12/05/2026
I think one of the reasons sewing can feel so intimidating now is because we’ve separated it from ordinary life.
For most of history, women made things while children played nearby, meals cooked, conversations happened, and daily life carried on around them. Sewing wasn’t treated as a separate performance that required perfect conditions. It was simply woven into the rhythm of family life.
Somewhere along the way, I think many of us started believing we needed uninterrupted time, a perfectly clean house, or hours of focus before we could begin creating anything by hand.
But sewing in small spirts of time will still lead you to a finished piece!
A seam here. A hem there. Ten quiet minutes while a child colors at the table beside you. Tiny pieces of work still become something useful over time.
I want to share more of what sewing and motherhood can look like together, not as perfectly curated hobbies, but as practical, lived-in skills that fit into real life. Because if I can sew clothing for my kids (and hundreds of others) you can too.