The old cedar chest in Sarah’s attic didn’t just hold fabric; it held a roadmap. Tucked inside was a tattered, coffee-stained booklet titled Quilts for Baby: Complete Instructions for 5 Projects . To anyone else, it was a vintage craft guide, but to Sarah, it was the key to welcoming her first grandson, Leo.
This was the baseline—simple 4-inch squares of soft flannel. As Sarah stitched the blues and creams together, she thought of her own father’s old shirts she’d snuck into the mix. It was a sturdy, humble quilt meant for the floor, for tummy time, and for the inevitable spills of early infancy. Quilts for Baby: Complete Instructions for 5 Pr...
The final project was the most difficult—an intricate Lone Star pattern using silk and high-thread-count cotton. It was the "Sunday Best" quilt, intended for the baptism and, eventually, to be tucked away for Leo’s own children. As Sarah tied the final knot on the binding, she realized she hadn't just followed instructions. She had stitched five different layers of a life yet to be lived. The old cedar chest in Sarah’s attic didn’t
When Leo was finally placed in her arms, wrapped in the "Welcome Home" patchwork, Sarah didn't see the tiny imperfections or the frayed edges of the old manual. She saw a legacy, five projects deep, ready to keep a new generation warm. This was the baseline—simple 4-inch squares of soft
She cleared her dining table, the sun streaming onto the five distinct patterns she intended to conquer.