Meet ZaZa
I’m ZaZa. I’m a Stitch Witch, an ancestral thread keeper, and a sacred maker whose Craft lives in the hands. My magick was not learned from books alone. It was learned through survival, through storytelling, and through the quiet knowing passed between generations of women who made beauty and meaning out of what they had.
If you’ve ever felt that creating is more than a hobby, that it is a way to breathe again or remember who you are, we are speaking the same language.
I am a third degree High Priestess, carrying the responsibility and lineage of deep spiritual leadership within my tradition. Long before titles, I learned that making itself is an act of healing. Fabric, needle, and thread became tools of remembrance and transformation. Where others saw scraps, I saw possibility. Where there were wounds, I learned to stitch them closed with intention.
My path is that of the hearth witch and the hedge walker. Rooted in the body, the home, and the everyday, yet always brushing against the unseen. My practice weaves together folk magick, ancestral remembrance, intuitive ritual, and somatic healing through craft. Each piece I create, whether a poppet, talisman, or stitched object, is made as a living prayer, carrying story, purpose, and care.
If you’ve ever felt disconnected from your hands, your body, or your own inner knowing, my work is an invitation back.
As the heart behind Sew it Seams Stitch Witch, I hold ritualized crafting circles and guided workshops designed to create safe and sacred space for others to reconnect with themselves. These gatherings are not about perfection. They are about presence. Not performance, but process. In these circles, hands stay busy, hearts soften, and something old and true is remembered.
If you’ve ever felt broken, burned, silenced, forgotten, or lost, this work is for you. Through making, you are invited to reclaim your power, your voice, and your sense of self, one stitch at a time.
I believe magick lives in repetition, in touch, and in the stories we tell while our hands are working. I honor the Old Ways not as something distant or rigid, but as something alive, adaptable, and deeply personal.
Above all, I am a keeper of stories. I believe we live on through what we create, what we teach, and what we leave behind in the hands of others. Through thread and ritual, through laughter and tears, through the simple act of making something with intention, I continue the work of those who came before me and make space for those still finding their way.