DIY audiences do not share or link to content that feels generic. They want projects that actually work, clear steps, and proof that the maker has done it.
If you are trying to rank craft tutorials, pattern pages, product collections, workshop pages, or “how to” guides, random backlinks from broad sites usually do nothing. A link only helps when it sits inside content that belongs in maker culture.
Link Growth Wizard builds Crafts & DIY backlinks through manual outreach and strict site vetting. We place guest posts and niche edits on publishers that already cover DIY tutorials, maker projects, handmade crafts, tools, and hobbyist communities.
Worked with 100+ clients around the world including
Why Crafts & DIY backlinks need to come from real maker and hobby publishers
In this niche, relevance is obvious. A link to a crochet pattern, woodworking plan, or resin tutorial looks natural only when the referring site is actually about making things.
We prioritize publishers that consistently publish about:
- Step-by-step DIY projects and tutorials
- Handmade crafts, patterns, and templates
- Tools, materials, and supply recommendations
- Home craft, décor builds, and upcycling
- Maker culture, workshops, and hobby communities
Off-topic placements can inflate backlink count. They often fail to improve rankings because the topic match is weak and the audience intent is wrong.
Our filter is simple: would a real DIY editor naturally reference your project or resource inside this article because it helps the reader build something? If it feels forced, we pass.
What you get with Crafts & DIY-focused link building
Sites that actually publish DIY projects, not “lifestyle blogs with crafts”
We avoid broad sites that post a craft article once a month and everything else is unrelated.
Each publisher is manually reviewed for:
- A real crafts library with repeatable project content
- Clear editorial quality with usable instructions
- Outbound linking behavior that does not look like link selling
- Active publishing and maintained pages
Content written like a maker wrote it
DIY readers want clear steps and realistic expectations. Guest posts are written to match the publisher’s style, with practical project framing and tool and material context.
That can include project tutorials, technique explainers, beginner guides, seasonal craft ideas, or “mistakes to avoid” content that feels useful.
Placements mapped to your target pages
Different pages need different support.
- Commercial pages (product collections, kits, craft supplies, courses, memberships, workshop pages) get links from content tied to project planning, material selection, and buyer intent.
- Informational pages (tutorials, patterns, templates, guides) get links from adjacent DIY content that naturally supports the build journey.
Anchors that look normal in DIY publishing
Craft publishers usually link with descriptive phrases that match the project, like “free macramé pattern” or “beginner woodworking plan,” plus some branded anchors for established makers and stores.
We keep anchors varied and realistic, avoiding repetitive exact-match patterns.
Who this is for
Craft bloggers and tutorial sites building authority
If you publish projects and patterns, you need links from other maker publishers, not generic sites. We target placements around related project categories and techniques that naturally support your tutorials.
Handmade product sellers and craft supply stores
Ecommerce pages need authority from project-led contexts. We build placements in content about materials, tool choices, beginner kits, and project planning that naturally supports your collections.
Course creators, workshop hosts, and maker memberships
If you teach skills, you need links from publishers that already attract hobbyists. We target placements around learning paths, technique guides, and “how to start” topics that align with your course and membership pages.
Brands in the maker ecosystem
If you sell tools, materials, or specialty products, you need links from content that shows real use cases. We focus on project and technique contexts where your product reference actually helps the reader.
How the campaign works
Step 1: Share your targets and project focus
Send your website, your priority pages, and what you focus on, like crochet, knitting, sewing, woodworking, resin, Cricut, home décor, upcycling, or kids’ crafts.
Step 2: Prospect and vet Crafts & DIY publishers
We source publishers inside the DIY ecosystem and manually review topical depth, editorial quality, publishing consistency, and spam risk.
Step 3: Map placements to page intent
Commercial pages get support from planning and product-selection contexts. Informational pages get support from tutorial and technique content. The intent match comes first.
Step 4: Publish guest posts or place niche edits
Guest posts are written to match the publication’s tone. Niche edits are placed only when an existing article naturally supports a reference to your project, pattern, or product page.
Step 5: Receive clear reporting
Each placement includes:
- Live URL
- Publisher focus (DIY, patterns, tools, projects, maker community)
- Target page and anchor used
- Notes on topical fit and why the link belongs
Service snapshot
Niche focus | Crafts & DIY sites only, manually vetted for topical depth and editorial quality |
Deliverables | 4–20 placements per month, guest posts or niche edits, full reporting |
Site vetting | Content quality, publishing consistency, topical alignment, spam screening |
Placement types | Contextual in-article links on relevant pages |
Anchor strategy | Niche-appropriate mix: branded, topical, partial match |
Targeting | Can filter by craft type, skill level, and audience |
Reporting | Live URLs, niche context, anchor, target page, placement notes |
Turnaround | Guest posts: 2–4 weeks. Niche edits: 1–3 weeks. |
Contracts | Month-to-month, no lock-in |
FAQs
How do you vet sites for Crafts & DIY relevance?
We review the content library to confirm consistent DIY publishing, not occasional craft posts. We check whether the site provides real projects, patterns, and tutorials with genuine editorial standards. After relevance, we screen for spam signals and suspicious outbound links.
Can I see Crafts & DIY site examples before committing?
Yes. We can share sample publishers filtered to your craft type, like sewing, crochet, woodworking, Cricut, resin, home décor, or kids’ crafts. If you want approvals before publishing, we can work that way.
What if my site spans multiple craft categories?
That is common. We can split the campaign into clusters and map placements to the right tutorials, product collections, or course pages.
How many backlinks do I need in this niche?
It depends on competition, your current authority, and what you are trying to rank. Many campaigns start with 4–8 placements per month, then scale based on traction.
Do you guarantee rankings?
No. Rankings depend on content quality, technical SEO, competition, and time. We guarantee vetted placements on relevant sites with transparent reporting.
Can you target beginner-focused publishers versus advanced maker audiences?
Yes. We can filter by audience style and skill level. Beginner content often benefits from “how to start” placements. Advanced content often benefits from technique and tool-driven placements.
Do you build links to tutorials and patterns, or only to product pages?
Both. Tutorial and pattern pages often perform best with editorial links from related projects. Product and kit pages perform best when supported by project-led content where the purchase makes sense.
Will the content avoid vague “DIY inspiration” fluff?
Yes. DIY audiences want usable information. We write with clear steps, realistic constraints, and project framing that fits credible maker publishers.
Build a Crafts & DIY link profile that supports rankings
In DIY, generic backlinks often sit there and do nothing. The links that help are the ones that live inside real project content, written for people who are actually building something.
Send your website and your priority pages, and we will show you what vetted Crafts & DIY placements look like for your craft type and goals.
Before you reach out, have ready:
- Your website URL
- Your top 3 priority pages
- Your focus (craft type, products, courses, tutorials, kits)
- Target geography or audience
- Monthly budget range
Relevant Niche Categories: