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Many Hands Make A Quilt: Short Histories of Radical Quilting

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Taking radical action is nurtured by quilting. Quilts are tender, fierce, and reliable. They are provocative and reparative. Quilts hold people and stories. As they conform to the unique shape of a body beneath their cascading surface, they affirm the vitality of love and safety. Throughout history, communities have turned to the collective intimacies of quilting in moments of need. This zine tells those stories.

Written by Jess Bailey. Edited by Laura Moseley. Illustrations by Saffa Khan. With additional artwork by Kristyna Baczynski, Maisy Summer, & Alicia Rodriguez.

51 pages, Paperback

Published January 1, 2021

9 people are currently reading
393 people want to read

About the author

Jess Bailey

2 books

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5 stars
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48 (32%)
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Displaying 1 - 16 of 16 reviews
Profile Image for Sian Lile-Pastore.
1,462 reviews180 followers
December 23, 2021
inspiring look at quilting and activism with references and a booklist. lovely design (inside margin needed to be a bit bigger tho as some text was lost in the binding)
Profile Image for Annie Tate Cockrum.
424 reviews76 followers
November 5, 2024
Another absolute banger from Common Threads Press! An introduction to the global histories of radical quilt making - the book is quite short but gives us a look at many quilting groups of the past and many that are active today. I appreciated the resources for further reading that are listed in the back of the book.
Profile Image for lonesome dreaming.
21 reviews
February 3, 2023
Great small overview on histories of quilting against structures of white supremacy, mass incarnation, ableism and patriarchy.
Profile Image for Isis Fawzy.
3 reviews
March 4, 2025
last review before i move to a less bezos-y app (storygraph): common threads press rules and everyone should read their zines 🤟🏻
Profile Image for Izy Carney.
89 reviews
June 19, 2025
From sweet Manasa. This book filled me with so much inspiration!!!!!! I love textiles!!!!
Profile Image for Cecily.
21 reviews
April 4, 2025
I wish I could give this book 10 stars! I borrowed this from KCPL, but by the time I finished it, I knew I had to buy my own copy. It’s a book I’ll return to again and again for both inspiration and grounding.

What I loved most was how it spotlighted niche and often-overlooked histories within the world of quilting. Jess Bailey skillfully connects threads of activism, community, and art in ways that felt both deeply educational and profoundly moving. This isn’t just a book about quilts—it’s about the power of collective care, resistance, and storytelling stitched into every piece of fabric.

If you’re interested in craft history, radical politics, or just want to feel reconnected to a broader creative lineage, this book is a must-read. It’s the kind of work that leaves you itching to make something, to dig deeper, and to appreciate the quiet but powerful legacy of makers who came before us.
Profile Image for Mik.
60 reviews7 followers
September 26, 2023
A fantastic, well written short introduction with lots of resources and ideas for further research/viewing. This book excited me!
Profile Image for Vera Elwood.
142 reviews2 followers
May 5, 2025
This book was beyond wonderful. I found myself stopping at the end of each brief chapter to give a synopsis of the story to my husband and then google pictures of the quilt being referenced. Jess Bailey does an incredible job of giving historical and cultural context to each quilt while also giving a primer on fiber art appreciation and what stylistic choices make each piece particularly impactful. She ties each piece to our current political moment - all within just a couple pages per piece. The connection she shows between the AIDs Quilt and the COVID-19 Pandemic genuinely made me put the book down and cry for a while.
This book is going to become a regular re-read for me. I will be gifting a copy to all of my crafty friends, historian friends, and artist friends. I honestly wish my grandmother was still alive so I could have read it with her and discussed the political history of the art that she loved so dearly. She would have been overjoyed to know the long and powerful history of her favorite pastime.
Profile Image for Ygraine.
652 reviews
Read
January 2, 2026
after reading patchwork i decided that this year was going to be the year of the quilt for me. i also decided that even though the first project i want to embark on is going to be a v self-indulgent and inward-facing one, i don't want to lose sight of what else quilting has been and is and can be, for others and now for me, & i found this a valuable & often really moving place to start ! will be coming back to many of the included works and their histories i hope, especially jesse krimes' elegy quilts.
Profile Image for Sam Olvey.
179 reviews4 followers
September 20, 2024
Have long admired Dr. Bailey's beautiful work when it creeps up on my pinterest, but never knew the power of quilting!
Displaying 1 - 16 of 16 reviews

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