Willoughby Quilt - Why Patchwork is Better Than Gardening
I first started to dabble in quilting when my 14 year old was just a toddler. I LONGED for something creative and meaningful to do in a sea of days filled with uneaten food and dirty laundry.
I tried gardening, thinking it would be the perfect family activity, but I quickly realised that Tully's happy following behind me, pulling out plants as quickly as I planted them, washing my seeds away with the blast of his hose, was NOT going to be the blessed family project I'd always dreamed of!
We sowed seeds that didn't grow, killed plants I'd spent good money on, and never, ever kept up with the weeds. There were already so many things in my life that died or turned to chaos if not regularly managed - the dishes, the laundry, the toddler. If gardening required the same level of regular attention, it wasn't the hobby for me.
Then I Discovered Patchwork Quilts
It didn't take long for me to notice that patchwork quilts, no matter how long it was left unattended, didn't undo itself, or become over-run with weeds. It just waited. I could come back to it a few days, or a month, or even a year later, and it was there, ready for me to pick up where I left off. There was no pressure to do a little each day in order to keep on top of it. And when I finished a quilt, it was finished. Not like the dirty dishes that hit the bench the second you empty the sink and hang up your towel. It was done, and ready to be included in our little family.
It was this realisation that got me hooked on quilting.
As time went on, I realised I loved lots of other thing about it too. In a season of a million invisible, unnoticed tasks, my quilts could be SEEN (by me, most importantly, but also by others). Before kids, I played music, wrote poetry, tried sketching, but those skills were hidden from view, trapped in my head or in notebooks. I longed for tangible evidence that I'd achieved something that day. My quilts became beautiful markers of a whole season of mothering work that couldn't easily be quantified.
Patchwork Quilts in My Life Today
My life is different now, and my kids are bigger. The days are marked with school time and work time, with pay days and exam results. But during our recent school holidays, I was reminded of this season. Days that would have gone by in a blur, if I didn't have these quilt blocks to show for it.
Willoughby Quilt
This is Willoughby, the scrappy version I used in my new pattern. I made the blocks while helping Tully with holiday homework, while supervising my 12 year old cook dinner, in the magic moments when no one needed me, but I still needed to be available.
I LOVED that my hands could be busy, but my head could be here. I could sit and chat, I could tell them where their shoes were (even though, if they spent 30 seconds looking, they'd find it themselves), and I could say no for the 15th time to Tully to his outlandish requests (outlandish requests are his super power). I could take it to the park or over to Nanna's. It filled my days with joy, with something to look forward to, with a sense of progress, with something tangible at the end.
On the last day of holidays, I trimmed the square blocks, sewed them together, and had myself a quilt top! Just like that! It's all these reasons that I LOVE Willoughby. No demanding colour choices, no mistakes, just easy company.
Willoughby is in the shop now! Grab it today and enjoy tangible evidence of a day well spent, that can't be undone.
I feel like you wrote this about my life exactly! I’m stay at home mom to three boys (2,4,6) and I literally felt stuck/burned out until recently when I started making quilts by hand. And I too currently have a big family garden sitting empty for lack of motivation or care, I just don’t want to have another responsibility right now at this stage.
I bought your pattern this morning and cannot wait to start! I think it will be just the thing to get me through the summer break.
Thank you so much for your story and your work.
I am so very happy that gardening, and your other pursuits, didn’t work out for you! Because you tried patchwork, and especially EPP, I am so very blessed, and I’m sure many more would agree with me! Your patterns and kits have been powerful mental and emotional therapy for me ( and physical as well- it helps with my wrist issues/ CRPS). Thanks so very much, Jodi, for sharing your talent with all of us! 💕
I bought the Willoughby kit yesterday for the same reason…epp is there ready to pick up and continue whenever you need it. I’ve got some machine projects on the go but it’s not the same. Painting not gardening was my thing previously but I never felt satisfied for the time I put in but hand sewing is just perfect :-)
I like this quilt very very much.
Hand sewing is a nice achievement. You made a good choice.
I used to do a lot of gardening, flowers and stuff, but now it is too much work and the past 5 years, the biting insects love me.
It is still only April, but I put up fencing around a small patch to maybe toss some seeds in for zinnias to magically grow without my attention. I was outside for a little over an hour and got several bites!!!!
I would love to make this quilt.
I sent this to a friend who is a gardener. We certainly do not understand each other. My green thumb is purple, my favorite quilting color.
Thank you…..
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