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The Queue: Cait Nolan

For natural dyer and quilter Cait Nolan, creation follows nature’s rhythms. In The Queue, the New Jersey–based artist discusses the cadence of her work, the power of collaboration and asking for help, and learning from an indigo-dyeing master.

Interview by Shivaun Watchorn
November 19, 2025

Nolan poses with the Japanese indigo plants in her garden.
Photo courtesy of Caitlin Nolan

Nolan with the Japanese indigo plants she uses to create a deep blue dye.

On her small farm in southern New Jersey, Cait Nolan grows a wide spectrum of dye plants, including weld, acorn, black walnut, madder, goldenrod, Japanese indigo, and marigold. Using these dye plants, she transforms secondhand and traded fabric into swaths of color, which she then pieces into thoroughly earthbound quilts. Nolan’s quilts are hyperlocal by design; she uses only locally grown and foraged dyestuffs. And the cadence of the year—with seasons for sourcing fabric, gleaning and growing dye plants, dyeing, and quilting—imbues her work with intentionality and deliberate slowness, which she touts as “as a response to the overconsumption of capitalism.” The resulting quilts are striking and meaningful, with classic patterns rendered in deep, earthy tones and topped off with contrasting sashiko stitching. Kimberly Coburn dove into Nolan’s practice in “Stitched from the Soil” in the Winter 2026 issue of American Craft, now available here.

How do you describe your work or practice in 50 words or less?

I make land-based heirloom quilts. The fabric I use for my quilts is secondhand or traded. I dye the fabric exclusively with plants that I grow or forage. 

Large hand-dyed quilt held up in a field of grasses
Photo courtesy of Caitlin Nolan

Cait Nolan’s Sage Quilt, 2024, is hand-dyed with homegrown weld, acorn, black walnut, goldenrod, Japanese indigo, 62 x 64 in.

How did your love of craft begin? 

I had a difficult time learning to read. It made everything at school feel out of reach, and I spent a lot of time in the nurses office with a “stomachache.” Luckily, I grew up in a home well stocked with art supplies, provided by my serial-crafter mother. Art and craft making became the way I made meaning in and of the world. 

Describe the cadence of your year as a quilt and natural dyer. Working with natural dyes, you must have lulls and boon periods. How does this guide your work?

I seek out white and undyed linen at thrift stores all year, but especially in the winter months. I dye that fabric throughout the spring, summer, and fall based on what I have planted, what I have time to forage, and what gleaning opportunities pop up. I don’t think about the quilts I am going to make when I am dyeing—I just explore color and lean into “chaos” dyeing. Towards the end of dyes season, I spend an inordinate amount of time staring at my stacks of fabric. This then triggers my quilt brain. I start working on quilts, and all I think about is quilts.

Quilt draped over a wooden fence
Photo courtesy of Caitlin Nolan

Detail from Indigo Sun Quilt, 2025, hand-dyed with marigold, madder, black walnut, and Japanese indigo.

“Art and craft making became the way I made meaning in and of the world.”

— Cait Nolan

I’ve noticed on your social media that you emphasize social justice and mutual aid in your work. Can you tell me about your No Borders Community Quilting Bees?

In June 2025, I put out a call asking for contributions to a community quilt. The intention was to raise support and ultimately funds for families affected by ICE raids. I had participated in a few community quilts to raise funds for families in Gaza, but I had never organized a community quilt myself. Thankfully my friend [quilter and gardener] Tenille Fatimah, who I had helped with community quilts in the past, provided guidance and support as I planned the No Borders Quilt. I was overwhelmed by the response and ultimately received over 90 block submissions from all over the world. 

I had initially intended to do the piecing and then complete the hand-quilting process myself, but guided by the work of [art historian and author] Dr. Jess Bailey, specifically her zine Many Hands Make a Quilt, I decided to organize a series of quilting bees so that the community could be involved in the quilting process. Ultimately the quilt will be raffled to raise funds for Juntos, a Philly-based immigrants’ rights group.

Do you belong to a craft lineage? Who have been your greatest teachers?

I don’t belong to a specific craft lineage per se, but my mother was and is always making, sewing, dyeing pysanky, or painting ceramics. Her father, my Poppy, was a waterman and my greatest teacher. I was gardening, trapping muskrats, and crabbing with him from the time I could walk. Those practices are deeply in relation with the environment and cultivated in me a deep respect for the seasonal rhythms of nature.

Japanese indigo (Persicaria tinctoria) leaf.
Photos courtesy of Cait Nolan

Japanese indigo (Persicaria tinctoria) leaf.

What is the craft scene like in New Jersey and Philadelphia? Where do you go to find community and fellowship?

The crafting scene in the Philly/South Jersey area is incredibly rich, and I feel like I am just getting plugged back in after living other places for a decade. 

My making practice tends to be introverted, but I am trying to lean into the communal aspects of quilting. I’m so grateful to the three fiber craft shops hosting me and the No Borders Quilting Bees this fall: Cut & Sew, Homesewn, and South Philly Yarn & Craft.

I have also met and come into community with some amazing people in the region teaching plant-dyeing workshops at my farm for the last two summers.

What are your go-to tools for quilting?

A rotary cutter, Prym mechanical fabric pencil, a clear quilter’s ruler, Clover leather thimbles, and long sashiko needles.

Large hand-dyed quilt held up in a field of grasses
Photo courtesy of Caitlin Nolan

Indigo Sun Quilt, 2025, hand-dyed with marigold, madder, black walnut, and Japanese indigo, 71 x 71 in.

If you could own the work of any craft artists for your home or studio, whose work would you want and why?

I greatly admire the work of Anna Evans. We share a similar ethos around sustainably and locally sourced materials. Her work so clearly speaks of the land it was created from and with. I am obsessed with the applique quilt Summer Brunch that she recently completed and shared on her social media.

Which craft artists, exhibitions, or projects do you think the world should know about, and why?

I am incredibly excited to head up to New York City in December to see An Ecology of Quilts: The Natural History of American Textiles, an exhibition at the American Folk Art Museum exploring the connection between quilts, plants, and culture. It’s up until March 1, 2026.

If you ever get a chance to learn from Aboubakar Fofana, don’t hesitate. I virtually attended a talk he gave called “Decolonizing Color: Re-membering and Re-claiming Indigo” hosted by Tatter in June 2024 and it rocked my world. 

What are you working on right now? 

I am coaxing the last bit of blue out of my summer indigo vats before I put them to bed, and I am piecing the first quilt of “quilt season.” It’s a strip-pieced quilt made with my plant-dyed linen with some warm yellows, golds, and blue-black. I’ve been calling it the Honey Quilt.

Photo courtesy of the artist

Small Olive Quilt, 2025, linen hand-dyed with weld, madder, black Hopi sunflower, and Japanese indigo.

  • Photos courtesy of the artist

    Nolan at work on Honey Quilt, a new quilt.

Shivaun Watchorn is associate editor at the American Craft Council.

Check out Cait Nolan's work online.

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This article was made possible with support from the Windgate Foundation.

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