of them, the weight of them — and just… sitting with it? No scroll, no algorithm, no one trying to sell you a fake pattern. Just beautifully curated stories, project ideas, technique tips, and the quiet joy of a community that took the time to put it all together.

I still have a collection of older magazines, and I genuinely love browsing through them. In fact, I had the loveliest thing happen a few years back, a dear reader sent me a collection of vintage 1980s issues, and OH MY goodness. I feel like the luckiest person ever! I talked about this in my previous post HERE> 

I have been slowly working my way through them, page by page, soaking up every bit of inspiration. The quilts. The styling. The way they wrote about quilting, and the stories… It’s a different kind of nourishment altogether, and one I didn’t realize I’d been missing.

Those magazines weren’t just content. They were curated. Someone who is chosen for their job through their experience in the quilting world thought carefully about what you needed to see, what would inspire you, what would teach you. That intention matters. It still matters somehow. At least the process of the curation is a filter in a way. These days we do have more originality but we also have to filter lots of noises around it too. 

Read on and I’ll tell you what I mean by this…

I Finally Started the Home Town Quilt (And Here’s What Happened)

There’s a quilt kit that has been sitting on my shelf since 2024. Every time I walked past it, I’d give it a little smile — a quiet, slightly guilty smile — and keep walking. You know exactly what I mean, don’t you? 😛

Well, friends. It has finally happened. I have officially started Lori Holt’s Home Town Quilt, and I have so much to share with you.

 

The Kit That Started It All

I first fell in love with Lori Holt’s whimsical, story-filled quilts the way most of us do — one Instagram scroll at a time. The houses, the gardens, the tiny little details in every block. I was completely mesmerized, and in 2024 I finally took the plunge and purchased the Home Town Quilt Kit from Fat Quarter Shop. The kit is no longer available, but FQS carries lots of fun quilt kit which you can check out HERE>

The kit comes with the gorgeous bundle of Riley Blake fabrics, called Hometown designed by Lori Holt. Along with the fabrics, you also get the Home Town Sew Along Guide and the Sew Simple Shapes: Home Town template set— 63 acrylic templates designed specifically for the blocks in this quilt.

And then it sat there. For months.

Read on… 

You know that feeling when you finish a project in one day and it just immediately makes your sewing space happier? That’s exactly what happened with my Pretty Pockets Sewing Machine Caddy.

Let me introduce you to my newest sewing room addition. This cheerful, scrappy sewing machine caddy has been sitting on my machine for a couple of weeks now and I am absolutely in love with how it brightens up my whole sewing space. It came together so quickly!  I made the whole thing in a single day — and that kind of quick win is exactly what I needed!

My finished Pretty Pockets Sewing Machine Caddy sitting pretty on my Janome Horizon Memory Craft 8200QC. Those “good vibes always” pockets are making me so happy!

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I’ve Always Known Creativity Gives Me Energy

For as long as I can remember, creating has always made me feel more alive. And ever since I have started this blog and quilt, I have always been inspired and super excited when I think about what I get to do. About the time I get to quilt. 

Even during busy seasons, creativity brought me back to myself. What changed recently wasn’t the realization that quilting gives me energy. I’ve always known that. What changed is that somewhere along the way, I stopped prioritizing it.

Let’s chat about this…continue to read below.

A Simple Spring Start (with the Sweetest Flower Quilt Block🌸)

There’s something about this time of year that makes me crave a fresh start. A year seems to be flowing so fast, and you wonder whether you’ve taken the time to really enjoy the year yet. Is it also time to look back a little and adjust a little. 

Not in a big, overwhelming, “let’s redo everything” kind of way…
but in a quiet, gentle shift.
A little softness.
A little lightness.

And for me, that often begins in the sewing room.

Lately, I’ve been feeling the pull toward spring…even if it doesn’t quite look like spring outside where I am. It’s more of a feeling than a season, isn’t it? That sense of hope. Of something new beginning. Of wanting to surround yourself with things that feel a little brighter, a little lighter.

So I decided to start small.

A Simple Wall Hanging to Welcome Spring

I picked up the Simply Sweet pattern by Lori Holt for It’s Sew Emma, and right away… I knew it was exactly what I needed.

If you’re like me, you’ve got fat quarter bundles stacked everywhere with very little plan for actually using them.

That fabric guilt is real. You see gorgeous bundles, buy them with the best intentions, and then they sit in your stash while you scroll Pinterest looking for the perfect pattern. Meanwhile, the pile grows and the finishing rate stays very low, but the beautiful collections keeps coming out and you simply love the idea of working with them!

Well, today, I am sharing you one way that I’ll be trying to stick to this year and possibly till the next year. I am following along with the book Fat Quarters by the Dozen from Its Sew Emma. There are twelve quilts designed specifically for those bundles you’ve been hoarding, with instructions so clear even beginner-friendly patterns feel like wins instead of stressful experiments. 

Let’s Talk About UFOs (and the Quiet Guilt We Don’t Say Out Loud)

You walk into your sewing room with a plan.

Today, so today… you will finish something.

You open a drawer…
then another…
then a basket…

…and suddenly you’re staring at a stack of unfinished projects. The photo below shows my UFOs from long time ago. And yet, I still have some of them in my UFO pile. Today, we are going to unpack the guilt around UFO and learn how to make a gentle move around them. Read more below — and tell me, do you have a UFO that’s been quietly judging you too?

I’ve been quietly working on my scrappy Ocean Wave quilt for years now, and this year I’m gently setting the intention to finally complete it. Progress has been slow, but meaningful. Hence it deserves another progress post. 

I can never get bored of putting these blocks into layout. So much movement and so many little piece of scraps that brings in memories of previous projects! Read more to see the latest progress and enjoy a few photos of these scrappy Ocean Wave blocks.

A Great Start to 2026: Cleaning Up, Finishing Up & Just Getting It Done

One of the best ways I’ve learned to start a new year is not by starting something new, but by finishing what’s already been started.

As I eased into 2026, I decided to look through my basket of nearly-there projects. You know the ones like sampler pieces, practice blocks, things that were made with intention but never quite crossed the finish line. This time, I made a simple decision: they deserved to be finished.

I grabbed a handful of leftover bindings from my scrap basket and used them to finish my free-motion quilting border sampler pieces. No overthinking. No matching stress. Just choosing what was already there and moving forward.

And honestly?
It was so much fun.

Check out what I made below!!

Reflecting on My 2025 Quilting Journey

Before I list the quilts and sewing projects I worked on this year, I want to pause for a moment.

Reflection matters. Not to count finishes, not to measure productivity, and definitely not to compare with anyone else’s sewing journey. This year reminded me that progress doesn’t always look loud. Some seasons are steady. Some are quiet. Many are made up of small pockets of time, 20 minutes here, a few stitches there and THAT still counts.

If you’ve ever felt like you didn’t “make enough” this year, I hope this list encourages you.
These projects aren’t about numbers or finishes — they’re about showing up when I could and finding joy in the process.

Read more ↓