What You Could Make This Weekend
Picture this. It's Saturday morning. You've got your coffee, a little stack of scraps you've been hoarding because you love them too much to cut into "something serious," and a few free hours. By the time the afternoon light comes through the window, you've made something you're genuinely proud of — and it's entirely, unmistakably yours.
That's not a fantasy. That's just a normal day with Scrappy Appliqué.

Here's what I want you to imagine, because I think you've been carrying around a quiet belief that making something beautiful has to be hard.
Long.
Fussy.
Full of points that have to match and seams that have to be perfect.
Scrappy Appliqué is the opposite of all of that.
Imagine a technique where there are only two real rules — don't overthink it, and don't touch your iron to the fusible — and beyond that, you genuinely cannot get it wrong.
Where "I added too much pink" isn't a mistake, it's just a piece you peel off, or a new piece you lay on top.
Where the whole thing is so forgiving that you finally get to let your hair down and just play.

Imagine reaching into that scrap bin — the one that's been quietly nagging at you — and watching those odd, beloved little pieces become something that looks like new fabric.
A bear.
A fox.
The skyline of the city you grew up in.
All those scraps you couldn't bear to waste, finally becoming the thing they were waiting to be.

And here's the part I love most.
Picture finishing one — actually finishing it, start to top-stitched, in a fraction of the time you're used to — and realizing you want to make another.
A different animal.
A wilder palette.
A version for your grandchild who'd light up to see it.
Because it goes so quickly, you get to experiment, and explore, and surprise yourself, over and over. You're not locked into one big months-long commitment.
You're free to play.
I've taught this to quilters all over the world — total beginners and folks who've been appliquéing for fifty years — and here's the thing that still delights me: no two quilts have ever looked alike. Not one. Because the technique doesn't ask you to copy a picture. It hands you the space to make something that could only have come from you.
That's the part I most want you to picture: not just a finished quilt, but
the feeling of standing back looking at it, and thinking I made that — and it looks like me.
If you'd like to see what's possible — quilt after quilt, palette after palette, all the different finishing options and creative variations — I put together a free Scrappy Appliqué Trunk Show where I walk you through dozens of them and share exactly how I think about color and design along the way. It's the best way to see yourself in this.
Watch the Scrappy Appliqué Trunk Show
Can't wait to see what you make.
Come play with me!
Shannon
P.S. Bring your coffee and your scrap bin to the Trunk Show — I have a feeling you'll be itching to start something by the end of it!

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