
Okay! I've been chomping at the bit to share more info about my new class that has just launched on Craftsy.com!
This class is called
Free Motion Quilting a Sampler and in the more than 7 hours of class time, you'll learn how to quilt many filler designs and apply them over the surface of a sampler quilt.
Which sampler? It's actually Amy Gibson's Block of the Month Quilt!
Amy Gibson has taught
this free class for Craftsy since January. If you run through the lessons, you'll learn many fantastic piecing and applique techniques and end up with 20 beautiful blocks to turn into a sampler quilt.
But what about quilting it?
Sampler quilts can be tricky to quilt. All those piecing lines, all those shapes and angles, can make it really hard to see where the quilting design will fit. Many quilters love making samplers to learn new techniques, but they often become UFOs because there's always that giant unanswered question -
"How do I quilt this?!"
So that's where my class comes in! I took a look at Amy's quilt design and immediately began sketching fills over the surface. All of Amy's beautiful blocks were perfect to explore many interesting designs, so the free motion quilting is almost like a sampler of it's own!
Along the way of learning the designs, I've also shared all of my tips and tricks for mastering free motion quilting. Taking a look here on the Free Motion Quilting Project, I see all this information is here, but scattered across hundreds videos and tutorials that you will have to dig around to find.
Craftsy has enabled me to combine ALL this information into this one huge class because for once I finally didn't have a limit to how long I could talk and teach!
Of course, this also means some of my lessons are really long, but the nice thing is you don't have to take it all in at once. You can pause the lesson for days or months and come back right to where you left it with no hunting and searching for the right place in the video.

What I love most about Craftsy is it's much more like an in-person workshop. From a teacher's perspective, I can easily see and respond directly to every question posted to the platform. I LOVE helping quilters learn free motion quilting so being able to directly respond is making me feel like a really effective teacher.
From a student's perspective (and yes, I'm taking multiple Craftsy classes right now. I may be a teacher, but I will ALWAYS be a student) the system is unbeatable. The videos are high quality, the teachers awesome, and the ability to ask questions anytime, any place and get an answer is phenomenal!
There's a reason why I'm able to be enrolled in 9 classes at once - I can attend class whenever I want! Sometimes I'm needing a
bit more info about fabric dyeing, so I check out that class. The next evening I might want to continue
learning how to spin, so I turn on that one. It's so easy to pick up where you last left off, jump forward, rewind, or start the whole class over at the beginning that there's never a risk of missing a step.
Honestly I feel that the way the lessons are delivered and the level of interaction has created classes that are more like college courses, or artist intensives. Growing up I drooled over the class cataloges for
Penland School of Crafts and
John C Campbell Folk School - two AMAZING intensive craft schools in North Carolina that my dad attended as a blacksmith.
However, when will I ever have 8 weeks to take an intensive class at Penland now? It might have happened before I got married, and it might still happen when James has left for college, but at the moment, that will just not fit into my life.
I did take a week long beadmaking class at John C Campbell Folk School, but can I still get in touch with that instructor? It's sad to say I don't even remember her name. Can I go back and watch footage from the class and remind myself exactly how to make a goddess shaped bead? Nope. That was an amazing class, but most of the knowledge was lost because I didn't take great notes and my interaction with the teacher ended as soon as the class ended.
With Craftsy, you will have that same awesome class experience, but now with the ability to interact and learn on your schedule, as your time allows, and you'll never lose access to the videos and instructions. It might not be in person, but you can watch the lessons repeatedly, ask questions, get answers, and you're guaranteed years of interaction with your instructor.
That's another thing - I occasionally teach workshops at
Ye Olde Forest Quilt Shop in Greensboro, NC from around 9 to 4. Usually by 2 pm, most of the students are so "fried" they can't take in anymore. Our brains can only absorb so much and as a teacher, I've always felt very frustrated by how little I can teach before I've worn everyone out!
When teaching
Free Motion Quilting a Sampler, I intentionally threw in as much information as I could because I knew you wouldn't try to watch all the lessons at once. If you get overwhelmed, just turn off the class and go quilt for a bit. Digest the class in small chunks so it's not overwhelming. This is also a better way to learn because you can try a design, quilt it out, and if you hit snags, come back to the platform and post questions, or a picture of a stitching issue you're experiencing.
Another point I just thought of - cost. My dad sent me to the folk school for my high school graduation present, and I believe the total cost for the class, room to stay, and amazing food was well over $500. Yes, it was a terrific experience, but not something I could do very often.
The average in-person quilting workshop can cost anywhere from $35 at a guild meeting to well over $200 if your teacher is a big name in the industry. You'll still need to buy materials, and possibly a kit, so in-person workshops can get pretty expensive pretty quick.
In comparison, Craftsy classes cost between $30 - $50 and if you get on the newsletter and are patient, you'll typically get special offers and coupons for classes every few months. You can even
enroll in my class right now for 50% off the regular price right here!
So overall, Craftsy ROCKS! It's an unbelievable place to learn, it's a terrific place to teach, and I think it's going to blast the crafting world off it's feet as more people are able to learn, able to access awesome teachers, and able to crank their craft up to the next level.
I hope to see you in class!
Leah Day