Signed in as:
filler@godaddy.com
Signed in as:
filler@godaddy.com
So why does it still feel like you're constantly juggling, constantly second-guessing your prices, constantly wondering if you can actually make this work , properly work, without burning yourself out in the process?
You're not doing it wrong. You're just missing a few things nobody ever tells makers.
That's exactly why I'm here.


And someone who spent a long time being told, in all sorts of subtle ways, that creativity wasn't a serious pursuit.
I have a degree in Textile Design from Winchester School of Art. I'm a qualified teacher. And I've done exactly what you're probably doing right now, craft fairs, Etsy, commissions, side hustles, fitting creativity around everything else and wondering why it never quite felt sustainable.
Then burnout stopped me in my tracks. Signed off with labyrinthitis, I found my way back through crochet and somewhere in that recovery, something shifted. I stopped seeing my creativity as the problem. I started seeing the structure, or the lack of it, as the thing that needed fixing.
That shift became the foundation of everything I do now.
I work with yarn and textile based craft makers, and creative business owners of all kinds , who are ready to move beyond surviving and start building something that actually works. Something sustainable, intentional, and genuinely theirs.
I believe creativity deserves to be taken seriously. Culturally, personally, and financially.
That's not a nice idea. It's the thing I've built my whole business around.
You're already selling your handmade work through Etsy, at craft fairs, via your own website , and it's going okay, but okay isn't enough anymore.
You're capable and creative, but you're stuck in a loop: make something, sell it, start again. There's no real strategy, no breathing room, and honestly? No sense that this is going anywhere bigger.
You want to grow — maybe into teaching, maybe into digital products, maybe just into charging what your work is actually worth — but you don't know where to start, and you're not sure you're allowed to want more than you already have.

If pricing has ever made you feel uncomfortable, undervalued, or just plain confused, this free guide is for you.
It will not only help you understand why you're undercharging, but also what to do about it!