The Quilt Scouts Podcast

Ep 001: Welcome to Quilt Scouts — A Creative Camp for Quilters

January 1, 2026

The Quilt Scouts Podcast — Episode 1 If you’re listening to this episode, there’s a good chance quilting matters to you. Or maybe you want it to matter again. Maybe you feel a little stuck, a little overwhelmed, or just tired of feeling like quilting comes with a rulebook you somehow missed. Episode one of The […]

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The Quilt Scouts Podcast — Episode 1

If you’re listening to this episode, there’s a good chance quilting matters to you. Or maybe you want it to matter again. Maybe you feel a little stuck, a little overwhelmed, or just tired of feeling like quilting comes with a rulebook you somehow missed.

Episode one of The Quilt Scouts Podcast is a welcome to camp. An orientation guide. A chance to slow down and get grounded before we head out on any creative adventures.

This episode is about what Quilt Scouts is, how it works, and why quilting doesn’t have to feel like a test you didn’t study for.

Before we dive in, I invite you to sit with one simple question, something we’ll return to often around here:

What would it look like to treat your quilting like an adventure?

You don’t have to answer it. Just notice what comes up.

🎧 Listen to the Episode

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Episode Overview

Welcome to Quilt Scouts — A Creative Camp for Quilters introduces the heart of Quilt Scouts and the spirit behind this podcast.

In this episode, I share how Quilt Scouts came to be, why the scouting metaphor matters, and how ideas like badges and base camp help create a more supportive, curiosity-driven approach to quilting.

Rather than focusing on mastery or perfection, this episode centers on exploration, learning by doing, and having a place to return to when things feel messy or uncertain.

Think campfire conversation, not lecture hall.

Key Topics Covered in This Episode

How Quilt Scouts Began

My quilting journey started the way many do. A deep YouTube rabbit hole, a lot of enthusiasm, and very little idea what I was doing. I didn’t even know quilt patterns existed. I was just cutting fabric, sewing pieces together, and figuring it out as I went.

When I did finally order a printed pattern, I thought it worked like a garment pattern. It turns out that is not how that works.

But that early phase, when I didn’t know what I was “supposed” to be doing, was some of the most fun I’ve ever had quilting. It was new. It was playful. It felt like exploration.

That feeling is the heart of Quilt Scouts.

The actual spark came from a children’s book I was reading to my kid at bedtime. The characters were scouts, covered in badges. And I remember thinking how powerful it would be if quilting had badges too. Not for being perfect or advanced, but for trying things. For showing up. For exploring.

That idea stuck.

Quilting as Exploration, Not Evaluation

At its core, Quilt Scouts is a creative framework. It’s a way to approach quilting with curiosity instead of pressure.

Instead of asking, “Am I good enough to try this?” we ask, “What would happen if I tried this?”

In Quilt Scouts, badges are not tests. They’re not competitions. They’re markers of experience. A badge doesn’t mean you mastered something. It means you explored it. You learned something. You showed up.

There’s no required order. There’s no timeline. And there’s definitely no quilt police lurking nearby.

You don’t fail at Quilt Scouts. You just gather information.

Why the Scouting Metaphor Matters

Scouting is about exploration. Scouts don’t start out knowing everything. They learn by doing. They take wrong turns. They forget snacks. They get a little muddy. They come back with stories.

And importantly, they always have a place to come back to and regroup.

That’s where base camp comes in.

Base Camp and the Importance of Coming Back

Base camp is the place you return to between adventures.

On a personal level, base camp might be a simple block you could make half asleep, a color palette you always reach for, or hand quilting on the couch while watching something comforting and, if we’re honest, mildly terrible.

Base camp isn’t boring. It’s grounding.

You don’t have to live in exploration mode all the time. You get to try new things and then come back to what feels supportive.

In Quilt Scouts, base camp can also be literal. A real, physical place where quilters gather to sew alongside other humans, ask questions without feeling silly, and build community stitch by stitch. In upcoming episodes, we’ll talk more about base camps and the people creating them in their local communities.

Community Without the Pressure to Perform

When you join Quilt Scouts, you’re part of an online community that’s intentionally not on social media. It’s a dedicated space to learn, connect, ask questions, and share progress.

There are no algorithms. No pressure to perform. Just quilters exploring together.

Each month, there’s a featured badge with optional resources like tutorials, patterns, and creative prompts. But it’s always a choose-your-own-adventure situation. If a different badge is calling your name, you follow that thread.

Some members collect badges. Some sew them onto projects. Some keep them as quiet reminders that they showed up. All of those are correct.

Key Takeaways

  • Quilting can be playful and exploratory
  • You don’t need to know everything to begin
  • Trying counts, even when things don’t work out
  • A sustainable creative practice includes rest and return
  • Curiosity is enough to get started

🔗 Resources Mentioned

  • Join Quilt Scouts — a supportive, adventure-focused quilting membership designed to help quilters explore new ideas with encouragement and structure (no pressure required):
    👉 https://quiltscouts.com

About The Quilt Scouts Podcast

The Quilt Scouts Podcast is a cozy campfire-style chat for quilters who crave creativity, community, and a gentle nudge to try something new.

Each episode explores quilting skills, creative ruts, experiments that worked and experiments that didn’t, all without the pressure to master anything.

New episodes drop weekly.

📲 Connect with Quilt Scouts

Episode Transcript

Below is the full transcript from Episode 1 of The Quilt Scouts Podcast for accessibility and reference.

Read the Full Episode Transcript

Megan (00:00)
The scouting metaphor matters here because scouting is about exploration. Scouts don’t start out knowing everything. They learn by doing. They make wrong turns. They forget snacks. They get a little muddy. They come back with stories.

Megan (00:16)
Welcome to the Quilt Scouts podcast. I’m Megan, your quilt scout leader and fellow adventurous quilter. This is a cozy campfire chat for quilters who crave creativity, community, and a gentle nudge to try something new. Each week we’ll talk about quilting, and the small adventures that help us grow more confident one stitch at a time. I’m so glad you’re here. Let’s get into it.

Megan (00:43)
If you’re listening to this episode, there’s a good chance you love quilting, or maybe you want to love quilting more than you do right now. Maybe you’re feeling a little stuck or overwhelmed or just craving something that feels more playful and less pressure filled. That’s exactly why quilt scouts exists. And today I want to tell you the story of what quilt scouts is, how it works.

and what we mean when we talk about things like a base camp. Think of this episode like your orientation guide. before we go any further, I want to start with a little campfire check-in, something we’ll do often around here. so wherever you are right now, driving, sewing, folding laundry, hiding in your sewing room for five quiet minutes, here’s the question.

would it look like to treat your quilting like an adventure? Just for a little while. No need to answer it out loud. You don’t have to solve it. Just notice what comes up. And if you do want to share, you can always send me a message. I love hearing your answers.

All right, let’s get into

in December of 2019, which in hindsight was impeccable timing. Like a lot of people, I immediately went down a deep,

YouTube rabbit hole. watched everything and eventually I thought, okay, I’m going to try this. So I jumped in and I was immediately hooked. Okay, here’s the funny part. I didn’t even know quilt patterns existed. I was just making things up, cutting squares, sewing them together, figuring it out as I went.

When I finally did discover quilt patterns, I ordered a printed one because I thought it was like a garment pattern, you know, where you have to cut out little paper templates and pin them to fabric. it turns out that’s not how that works.

But honestly, that early phase when I didn’t know what I was supposed to be doing was some of the most fun I’ve had quilting.

It was new and exciting and it was just fun to jump in and start learning something new. And that feeling, that’s the heart of Quilt Scouts. The idea of Quilt Scouts didn’t come from a business plan or brainstorming session or anything particularly serious.

It came from a children’s book I was reading to my kid at bedtime. The book is called, okay, you can laugh, it’s called Who Wet My Pants by Bob Shea. And just to set expectations, the plot is exactly what it sounds like. It’s about a bear who pees his pants and is very embarrassed about it. And then he goes around accusing everyone else of having wet his pants. Okay, that part is not the

But in the story, all the characters are scouts. They’re out camping, they’ve got uniforms, sashes and badges and

The artwork is really beautiful. It’s playful and expressive and super creative.

the inside cover has illustrations of all these different badges. And I remember just staring at that page thinking,

wouldn’t it be amazing if we had badges for quilting? Not badges for being perfect, not badges for being advanced, just badges for trying things, for showing up and for exploring. Once that idea popped into my head, I literally, couldn’t shake it. I finished the book, I turned off the light, and then I just kept thinking about it,

about how fun it would be if quilting felt more like an adventure and less like a test you didn’t study for. That was the spark.

At its core, Quilt Scouts is a creative framework. It’s a way to approach quilting with curiosity instead of pressure. Instead of asking, am I good enough to try this? We ask, what would happen if I tried this? In Quilt Scouts, you earn badges, not as a test, and definitely not as a competition,

but as a way to mark your experiences. A badge doesn’t mean that you mastered something, it means you explored it. You showed up, you learned something, you tried.

There’s no timeline, there’s no required order, and there is definitely no quilt police lurking nearby. You don’t fail at Quilt Scouts. You just gather information.

The scouting metaphor matters here because scouting is about exploration. Scouts don’t start out knowing everything. They learn by doing. They make wrong turns. They forget snacks. They get a little muddy. They come back with stories.

And this part matters. They always have a place to come back to and regroup. Which brings me to one of my favorite ideas in Quilt Scouts. A base camp.

Base camp is the place you return to between adventures. On a personal level, base camp is made up of some techniques, styles, tools, habits that feel comfortable and supportive to you. Your base camp might be simple patchwork that you could do half asleep, or a color palette you always come back to, or a go-to block. Maybe it’s hand quilting on the couch while watching something comforting, and if we’re being honest, mildly terrible.

Base camp isn’t boring. It’s grounding. You don’t have to live in exploration mode all the time. You can go out, try something new, and then come back to what feels good. In the quilt scouts world, base camp can also be literal. A base camp is a real physical meeting place. it’s often hosted by like a local quilt shop or fabric shop or a community space where quilt scouts gather in person. So these base camps host meetings, workshops, classes, and

badge related activities. It’s where you sew alongside other humans and you can ask questions without feeling silly. You get to try things together and you build community stitch by stitch.

And in upcoming episodes, we are going to talk more about base camps, including chatting with local base camp leaders about what they’re building in their shops and in their communities.

When you join Quilt Scouts, you become part of an online community that’s intentionally not on social media. It’s a dedicated space just for members, a place to learn, connect, ask questions. You get to share wins, big and small, get support when you’re stuck. There’s no algorithms. There’s no pressure to perform. Just a group of quilters exploring together.

Each month, we shine a spotlight on one specific badge, what we call the badge of the

with that badge, members get access to exclusive content designed to help you explore it. Tutorials, patterns, resources, creative prompts. But this part is important. You don’t have to work on the badge of the month. If a different badge is calling your name, follow that thread.

Quilt Scouts is very much a choose your own adventure situation. The badge of the month is there as a guide, it’s not a rule. The community becomes a place where you can share what you’re working on, whatever that is. Ask questions and celebrate progress together.

of the perks of being a Quilt Scouts member is the ability to order a free physical badge each month.

A couple quick clarifications though. It’s not automatically shipped. You get to choose which badge you want and you can pick the one that feels meaningful to you. Some people collect them. Some people sew them onto projects. Some people keep them as tiny reminders that they showed up. All of those are correct. If you’re wondering whether Quilt Scouts is for you, here’s the short answer. You don’t need to be experienced. You don’t need fancy tools. You don’t need to finish everything you start. If you are curious,

If you want quilting to feel lighter, more playful, more human, then you are already a quilt scout. Listening counts. Thinking counts. Trying counts.

On this podcast, we’ll talk about quilting skills and techniques

without the pressure to master them, creative ruts and how to move through them, stories from other quilters and their adventures. We’ll talk about experiments that worked experiments that did not work out. Think campfire conversation, not a lecture hall.

so welcome Scout. I’m really glad you’re here.

You don’t need a plan yet. You don’t need to know which badge you want to earn. You don’t even need to know where your rotary cutter is right now. Just being curious is enough to get started.

Thanks for being here.

Megan (08:25)
If you enjoyed this episode, I would love for you to follow or subscribe to the Quilt Scouts podcast so you don’t miss future episodes. And if you have a minute, leaving a review is one of the best ways to help this podcast find other quilters who could use a little creativity and community too. You can find show notes and more from Quilt Scouts at quiltscouts.com. Until next time, happy trails scout.

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I'm Megan, your Troop Leader.

I started Quilt Scouts to make quilting feel less overwhelming and a lot more fun. Instead of guessing what to try next, I built a badge system that guides you through skills, creative challenges, and milestones—one adventure at a time.

I’ll be cheering you on as you earn badges, try new techniques, and build confidence in your quilting. Think of me as your trail guide, not your bossy camp counselor.
And yes… I might convince you to hike for the perfect quilt photo.

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