AbstractThis article documents the authors' modification and implementation of anti‐racist writing workshop (ARWW) practices in the context of an online, drop‐in writing club, Pens Out. We sought to understand how teens perceive writing practices that are not white‐normed — specifically, centring relationships instead of prizing individuality, embedding choice instead of replicating one authorial view and observing writerly craft instead of errors. As white‐identifying educators and researchers, we engaged in practitioner inquiry to understand how programme participants who live in a predominately white region experience these practices. We asked: How do attendees understand and describe experiences with writing workshop pedagogies that seek to de‐centre whiteness? This question has become increasingly important as politicians in the United States restrict anti‐racist educational practices and content. We used conventional content analysis to observe themes across five participants' semi‐structured interviews. Findings indicated that participants' relationships with each other produced inspiration and reciprocity, writing expectations from inside and outside the club affected choice and risk taking, and observing craft multimodally encouraged sharing and reciprocity. What we discovered can help teachers and leaders of K12 writing workshops implement ARWW practices and increase allyship while discussing and questioning hegemonic ideals in K12 schooling.