Holiday Gift Guide – Part 2

And we’re back with part 2 of our Colonial Needle Company Gift Guide! Whether you’re a maker, your friend is a maker, or your favorite person is a maker, this will get you started on solid ground. There was too much good stuff to cram into one post so we broke it up for you (in no particular order). Be sure to go back and check out Part 1 here and do NOT miss out on the talent we recruited to help us with our YouTube videos. He’s kind of a big deal. [YouTube Part 1 video link here] [YouTube Part 2 video link here]

And now, onward with Part 2!

Mat Smoother

A miracle product as far as we’re concerned. Colonial Needle Company sent this to us and we’ll be honest, we were skeptical. Really skeptical. We called it “one of those products we thought was going to be useless until we tried it. Now we don’t know how we lived without it!” This simple tool extended the life of our regular rotary cutting mats and, surprisingly, worked on our industrial-strength cutting table. We were about to chuck our small rotary mat entirely, and our big cutting table was in such bad shape we were facing the miserable task of sanding it down and flipping the entire top. <shudder> Not a fun prospect in our little workspace. The Mat Smoother smoothed out burrs and grooves that were causing skips in our cutting and that looked terrible on camera. If your maker friend uses cutting mats of any sort, this is the gift that will make them think you’re a genius.

Roxanne Glue – Glue Stick & Temporary Adhesive Spray

We love and use all of the Roxanne glue products but our favorites are the glue stick and the temporary adhesive spray. The glue stick is lightweight glue that doesn’t gum up our machine or hand sewing needles, and it washes out completely. We’ve used it for everything from boro patchwork, mending, and appliqué and it works beautifully every time. No residue, no fabric discoloration, no problems.

But let’s talk about that Temporary Adhesive Spray because this was a game-changer for us. It’s safe to use indoors and any overspray comes right off with a damp washcloth. No more toxic fumes that make us woozy or give us headaches. We still open a window, but we don’t have to move the car out of the garage to baste our big quilts anymore. This has revolutionized everything from our large quilts to smaller boro and appliqué  projects where we want to position patches and still be able to move them around without worrying about gassing ourselves in the process. If you or your maker friend does any kind of quilting, appliqué, or layered fabric work, this spray will change their life.

Presencia Sampler Packs

We fell down a rabbit hole with these and we’re not even a little sorry about it. CNC handed us some samplers at a trade show, including sizes and colors we never thought we’d use, and now we keep reaching for them for all those little extra touches. Yes, they used the “try it you’ll like it” line on us… and it worked! The No. 3 sampler packs are our favorites because they come in pretty color sets and are incredibly versatile for thread crochet projects, embroidery, couching, and edge stitching. We even did a thread crochet project using the No. 3 size that turned out gorgeous.

That said, having a selection of the metallic threads is a dream when we want to add a little extra something to a project. Then of course there’s the size 8 and… well… you get the idea. We love a sampler pack to play with. Here’s the truth: if we have a product on hand, we will find a way to use it. Having these sampler packs keeps our options open and our creativity flowing. We raid all of them on a regular basis. Especially for embellishing and small mending projects. No particular color set is a favorite. We love them all. Any maker would love to have these to experiment and work with.

Colonial Needle Company Gift Card

And, finally, if all else fails and you waited WAY too long, or you want something you can pop into a fabric card (see our DIY Fabric Card post from 2024 https://blog.colonialneedle.com/diy-fabric-cards/), you can’t go wrong with a Colonial Needle Company Gift Card. Money to spend on our favorite products? Yes please! Sometimes the best gift is letting your maker friend choose exactly what they need for their next project. No guesswork, no returns, just some much deserved retail therapy after a busy holiday making season.

The Bottom Line

Whether you’re a maker shopping for yourself (no judgment… we do it all the time!), a maker shopping for another maker, or a brave non-maker venturing into the unknown void of craft gift territory, these products are exactly what you are looking for. They’re the tools we actually use on a daily basis, the ones that live in our kits, the ones that make us better at what we do.

The beauty of these gifts is that they work for any skill level and almost any fiber and textile craft. They’re practical, they solve real problems, and they show you actually put thought into the gift. Bundle a few several together for a basket, tuck one a couple into a stocking, or go all out and create the ultimate maker’s starter kit.

Happy gift giving, folx! May your holidays be filled with Creative Chaos, plenty of needles, and perfectly sharp rotary blades.

STITCH ON!

Shannon & Jason​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

Are Stainless Steel Needles Really the Best?

(Spoiler: Not necessarily.)

Every now and then, a trend or “hot take” makes its way across the internet— and lately, stainless steel needles have been getting all the buzz. The claim: that stainless steel needles are “better, sharper, stronger, and overall, superior to everything else out there.”

But here’s the truth: when it comes to sewing, quilting, and needlepoint, high-carbon steel needles with nickel plating — like the ones Colonial Needle has imported from England for 100 years — are the superior choice.  The main reason for this is that the high carbon content of the steel alloy allows for the needles to be heat treated at incredibly high temperatures to harden them like no other, then tempered to give them the required spring.  This is simply not possible with low carbon composition of Stainless Steel.

Let’s take a closer look at why.

The Difference Between High-Carbon Steel and Stainless Steel

 High Carbon Steel Needles
(Nickel-Plated)
Stainless Steel Needles
CompositionIron based alloy with a high carbon content, plated with nickel for corrosion resistanceIron based alloy high in chromium for corrosion resistance and relatively low carbon content
HardnessVery hard core; can be sharpened to an extremely fine pointSlightly softer but still durable
Sharpness RetentionExcellent — maintains a sharp tip for a long timeGood, but tends to dull faster under heavy use due to the softness of stainless steel
Corrosion ResistanceImproved by nickel plating, but plating can wear off over time if made poorlyNaturally resistant to rust and corrosion throughout
FlexibilitySuperior strength resists bending, but may snap if bent excessivelyMore flexible. Less likely to break, but more likely to remain bent.
Surface FinishSmooth, bright nickel coating; may tarnish over time as coating wears if made poorlyNaturally shiny and maintains luster over time, but often creates more “drag”
CostGenerally lowerTypically higher
Best UsesIdeal for precise needle placement and perfect stitches requiring sharpnessFor sewists with a Nickel allergy, and preferred in environments with moisture exposure

Why High-Carbon Steel Wins

When you pick up a high-quality needle, what matters most is how it feels and performs in your hand. High-carbon steel gives you:

  • A sharper, smoother point that glides effortlessly through fabric and fibers.
  • Less bending and more precise stitch placement, even with heavier threads or more coarse fabrics.
  • Consistent performance, stitch after stitch.

That’s why professional stitchers, quilters, and embroiderers have trusted high-carbon steel needles for generations. They simply work better — and that’s what matters most.

The Finishing Touch: Nickel Plating

Applying nickel plating to our needles gives the needle a mirror-like smoothness that allows it to pass through fabric with ease, and it also adds a layer of protection against rust and corrosion.

So while stainless steel relies on chromium for rust resistance, nickel-plated high-carbon steel needles achieve the same benefit — without sacrificing sharpness, strength, or feel.  The only true benefit to using Stainless Steel needles would be if you were allergic to the Nickel plating.

So Don’t Believe Everything You Hear Online

The claim that “stainless steel needles are the best” sounds good in theory — but in practice, it doesn’t hold up. Stainless needles may look shiny and promise rust resistance, but they can’t match the performance of a high-carbon steel needle where it really counts: in sharpness, durability, and smooth stitching.

Our manufacturer in England has  been perfecting the craft of needle-making for over 150 years – since 1840! The high-carbon steel, nickel-plated needles from brands like John James, Mary Arden, Colonial Needle, Richard Hemming, Roxanne, and S. Thomas & Sons are designed to give makers the best possible stitching experience — no trends required.

The Bottom Line

If you want a needle that is strong, stays sharp, feels smooth, and lasts through countless projects, choose high-carbon steel with nickel plating. It’s the traditional choice for a reason — and still the best one today.

2025 Colonial Needle Gift Guide: Part 1

Hey there folx! It’s Shannon & Jason and we’re back with our favorite list of products from Colonial Needle Company to inspire your holiday gift giving. Whether you’re a maker yourself, your friend is a maker, or your favorite person is a maker, this will get you started on solid ground. And dare we say, even make you a gift giving hero.

Let’s talk about that particular terror that grips the heart of non-makers when they’re shopping for their crafty friends. You know who you are. You walk into a craft store, see 47 different types of scissors, and suddenly you’re questioning every life decision that led you to this moment. Fear not! We’ve got you covered.

Grab a few of these as stocking stuffers or bundle them together into the ultimate maker’s gift basket. Having a holiday auction for your group? Makers are going to want this! Guild gift exchanges, holiday grab-n-go gift exchanges, or a gift for yourself (it’s totally valid to give yourself a gift!). And if you know your person is horrible at picking gifts that you want, you can always save this list and send it to them.

We would like to say in advance that there are SO many possibilities for gifts on the Colonial Needle Company site, but these are the products we reach for on a regular basis and carry in our kits for almost daily use. Also, these are in no particular order. We tried to rank them but, in the interest of continued wedded harmony, we gave up on that and randomized our picks. So without further ado… here is the Shannon & Jason 2025 Colonial Needle Company Gift Guide!

Sixth Finger Stiletto

Easy to hold because of the textured handle and it is essential for guiding fabrics under the presser foot of your sewing machine. Safety first, folx! We’ve known people who have pierced their fingers with the machine needle (GAH!), and Shannon has personally sacrificed a French tip manicure to the sewing gods. This little tool keeps your digits safe while giving you precise control. The flat tip does double duty as an EPP creasing tool. We featured it in our EPP project post this past summer https://blog.colonialneedle.com/epp-take-it-with-you/ showing how it keeps glue off your manicure and off the rest of our fabric when folding over those fiddly paper piecing edges.

5715 - Sixth Finger Stiletto

Easy-Store Measuring Tape

Before we discovered these measuring tapes, we used to fake it by looping old hair ties or tiny rubber bands to keep our tapes tidy in our sewing kits. If you have also tried this trick, you know that the hair ties tend to wiggle their way off or the rubber bands break. The result is that the measuring tapes end up all tangled in the bottom of our kits. If you’ve ever reached into your project bag and pulled out a snarled mess of measuring tape wrapped around scissors, needles, and (somehow) knotted around some stray thread, you know the pain. This has been the bane of crafter’s existence for as long as these tapes have been around. The Easy-Store lives in our travel kits and our project baskets (Shannon has one right next to her as we write this) because it stays put. No unraveling, no tangling, and no trying to find where that hair tie went. Just a measuring tape that stays neat and tidy until you need it.

CBT-60 - Easy Store Measuring Tape

Needle Wheel

Here’s the thing: we are by no definition beginners, but we still use this as a quick reference check. It’s perfect for those “wait… could I be using something more suited to this task?” moments when you’re reaching for your usual needle but wonder if there’s a better option. For beginners, this is absolutely invaluable and will save so much frustration and help prevent failed projects. For experienced makers, we use it mostly as a reference tool when we’re writing content now, but it lives in our workspace hanging on our peg board for those occasional double-checks. No more second-guessing yourself about needle types. Just spin the wheel and get your answer.

Thimble Pack Plus

We have these at every work station in our studio and in every stitching kit. A must-have for hand sewists, quilters, and embroiderers. Whether you’re piecing a quilt, doing delicate embroidery work, or hand-stitching a binding, these thimbles are going to save your fingertips and maybe even your sanity. They come in multiple configurations, so there’s always one that fits the task just right. Trust us. If your maker friend does any hand sewing at all, they can never have too many of these magical little thimbles. They’re like hair ties for crafters (wait for it); they multiply when you buy them but somehow disappear when you need them most. So buy a couple of these.

Long Darners & Palm Thimble Combo

This product combo holds a special place in our hearts because these are the tools we use for our sashiko and boro projects. Without these, we just couldn’t do what it is that we do do! The Long Darners give you the reach you need for those long, gathered running stitches, and the Palm Thimble provides the right leverage and control that lets you work for hours without destroying your hands. If your person is into Japanese stitching techniques, visible mending, or hand quilting (Yes! We use them for sashiko-style quilting), this combo is like giving them a superpower. These aren’t just tools, they’re the difference between a painful hand-stitching session and a meditative, enjoyable one.

Needle Grip-It

These unassuming little wonders are absolutely essential for all types of needlework from sashiko to EPP and embroidery. Just apply to the tips of your fingers and they give you a secure grip without any bulk, so they don’t interfere with your work. They make pulling needles through multiple layers so much easier, and they’re especially helpful if you have any hand issues or arthritis. Just remember to take them off when you’re finished… ever wash your hair with these on? One of us has… not saying who. (Spoiler: Jason doesn’t have any hair, so you can probably figure out the culprit from our photo.)

Dual Rotary Blade Sharpeners

LOVE! No really… we love these. Rotary cutter blades are expensive when you use them a lot, and these give them a second life. Actually, used properly, they have given our rotary blades multiple lives. They come in sizes for 28mm, 45mm and 60mm blades, and you can get two or three sharpenings out of a blade before you need to test for replacement. Even getting just two uses saves serious money. After all, it doesn’t do to use dull blades. In fact, a dull blade is dangerous and can slip or catch, causing injuries or ruining your fabric. These sharpeners get us back to creating faster without the expense of constantly replacing blades. ’Nuff said. If your person has rotary cutters, they want these. Trust us.

Okay! That’s it for Part 1. Again, in no particular order so be sure to come back for Part 2 which drops next week for more of our favorites to inspire you to be a better gifter. Or maybe to buy your own gifts! Seriously, grab your favorites, wrap them up, and put a tag on it to yourself from Santa. We’re definitely not above such things. Speaking of the big guy, did you hear who we recruited to help out with our YouTube video? Better go check that out if you want to stay on the nice list. Just sayin’!

Remember to share this list with a friend who could use some gift giving inspiration or who needs a hint so they get you exactly what you want this year.

STITCH ON!

Shannon & Jason