
Any craft that requires detailed human input is an act of excellent care for ourselves and the community. Particularly, throughout history, we’ve come to understand how stitching in practice served as acts of defiance, embodying the concept of sewing as resistance. Sewing has always been more than a mere hobby; it’s how we mend the clothes needed for work, play, and gathering.
Sewing served as a way to imagine beyond the moments of feeling stuck. It has allowed our society to resist in ways that our ancestors hoped would enable future generations to breathe more easily. From mapmaking to visible mending to haute couture, sewing has always been a radical tool of survival and revolution.
The Personal Power of Sewing
We often think of sewing when something close to us becomes damaged or needs modification. Those jeans you saw at the store require modifications to fit your body the way you need them. A button has gone missing in the most auspicious location, and you must have it fixed before the big event. Alternatively, your favorite jacket has worn out and now needs patching. These small needs play a valuable role in the larger truth of making and sewing.
Sewing for Healing
The rhythm of stitching slows us down, grounding us in the present. Like breathwork, the repetition becomes meditative. It’s a way to restore the self, one thread at a time.
Sewing for Joy
If you’ve never created a garment from scratch, it’s a journey of joy and discovery. The process of selecting fabrics you like, experimenting with texture and design, and seeing your little mistakes become a testament to completing a larger project; all of these moments are what bring joy and whimsy to what we wear. It also serves as a reminder that when we care for ourselves, others, and the environment in our daily process, we can create beauty beyond what we thought was possible.
Sewing as Collective Resistance
Throughout time, sewing circles and stitches have been more than craft; they’ve been shields, codes, and rallying cries.
- Enslaved women stitched quilts that contained secret symbols, guiding people toward freedom on the Underground Railroad.
- Union workers carried hand-sewn banners that turned fabric into declarations of solidarity.
- Anti-fascist groups in Europe used sewing circles as safe covers for resistance meetings.
- Feminist fiber artists of the 1970s reclaimed “women’s work” as a political protest.
- Queer and trans sewing spaces have fostered kinship and survival, where fabric and thread have become tools for identity and chosen family.
📦 Revolutionary Sewing Fact
During the Underground Railroad, historians believed some quilts carried hidden messages — such as the “Log Cabin” or “Flying Geese” patterns — that helped enslaved people find their way to freedom.
Sewing as Revolutionary Practice Today
The revolutionary power of sewing didn’t stop in the past — it continues today in how we resist fast fashion, claim identity, and care for one another.
Skill as Survival
Visible mending and upcycling fight against throwaway culture. Every patch is an act of refusal: we don’t discard, we reimagine.
Strength in Numbers: Building Community Power
Sewing circles serve as community gathering spaces, fostering a sense of solidarity amongst people you may not interact with otherwise. They become more than simply the tools we use to repair or make. They become the instruments by which we build new bridges, connecting us in a shared journey of creativity and resistance.
Craft as Protest
Banners at marches, memorial quilts, and activist fiber art installations remind us that textiles carry power, visibility, and a rich history of storytelling.
Sewing in History
- Union banners stitched by workers → visible solidarity.
- Sewing circles in fascist Europe → covers for resistance.
- Queer and trans sewing spaces → chosen family through craft.
Resource Guide: How to Begin Sewing with Intention
Whether you’re sewing for healing, joy, or resistance, here are some resources to help you get started.
Learn How to Sew
- YouTube: Made Everyday, With Wendy, Professor Pincushion.
- Online Classes: Skillshare, Creativebug, Coursera, Sustainable Fashion.
- Workshops: FabScrap, or local libraries, art collectives, and community centers.
Essential Materials
Start small with:
- Needles, thread, scissors, measuring tape, fabric scraps.
- Pins, seam ripper, and iron (optional but helpful).
- A secondhand sewing machine (optional for expansion).
Source Sustainably
- Reuse: Thrift stores, Buy Nothing groups, swaps.
- Upcycle: Old sheets, curtains, garments.
- Independent Shops: Black Cotton, Averbach Textiles, Queen of Raw, Swanson Fabrics.
A Helpful Sewing Tip:
Mending visibly isn’t just about repairing an object; it’s about restoring it to a sturdy state. It’s an act of defiance against fast fashion and poor working conditions, as well as creating more sustainable processes. It allows us to individually resist the loop that a splintered supply chain and lack of regulation globally keep us trapped in.
Call to Action
Sewing is a vital part of the revolution. Every stitch you make as you sew comes in a strong lineage of hope and resistance for humanity.
Try This Today
- Mend one item instead of throwing it away.
- Swap fabric scraps with a friend.
- Stitch a patch with a message that matters to you and wear it as a quiet protest.
Whether you pick up a needle for joy, healing, or community, you’re joining centuries of people who stitched toward freedom. The only question is: what story will your stitches tell?
