About Digalli

Make it yourself — cheerful, easy crafts for everyone

Digalli is a friendly, beginner-first guide to DIY and crafts. We help anyone make lovely things by hand — with simple steps, low-cost materials, and zero pressure to be perfect.

Why we started Digalli

So much craft content online quietly assumes you already know what you're doing — that you own a sewing machine, a cabinet of supplies, and a Pinterest-perfect aesthetic. For a real beginner, that can be more discouraging than inspiring. We wanted the opposite: warm, clear projects for people who have never threaded a needle, folded a paper crane, or melted a candle, and who are working with a small budget and a kitchen table.

Digalli started in 2026 as a handful of make-along notes shared between friends who loved making things and kept being asked "how did you do that?" Those notes turned into step-by-step tutorials, and the tutorials turned into this. Today we publish cheerful, beginner-friendly projects across four areas — paper crafts, sewing & fabric, DIY home decor, and kids' crafts — all built on the same belief: anyone can make something lovely, and the wonky first try is part of the fun.

What you can expect

Every project is written or edited by someone who has actually made the thing, mess and all. We favour clear steps over clever shortcuts, we list cheap and easy-to-find materials, and we are upfront when a project needs patience or a grown-up's help. When we suggest a tool or supply, it is because we'd reach for it ourselves — not because someone paid us to.

We also care about doing things safely. Crafting involves scissors, blades, hot glue, heat, candles, paints, and the occasional sharp needle, so we flag those moments and remind you to follow the product instructions. You can read the full details in our disclaimer and learn how we work in our editorial policy.

4craft topics
20+step-by-step projects
100%independent & original
0fancy studios needed

What we value

The principles behind every project

Beginner-friendly, always

We write for total beginners. Every project explains the steps, the tools, and the little tricks nobody tells you — no assumed skills, no fancy studio required.

Budget over fancy

Crafting shouldn't cost a fortune. We favour cheap, forgiving materials and things you probably already have at home, so you can start today without a shopping list.

Reader-first and honest

Our projects are independent. We are never paid to feature a product, we keep advertising clearly separate from our tutorials, and we tell you when a project is fiddly.

Wonky is welcome

We celebrate handmade over perfect. A slightly crooked, made-by-you thing beats a flawless bought one every time — and we explain things the way we'd show a friend at the kitchen table.

The makers

Who writes Digalli

Posy Hartwell
Posy Hartwell
Founder & Craft Editor

Posy has been making things by hand since she could hold a pair of scissors, and founded Digalli to prove that crafting doesn't need a fancy studio or a big budget. She writes warm, step-by-step projects for nervous beginners, and she firmly believes a wonky, handmade thing beats a perfect, bought one every time.

Bea Solomon
Bea Solomon
Sewing & Textiles Writer

Bea is a self-taught sewer and knitter who writes about needles, thread, and yarn for people who've never touched a sewing machine. She's patient about wonky seams and dropped stitches, and she's convinced that mending a button or hemming your own jeans is one of the most satisfying small skills you can learn.

Milo Frank
Milo Frank
Upcycling & Kids Crafts Writer

Milo is an upcycler and dad who writes about turning junk into treasure and keeping kids happily busy with glue and glitter. He favors cheap, forgiving projects over Pinterest perfection, and he believes the best crafts are the ones that get finished — mess, mistakes, and all.