7 Best Craft & DIY Newsletters in 2026

"The 7 best craft newsletters in 2026. Woodworking, DIY projects, paper crafts, and maker culture from Make Magazine, Fine Woodworking, A Beautiful Mess, and more."

Last updated: March 2026 | Updated monthly

List Overview

Items
7 newsletters
Sections
4
Updated
March 2026
Read Time
15 min

Editor's Top Picks

#1 Best Maker

Make: Magazine

"The magazine that launched the maker movement. Where technology meets creativity meets community."

Read Review
#2 Best DIY

A Beautiful Mess

"The most beloved DIY blog on the internet. Beautiful, doable projects that actually look good."

Read Review
#3 Best Woodworking

Fine Woodworking

"The gold standard for woodworking since 1975. Precision craftsmanship for serious woodworkers."

Read Review

๐Ÿ› ๏ธ Best for Maker Culture & DIY Projects

Making things with your hands is one of the most satisfying activities in life. These newsletters fuel that creative urge with project ideas, tutorials, and inspiration across every type of craft โ€” from high-tech maker projects to simple weekend DIY.

#1

๐Ÿ“ฌ Make: Magazine

by Dale Dougherty & Team

Make: Magazine literally launched the maker movement. Founded by Dale Dougherty (who coined the term 'maker'), their weekly newsletter covers everything from Arduino projects and 3D printing to traditional crafts and community workshop news. Make: treats technology as a creative medium and making things as a revolutionary act.

Recent Topics
Arduino Projects 3D Printing Electronics Maker Community
Pros
  • Incredible variety of projects (from sewing to satellites)
  • Strong focus on education and youth making
  • Heart of a massive, supportive global community
Cons
  • Can be dominated by high-tech/electronics (not for pure traditionalists)
  • Frequent promotion of their own kits and faire tickets
Frequency
Weekly
Price
Free / Paid
Best For
Makers, Tinkerers, Tech-Creative Enthusiasts
Why we recommend it

"The publication that started the maker movement. Make: proves that the future belongs to people who build things."

#2

๐Ÿ“ฌ A Beautiful Mess

by Elsie Larson and Emma Chapman

Elsie Larson and Emma Chapman have built A Beautiful Mess into one of the most beloved craft and lifestyle blogs on the internet. Their weekly newsletter delivers accessible DIY projects, home dรฉcor ideas, recipes, and creative inspiration โ€” all presented with the colorful, welcoming aesthetic that has earned them millions of devoted readers.

Recent Topics
DIY Home Dรฉcor Craft Projects Creative Lifestyle Seasonal Crafts
Pros
  • Beautiful photography
  • Relatable and personal tone
  • Diverse range of topics
  • Very established publication
Cons
  • Focuses heavily on lifestyle in addition to crafts
  • Some projects require specific tools
Frequency
Weekly
Price
Free
Best For
Home Crafters, Creative Enthusiasts
Why we recommend it

"The most beautiful craft newsletter. Every project looks achievable and genuinely gorgeous."

#3

๐Ÿ“ฌ DIY Candy

by Amy Anderson

DIY Candy delivers weekly craft project ideas that are genuinely beginner-friendly. Amy Anderson focuses on projects that are affordable, achievable, and satisfying โ€” no expensive tools or advanced skills required. It's the newsletter for people who want to make something cool this weekend.

Recent Topics
Easy DIY Projects Budget Crafts Holiday Crafts Home Dรฉcor
Pros
  • Wide variety of projects
  • Clear photography and instructions
  • High frequency of new content
  • Free
Cons
  • Ad-heavy website
  • Can be generalist
Frequency
Weekly
Price
Free
Best For
Beginners, Budget Crafters
Why we recommend it

"Crafting made easy. DIY Candy proves you don't need special skills to make beautiful things."

๐Ÿชต Best for Woodworking

Woodworking is one of humanityโ€™s oldest crafts, and these newsletters serve the community with the same respect for precision, quality, and craftsmanship that defines the discipline.

#4

๐Ÿ“ฌ Fine Woodworking

by The Fine Woodworking Team

Fine Woodworking has been the gold standard for woodworking education since 1975. Their weekly newsletter delivers expert techniques, tool reviews, project plans, and the kind of detail-oriented craftsmanship guidance that transforms hobbyists into skilled woodworkers.

Recent Topics
Joinery Techniques Tool Reviews Project Plans Wood Science
Pros
  • Unrivaled technical expertise and authority
  • Extremely high production values for videos and plans
  • Features the world's most talented master craftsmen
Cons
  • Most deep-content is behind a premium paywall
  • Can be intimidating for absolute beginners
Frequency
Weekly
Price
Free / Paid
Best For
Woodworkers of All Levels
Why we recommend it

"Nearly 50 years of woodworking excellence. Fine Woodworking's standards are what every craftsperson aspires to."

#5

๐Ÿ“ฌ Woodworker's Journal

by Chris Marshall & Editorial Team

Woodworker's Journal has been serving the woodworking community since 1977, delivering project plans, technique tutorials, and tool reviews that cover everything from beginner jigs to advanced furniture making. Their weekly newsletter is a staple for weekend warriors and professional woodworkers alike.

Recent Topics
Project Plans Tool Guides Technique Tutorials Workshop Tips
Pros
  • Extremely reliable and shop-tested project plans
  • Very high level of instructional clearity
  • Great balance between hand tool and power tool content
Cons
  • Newsletter can be ad-heavy
  • Less 'Artistic' focus than Fine Woodworking
Frequency
Weekly
Price
Free / Paid
Best For
Hobbyist Woodworkers, Workshop Enthusiasts
Why we recommend it

"A woodworking companion for nearly five decades. Woodworker's Journal delivers projects you'll be proud to build."

โœ‚๏ธ Best for Paper Crafts & Home Projects

For crafters who work with paper, fabric, and the dozens of creative mediums that transform raw materials into art and useful objects.

#6

Ann Martin's All Things Paper is the internet's most comprehensive resource dedicated to paper crafts. From quilling and origami to book arts and paper sculpture, her weekly newsletter showcases beautiful paper creations from artists around the world and provides tutorials for crafters at every level.

Recent Topics
Quilling Origami Book Arts Paper Sculpture
Pros
  • Inspiring curated galleries
  • Expert quilling advice
  • Great for discovering new artists
  • Free
Cons
  • Very specialized (Paper Art)
  • Less frequent updates than daily news
Frequency
Weekly
Price
Free
Best For
Paper Crafters, Book Artists, Origami Enthusiasts
Why we recommend it

"The definitive paper crafts newsletter. Ann Martin has built the most loving tribute to what paper can become."

#7

๐Ÿ“ฌ Young House Love

by John and Sherry Petersik

John and Sherry Petersik have documented their home renovation journey since 2007, building Young House Love into one of the most popular home DIY resources on the internet. Their weekly newsletter delivers renovation tips, project tutorials, and the honest, funny narrative of two regular people transforming their home one project at a time.

Recent Topics
Home Renovation DIY Tutorials Budget Projects Design Decisions
Pros
  • Budget-friendly focus
  • Honest and relatable
  • Large amount of archived projects
  • Practical advice
Cons
  • Very personal to the authors' own homes
  • Can be sporadic when they are between major projects
Frequency
Weekly
Price
Free
Best For
Home Renovators, DIY Home Enthusiasts
Why we recommend it

"The most relatable DIY home newsletter. John and Sherry make home renovation feel achievable for everyone."

Top 5 Craft & DIY Newsletters at a Glance
Newsletter Frequency Price Best For
Make: Weekly Free/Paid Maker Culture
A Beautiful Mess Weekly Free Creative DIY
Fine Woodworking Weekly Free/Paid Woodworking
All Things Paper Weekly Free Paper Crafts
Young House Love Weekly Free Home DIY

How We Evaluate Craft & DIY Newsletters

Our team subscribes to 20+ craft newsletters and evaluates them based on:

  1. Project Quality (35%): Are projects well-designed, achievable, and worth the time and materials?
  2. Instruction Clarity (25%): Quality of tutorials, step-by-step guides, and skill-building content.
  3. Community (20%): Engagement with the maker community and support for crafters at all levels.
  4. Accessibility (20%): Suitability for beginners, affordability of materials, and range of skill levels served.

We update this list quarterly. Last evaluation: March 2026.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q. What is the best craft newsletter in 2026?

Make: Magazine and A Beautiful Mess are the top-rated craft newsletters. Make: covers the broader maker movement, while A Beautiful Mess delivers accessible DIY projects and home craft ideas.

Q. Which newsletter is best for woodworking?

Fine Woodworking and Woodworker's Journal are the definitive woodworking newsletters, covering techniques, tool reviews, and project plans for both beginners and advanced woodworkers.

Q. Is there a newsletter for paper crafts?

All Things Paper by Ann Martin covers paper crafts exclusively โ€” from quilling and origami to book arts and paper sculpture โ€” with weekly inspiration and tutorials.

Q. Which newsletter covers home DIY projects?

Young House Love and The Family Handyman cover home DIY comprehensively, from home renovation projects to quick weekend crafts.

Q. Are craft newsletters free?

Most craft newsletters are free including Make:, A Beautiful Mess, DIY Candy, Young House Love, and All Things Paper. Fine Woodworking offers a freemium model.

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