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Gathered Grace: Why this Collection was Born

By Regan Tucker

November 30, 2025


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The Gathered Grace Collection was created out of a conviction that the home—especially the kitchen—is more than a place of utility. It is where legacy is lived out daily. Recipes are written down not just to feed, but to remember. Aprons are tied not just to protect, but to prepare hearts for service. Candles are lit not just for light, but to mark moments with intention. This collection is about reclaiming those rhythms and giving them form in pieces that last.


When I was growing up, and even now, most of the time spent with each other has been around food—either cooking together or sitting down to eat a prepared meal. It’s the same at my Mema’s and my grandma’s. Those kitchens were never just about getting dinner on the table; they were places where stories were told, laughter was shared, and love was lived out in practical ways. Cooking is more than nourishment for the body. If done right, it can be nourishing for the soul too.


Gathered Grace began with the recognition that modern life often pushes us toward speed and distraction. Meals become rushed, traditions fade, and the table is reduced to a surface instead of a gathering place. Each piece in this collection was designed to resist that drift. The recipe box and stand invite families to slow down, to cook from cards passed down by hand, and to keep those meals visible in the kitchen as part of everyday life. They are reminders that legacy is not digital—it is handwritten, tangible, and meant to be shared face-to-face.


The apron carries another layer of meaning. It is practical, yes, but it also signals readiness to serve. In tying it on, we acknowledge the value of the work done in the kitchen—the chopping, stirring, kneading—that builds both nourishment and memory. It is a garment of stewardship, meant to be worn often and passed on, a quiet witness to the truth that homemaking is sacred work.


The candles, whether poured into a teacup or carved into a dough bowl, embody the atmosphere of hospitality. They are not decorative extras, but tools of intention—marking the start of a meal, the pause of prayer, or the warmth of conversation. Their light is communal, reminding us that grace is gathered when people come together, not when they remain isolated.


At its heart, Gathered Grace is about rebuilding the home with intention. It is about choosing pieces that are not trendy, but timeless—items that carry meaning because they are used in the daily work of tending, serving, and remembering. This collection is not about decoration; it is about devotion. It is about honoring the women who came before, preserving the ways they lived, and passing them on to the generations who will follow.


Gathered Grace is an invitation: to cook slowly, to serve joyfully to light candles with purpose, and to remember that the kitchen is holy ground.


Let every recipe, every flame, every apron remind you: the kitchen is holy ground, and legacy is built at the table.

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