Quilting PressHeirloom memoirs — researched, pressed & bound
Our story

It began with a single name.

Quilting Press grew out of one family’s search — and the realization that every family has the same kind of story, waiting in the record.

It started with my grandfather. For most of my life, almost no one in our family could tell me where he came from — only a few thin facts and a lot of silence. So one night I started pulling the thread, one record at a time.

What I found undid the story we’d been told. He wasn’t the oldest of three; he was the seventh of nine. There were six aunts and uncles no one had ever named. There was an orphanage the family had carried as a secret, and a kind stranger in another city who had taken an orphaned boy in. Piece by piece, a whole buried life came back — and with it, a pattern of fathers and sons that ran four generations deep.

I realized I wasn’t just fixing a family tree. I was giving us back a person.

That’s when it clicked. Every family has a story like this — sitting in census sheets and old directories that no one has ever opened. Most keepsake services only collect what you already have. They hand you a nice place to put your memories. But they don’t go find the ones you lost.

Quilting Press does. We piece a life together from the historical record, write it with the care it deserves, handle the hard truths gently, and press it into a book your family keeps. It’s named for what it does: a quilt is made of the pieces that were left over — scraps too small to mean anything alone — stitched until they become the warmest thing in the house.

— Briana, founder of Quilting Press

From the record

Every fact is recovered from a primary source and cross-checked before it’s written. We separate what the record proves from what it suggests.

Told with care

Family history holds hard truths. We share anything sensitive with you privately first — you decide what goes into the book.

Made to keep

The end of the work is a real, bound object — not a login or a subscription. Something a grandchild finds on a shelf one day.

Start with a name.

We’ll find the rest of the story, and press it into something to keep.

Begin a book