Ep 2: Quilting as Collective Storytelling
Sara Trail has been sewing since she was four years old. By twelve, she'd designed a Simplicity pattern collection. She'd seen the inside of the quilting industry, and she knew exactly who was being left out.

Quilting can cost $15 a yard. That's a high barrier to entry. So Sara created the Social Justice Sewing Academy in Oakland, using what she calls a "Robin Hood" model: capturing the excess fabric that accumulates in quilters' studios and redirecting it to young people who couldn't otherwise afford to participate.
"Needle and thread can be tools of protest. It can be way more than the art of making. It's the art of sharing, the art of educating, the art of empowering, the art of informing, the art of creating empathy."
Sara Trail, Social Justice Sewing Academy
But SJSA isn't really about teaching kids to sew. Sara's building what she calls "an intergenerational army of makers" who understand that fabric has always carried history. When Sara invokes Gee's Bend, she's connecting to a history that runs from freedom quilts through the AIDS Memorial Quilt.

The quilts young people make at SJSA speak to police violence, gentrification, ICE raids, and the daily realities of their communities. They're giving voice to lived experience through fabric.
"The AIDS Quilt walked so the Social Justice Sewing Academy can run."
Sara Trail
The Memorial Quilt Project creates quilts for families who've lost children to police violence. Each quilt becomes a memorial and a demand.


We also hear from Grace Rother of the Abolition Quilting Bee on collective making: small acts that contribute to a greater whole. One square at a time, one seam at a time, until suddenly you're looking at something that can cover a bed, or cover America's National Mall.
How to Support SJSA: Volunteer as an embroidery volunteer (blocks mailed to you), donate fabric or financial support, host a workshop, or follow @sjaborhood on Instagram.
⚠️ Content warning at 39:12: Brief mention of childhood sexual abuse in the context of creating safe spaces for young people to share trauma through art.
One square at a time, one seam at a time. That's the quilter's way.