Cousin Demands Free Crocheted Blanket For Her Daughter, Student Refuses And Sparks Family Dispute

Creative hobbies often look effortless from the outside. People see the finished product draped neatly over a couch and admire the colors, but they rarely picture the late nights, sore hands, and steady focus required to bring it to life. When something is handmade, the time behind it is invisible, and that can make it easy for others to undervalue it.

One university student learned this the hard way while visiting her grandmother. Proudly working on her first king-sized crochet blanket for her future apartment, she showed her progress to a cousin who quickly suggested that she simply make another one and gift it to her daughter.

The request caught her off guard, especially when payment was not part of the conversation. Scroll down to see how she responded and why her family is divided over it.

A student crocheter refuses to gift months of labor

Cousin Demands Free Crocheted Blanket For Her Daughter, Student Refuses And Sparks Family Dispute
Not the actual photo

AITA for telling my cousin that I would not make a blanket for her kid for free?

I am a uni student and in my free time I crochet a lot.

I was spending a week at my grandma’s to help her wash the windows and do some cleaning.

My cousin (31F) came for a visit and asked me to show her what I was working on.

Currently, I am making a starburst granny-square blanket (https://youtu.be/R3mbrXdoJns) for anyone interested)

so I showed her the squares I’ve made so far and told her

that it was to be my first king-sized blanket for my

and my bfs first shared apartment (we will be moving in next year)

She told me that in all that time I could make a second blanket

and give this one to her daughter as a birthday present.

I told her that I absolutely would not do that

because it is hard work to make a blanket

and also very expensive since I am using good quality yarn.

I told her that I’d be happy to put my own project aside

and make one for her kid as a commission,

but that I wouldn’t do it for free as I couldn’t afford that

My dad thinks that I should have asked them to cover the costs of the yarn

and make a free blanket but I disagree considering how much work goes into a blanket.

EDIT: The price for my work that I gave her is my family rate, very symbolic costs + 1$/hour

We all want our generosity to feel chosen, not assigned. There’s a quiet difference between giving because we want to and giving because someone assumes we will. When that line blurs, even a kind request can start to feel heavy.

In this situation, she wasn’t simply refusing to make a blanket. She was protecting something deeply personal: her time, her skill, and the meaning behind her craft. A king-sized crochet blanket represents hours of concentration, physical effort, and expensive materials.

It’s not just yarn stitched together, it’s intention and planning for her future home. When her cousin suggested she “could make another one” and give it away, the project shifted from a labor of love to an assumed resource.

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The emotional tension here isn’t about selfishness. It’s about agency. She offered a reasonable compromise, a commission at a symbolic family rate, but the pushback made her question whether valuing her own work was wrong.

What makes this dynamic especially interesting is how society views generosity. Creative work, particularly when done by women in their “free time,” is often treated as naturally shareable. If she were fixing someone’s plumbing or designing a website, payment would feel obvious.

But crochet feels cozy, homemade, and easy to underestimate. Her father’s suggestion that she simply charge for yarn reflects a common belief that labor within families should be freely given.

From his perspective, helping relatives strengthens bonds. From hers, unpaid labor can quietly become an expectation.

Organizational psychologist Wayne Baker, Ph.D., explores this tension in his Psychology Today article “The Real Challenge of Generosity.” He explains that giving is associated with happiness and social connection, but only when it is voluntary.

When generosity becomes expected or socially pressured, it can lose its positive emotional impact. Baker also notes that we often glorify the giver while overlooking the complexity of asking and receiving. Healthy generosity depends on thoughtful requests and free choice, not assumption.

Through this lens, her refusal wasn’t stingy; it preserved the integrity of giving itself. If she had agreed out of guilt, the blanket might have carried resentment rather than warmth. By offering a commission, she kept the exchange honest and sustainable.

Perhaps the deeper question isn’t whether family should help each other; most would agree they should. The real question is this: Does generosity still feel generous when it stops being a choice?

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Here’s what Redditors had to say:

These crocheters defended her labor and stressed that time is never free

LoveBeach8 − NTA As a crocheter myself, I totally agree with you.

It takes hours and hours to make a full-size blankie and much longer to make a king-size one.

The yarn can be very expensive but just because someone pays for the yarn,

doesn't mean it's any less work. Stick to your guns!

You never offered a free gift and it's rude for anyone to expect a free gift.

doublestitch − NTA another crocheter here. Both your cousin and your father are entitled and rude.

Of course both of them already have a clue what an enormous request that was.

Offer to teach them to make starburst granny squares and watch their reactions.

CatteHerder − NTA- I'm a designer/instructor/spinner. . And no. Just no. Your skill is not free.

Your labour is not free. No one is entitled to it.

Don't let other people's absence of appreciation

for the skills you've worked to acquire, affect how you value them.

This isn't any different from asking an architect, contractor,

or coder to just give you free labour because hey, if you're doing it anyway then it really isn't worth anything, right?

Sorry, but your father is really, really in the wrong here.

Lorange99 − NTA. You can choose to make something for a family member, but they don't get to demand it.

You know the value of your time and the finished product. I crochet and knit.

I know how much yarn costs and how long it takes to make things.

You have every right to ask for a commission to cover the yarn and your time.

This group agreed that effort deserves fair pay

grindelwaldd − NTA. I don’t personally crochet or knit but my mother does, a lot of time goes into making blankets.

You deserve to be paid for your labour.

RoyallyOakie − NTA. ..People who can't do art, somehow think that your time and effort should be free--not so!

Your response was spot-on. A beautifully crocheted blanket is worth the money.

DannyBigD − NTA. It's your time, you can value that however you want to.

They called the cousin’s demand presumptuous and entitled

Weskit − NTA. Apparently they want to make you look like the rude one,

but what is ruder than telling someone what they have to give their child as a gift,

regardless of the expense (time/money) to you?

starchy2ber − Nta. Its presumptuous and rude for her to ask for a free blanket.

The most she should have done is admire yours and hint shed love one for her daughter.

Then it's up to you to i) stay silent/deflect, i) offer to make one for free,

or ii) tell her an aprox cost for making a custom blanket.

Beautiful_mistakes − NTA If she wants it she can pay for it or she can make her own blanket.

Your father doesn’t get to say what YOU do with your time and craft.

Most people don’t understand the time and effort it takes for these type of things.

Obviously your father is one of them.

These commenters joked that dad or Etsy could solve the problem

nannylive − NTA, tell your dad to make her one.

cassowary32 − NTA. Give her a link to Etsy.

Handmade doesn’t mean handout. In a world where creative work is often brushed off as “just a hobby,” this student drew a simple line: appreciation doesn’t replace compensation.

Do you think family members should expect discounted or free labor from talented relatives? Or is protecting your time the ultimate act of self-respect? Drop your thoughts below and let the stitching debate continue.

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