How did Black Women Stitch come to be? What sparked the idea?
In the summer of 2017, white supremacist, Nazis and Confederates, who were angry that their Civil War Participation Trophies were being moved, marched regularly in my community. Their monthly marches culminated in the largest white nationalist rally on US soil. As part of standing up and resisting white supremacy, I was at the deadly downtown intersection when a white supremacist drove his car into the crowd, killing one person and injuring dozens. I did an interview with NPR about this.
A month later, I went to a quilt retreat that I had been attending for the last 15 years. When I arrived, a few people who knew that I survived that terror attack, asked how I was. I answered their questions. Later, I was told that “Charlottesville was not to be discussed.” After that event, I was uninvited to the upcoming quilt retreat to be held the following year.
This was heartbreaking and embarrassing. But it made me realize that I would never again audition my humanity in exchange for doing something I loved. I realized that what I needed was a creative environment like the one I had grown up with as a girl, as a Black girl in a Black family in a Black community with Black people who loved Black people. Black Women Stitch (BWS) emerged at a time when many social media sewing craft groups were homogenous and anti-black. Essentially, I built Black Women Stitch because it was something that I needed. As the years have gone on, I have discovered that other people need it too.

What was the first brainstorm session like when you started to dream up Stitch Please?
I hosted a sewing retreat in 2019. It was beautiful. There was joy and music and laughter and overall support. It reminded me of the environment that I grew up in, warm and familiar. We were having conversations that were about our lives and experiences as Black women, which felt affirming. And we spent a lot of time discussing the nitty gritty of sewing, the kind of things that people who don’t sew would think boring, but we find it endlessly interesting. We chatted about patterns and which ones yielded the best outcomes or had crappy directions. We also had different types of expertise and sewing interests. This was wonderful because if I was stuck on something, there was a person who knew information or a technique that I didn’t know. I wanted that vibrant exchange of knowledge to continue, the feeling of creativity bubbling over, and the ability to nerd out about sewing with people who loved it too.