For years her hand-stitched baskets passed quietly from hand to hand, never sold online. Now Verna Stiles is letting her final collection go.
At 72, Verna Stiles is closing her Berea shop for good at the end of July — sooner than she'd planned, and not entirely by her choosing. For the first time, her hand-stitched baskets are available to everyone, while a few hundred last.
The shop on Main Street is nearly packed up. The 1971 Singer her mother sewed on before her is wrapped and waiting by the door; the bolts of sage, cream, and cornflower-blue cotton that lined the back wall for four decades are going into boxes. The last thing Verna made here wasn't a tote or a table runner. It was a basket.
“I'd been sewing them in the quiet hours all winter,” she says. “Whenever my eyes got tired of the small work, I'd switch over to a basket. I didn't plan on them being the last thing I made here. They just turned out to be.”
The building changed hands this spring. A real-estate group out of Lexington bought the whole corner, and Verna's lease went with it. “They've got plans for it,” she says, without any heat in her voice. “Those plans don't have room for a quilter.”
“I'm seventy-two,” she says. “My hands still do most of what I ask. But the twelve-hour days are well behind me. Truth be told, this was coming either way — the developer just picked the date.” She looks down at her knuckles, thickened from fifty years at the machine.
Berea, Kentucky. Late April. The shop smells of cotton, cedar, and the last of the woodstove. The totes that paid the bills are long gone; what's left are the baskets, stacked in careful rows along the side wall, every one quilted, every one carrying a hand-stitched design of its own. “The totes were what folks came in asking for,” Verna says. “The baskets I made because I wanted to. I can't take them with me — they ought to go somewhere they'll be used.”
Fifty years at one machine — and the baskets she almost kept for herself
Verna has been quilting since she was in her twenties. The baskets came later — she started about ten years ago, one at a time, for people she knew. She's made close to four thousand since. Every single one passed through her hands.
It started with a woman at a fall fair in Richmond. She stopped at Verna's table and asked if she could make something for a laundry room. “She told me her hamper was the ugliest thing in her house,” Verna says. “She wanted something that looked like it was supposed to be there.”
Verna went home and made one. When the woman came to collect it, she stood in the doorway and went quiet for a second. “She said, ‘I don't think I want to put laundry in this. It's too pretty to shove in a corner.' I've thought about that line for ten years.”
She never brought finished baskets to the fairs to sell. She made them quietly, to order, for neighbors, for customers who came back twice, for friends of those customers. “They got around by word of mouth, same as everything else I've made,” she says. “I never had to advertise them. They found their own way to people.”
Until now. The shop is closed. These are what's left. And for the first time in ten years, anyone can buy one.
What makes Verna's baskets different
What sets these apart isn't only the flowers, lovely as they are. It's how they're built — the same way Verna has built every quilted thing she's made since the seventies.
Each basket is a heavy cotton-poly blend wrapped around a firm batted core, then run through the Singer in her feather-stitch quilting pattern. That's the same stitch that keeps her totes standing up straight when they're stuffed full. The quilting wraps the whole way around the outside, which gives the basket a real heft and shape you can feel the moment you pick it up.
The patterns aren't printed on. Every shape — leaf, petal, wing — is cut, layered, and stitched onto the quilted ground by hand. The motifs sit slightly raised off the surface — run your fingers over one and you can feel it. “They won't crack, peel, or wash off,” Verna says. “They're sewn into the cloth. They're part of it.” She learned it one piece at a time, the way her mother taught her at this same machine. “Fifty years on, my hands still do it without me thinking,” she says.
It stands on its own — empty or full. No wire ring, no plastic frame inside. The batted quilted walls hold the shape on their own. At 16 inches across and 22 inches tall, it swallows a full load of laundry and still sits up straight in the corner. The handles are doubled canvas, bartacked at the stress points. “I bartack every handle the same way I've done the tote handles for fifty years,” she says. “It's the one thing I've never had a reason to change.”
Some have been in the same corner for eight years
Under the worktable Verna keeps a cigar box she's had since the nineties. It's full of letters. She slides out a card that came last fall and reads part of it aloud.
“Dear Mrs. Stiles — your basket has sat in the corner of my bedroom for eight years now. It started out holding laundry. These days it holds my knitting, my good quilts, and whatever the grandbabies drag in when they come. It's the most-used thing in the house. Everyone who visits asks where I found it. I thought you should know it's loved.”
“That's all I ever wanted for them,” Verna says. “Not something you tuck away because it's pretty. Something you keep out because it works.”
That kind of staying power isn't luck. Verna builds each one the same way — quilting the body, cutting and laying in every flower by hand, finishing the handles herself — across the eight designs she worked up over the years: the wildflower bouquet she's known for, plus songbirds, summer sunflowers, butterflies, hearts and roses, a cottage-garden patchwork, and more. The final collection has all eight.
This is everything that's left
The reason there's a final collection at all comes back to the building. When the corner sold this spring, Verna's lease went with it, and the new owners set a date to clear the space by the end of July. At seventy-two, she's moving in with her daughter in the fall — there's a room for her there, but no room for the Singer, the bolts of fabric, or the quilting frame. “Some things you carry with you,” she says. “Some things you hand on.”
So most afternoons now go to boxing things up — the patterns, the spools, the photographs off the wall. On the worktable, under a spool of thread, sits the notice from the new owners. “Fifty years fits into more boxes than you'd think,” she says. The baskets are the last thing she'll carry out the door.
What she finished over the winter comes to around 600 baskets. That's all of them. No more are coming — there's no apprentice, the machine is being retired, and there's no one she's handing the pattern to. “The totes found their people,” she says. “I'm hoping the baskets do too.”
She's set one flat close-out price: $65 a basket, down from the $79 she used to ask for them. “I'm not doing this for the money,” she says. “I'd rather they go to homes that'll actually use them than sit in a stockroom waiting for the right occasion.” Her granddaughter Lacey (11) is the one who got them online. “I'm no good with any of this,” Verna says, laughing. “She had it sorted in an afternoon.”
- Real quilted construction. Cotton-poly face, batted interior, feather-stitch quilting wrapping the whole way around — not a flat print. Stands up straight even when it's empty. You can feel the difference the second you lift it.
- Hand-appliquéd designs. Every leaf and petal is cut, layered, and stitched onto the quilted body. The motifs sit raised off the surface. They won't peel, crack, or wash off — they're sewn into the cloth, placed one at a time by hand.
- Self-standing structure. Holds its shape on its own, empty or full. No wire ring, no plastic frame. The batted quilted walls do the work.
- Reinforced handles. Doubled canvas, bartacked at the stress points. Carries a full week of laundry — or a heavy stash of yarn — without sagging or pulling loose.
- Roomy and easy to keep clean. 16" × 22": deep enough for laundry, blankets, yarn, toys, or anything that deserves a nicer home. The interior wipes clean.
- Final collection. Around 600 baskets remain from Verna's last run. The shop closes at the end of July — no reorders, ever.
The shop closes at the end of July — when the last of the final collection is gone, that's it.
Get your basket — $65What customers say
“I almost didn't bother — I figured my hamper was fine. It showed up on a Thursday. By Saturday it had moved itself into my bedroom. I kept finding excuses to set it somewhere I could see it. Eventually I just admitted I wasn't going to hide it.”
“My mother had one of Verna's totes for years. When I heard she'd made baskets, I ordered two the same morning — one for the wash, one for my knitting chair. The yarn one might be my favorite thing in the house.”
“I bought one for my sister's birthday. She rang me the day it came to say she'd stood in her laundry room just looking at it. ‘It's too nice to use,' she said. She's used it every single day since.”
Where to get one of Verna's baskets
The baskets are available only through Verna's official shop — the one place you'll find the real, handmade baskets straight from her final collection.
The shop closes at the end of July — no reorders, ever
“I did what I set out to do,” Verna says. “Fifty years of it. That's plenty.” At the end of July she hands back the keys for good. When the remaining baskets are gone, that's the end of it — the Singer goes into storage, the room is already promised to someone else, and there's no one taking over the pattern.
Payment & shipping: Verna's shop takes all major cards, PayPal, Apple Pay, and Google Pay. Orders ship within 2–3 business days. Free returns within 30 days.
The short version
These are baskets you won't want to leave in the laundry room.
That's no accident. Verna built them the way she built everything for fifty years: to get used every day and looked at while you use them. Soft to carry. Stiff enough to stand in the corner on their own. And every time someone new walks through the room, they stop, look closer, and reach out to touch the flowers.
Ten years she kept these to herself. These are the last ones she'll make.
Thank you, Verna. 🌼 🧵
Claim your basket — with Verna's personal 100% money-back guarantee
Verna puts it plainly:
“These should only go home with people who'll be glad to have them there.”
So she backs every one with a 100% money-back guarantee: take the basket home. Set it in your laundry room, your bedroom, your knitting corner. Live with it for a week. If it doesn't belong there — if you don't love it — send it back and get your money back. No questions asked.
Final collection — no reorders once sold out · Ships within 2–3 business days
More from customers
“The neighbors ask about it every time they come over. My granddaughter calls it ‘the flower bucket.' My husband — who hasn't said one word about decorating in thirty years of marriage — looked at it and said, ‘That's a nice basket.' I ordered two more as gifts that afternoon.”
“I had a plastic hamper for eleven years. I threw it out the day this arrived. There's no comparison — the weight of it, the way it stands up, the way the light catches the stitching. This is what a laundry basket ought to feel like.”
“I bought it because the flowers were pretty. I kept it because it holds a mountain of laundry and the sides never cave in. Dirty clothes going to the wash, clean clothes coming back — one basket, both directions. I don't need another.”
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Testimonials reflect individual experiences and results may vary. Images are for illustration; because each piece is made by hand, the final product may vary slightly.