Life Lessons for a brand new Quilter
My late mom Kate, used to say “every spoil is a style”. That’s what I named my first quilt.
I’m teaching myself how to quilt, and somewhere between the fabric scraps and the seam ripper, I realized I wasn’t just learning a craft—I was relearning how to live.

You can’t learn quilting by just watching videos. At some point, you have to cut the fabric, thread the needle, and make the mistakes yourself. Life works the same way. You can’t watch it from the sidelines. You have to get your hands dirty and actually live it.

I cut my 7½-inch squares down to 6½ inches by mistake. Shit happens. The real question is always: how are you going to get past it? I cut more strips, sewed them on, and reclaimed the missing inch. Problem solved—not perfectly, but honestly.

I arranged my squares in the wrong configuration and didn’t realize it until later. Sometimes you’re going to mess things up. So I ripped them out and sewed them again. No drama. Just patience.

I assumed the quilt top would fit the backing. It didn’t—it was too small. So I added a border. Sometimes in life, we have to fake it till we make it. Sometimes we just need to add more effort, more support, more room to grow.
I embroidered my son’s name in the wrong color thread. Instead of living with it, I ripped it out and redid it in a darker shade. We can always regroup. We can always start over. Grace matters—especially the kind we extend to ourselves.

That first quilt was full of errors. But it was finished. And it was warm. Life can be messy and imperfect, but we can still make something meaningful out of it.

Now I’m on my second quilt. My blocks are measured more carefully. I lay everything out before sewing. My seams are sharper. My borders are planned ahead of time.

Will it be perfect? Nope. I still have a long way to go.
But that’s the point.

🌺🌸Buy me a coffee ☕️ please🌺🌸
