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In einem religiösen Haus im Königreich Nápoles bat eine verzweifelte Frau einen Priester um Hilfe. 😔 Ihr Ehemann hatte seit 28 Jahren nicht mehr gebeichtet und wurde zornig, sobald man mit ihm über Gott sprach. Der Priester gab ihr ein Bild der Unbefleckten Jungfrau Maria und sagte ihr, sie solle es ihrem Mann schenken. 🌹 Noch in derselben Nacht veränderte sich sein Herz. Als er das Bild betrachtete, sagte er plötzlich: —Wann bringst du mich zur Beichte? Am nächsten Morgen kam er in die Kirche, beichtete mit großer Reue und änderte sein Leben. 🙏🏻⛪ Während einer Mission in der Diözese Salerno geschah etwas Ähnliches. Ein Mann lebte voller Hass und wollte sich an seinem Feind rächen. Ein Missionar sprach lange mit ihm, doch ohne Erfolg. Schließlich gab er ihm ein Bild der Jungfrau Maria. 🤍 Kaum hielt der Mann das Bild in den Händen, begann sein Herz sich zu wandeln. Schließlich vergab er seinem Feind und ging zur Beichte. 🙏🏻 Diese Geschichten zeigen die mächtige Fürsprache der Heiligsten Jungfrau Maria und wie viele Herzen durch ihre Nähe verändert werden. 👑🌹 #JungfrauMaria #UnbefleckteEmpfängnis #Bekehrung #Beichte #KatholischerGlaube #Vergebung #Gebet #JesusChristus #HeiligeMaria
If you've been craving a joyful creative practice that's fun and feels like play... this is your moment. Not just saving inspiration to a Pinterest board and calling it a day. But actually watching something take shape in your sketchbook, step by step, until it becomes something real. Something you can hold and say, I did that. I made that! ✨That’s the magic of Pattern Week.✨ Next week. from May 18–22, you'll get to experience the same playful pattern making that Pattern Play members look forward to every single month. Here’s what we’ll do together: 🌿 Gather inspiration and build a color story that feels like you 🌿 Fill your sketchbook with loose, imperfect, surprisingly beautiful marks 🌿 Turn those marks into a seamless repeat pattern in Illustrator 🌿 Bring your design to life on real product like: fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap 🌿 End the week holding proof that you didn’t just imagine it… you made it There’s something kindddd of magical about that moment. When an idea that lives quietly in your head suddenly exists in the world… in color, in pattern, in form. And the best part is, this isn’t reserved for “real artists” or people who already know what they’re doing. It’s designed to guide you there, gently and clearly, one step at a time. It’s just $10 to join, so you can step into the experience, follow your curiosity, and see what’s possible for you without overthinking it. Five days. One finished pattern. A completely different way of seeing yourself creatively. That sketchbook has been waiting long enough, are you in? 🤔 Let’s begin!
She had her phone in her hand. The app was open. The little box at the top that says "What's on your mind?" was blinking at her. She'd been sitting like that for about ten minutes. I know because she told me, on a call, surrounded by other self-publishers who were nodding along like she'd just described their entire week. "I want to post about my books," she said. "But I don't know where. I don't know what. I don't even know if I should be using my personal account or starting a new one." The room went quiet for a second. Then someone else said, "Same." Then someone else. And I realised something I'd been half-noticing for months but had never said out loud. The thing stopping most self-publishers from promoting their books isn't laziness. It isn't lack of time. It isn't even fear of being seen, although that's part of it. It's the questions. The endless, looping, unanswerable questions that start the moment you decide you should "do social media." Do I post on my personal account or make a new one for my publishing brand? Which platform is even right for what I make? Instagram? Facebook? TikTok? Pinterest? Threads? Do I really need to be on all of them? What do I actually post? A photo of my planner over and over? My colouring book pages? My puzzle interiors? But that feels repetitive. So what else? Do I need to be on video? Because the thought of flipping through my own journal on camera makes me want to lie down. If I post on Tuesday and nobody likes it, does that mean my book is bad, or my post is bad, or the algorithm hates me, or all three? Should I be using hashtags? Trending sounds? Reels? Stories? Carousels? And on, and on, and on. So most self-publishers do what any reasonable person would do when faced with that many decisions. They don't post. Or they post once, get three likes (two from family), feel embarrassed, and don't post again for six weeks. I did this too, by the way. For ages. I'd design a book, pour hours into it, hit publish on Amazon, and then completely freeze when it came to telling anyone about it. Not because I didn't believe in the book. Because I didn't have a single clear plan for how to talk about it without feeling like I was either bragging or shouting into the void. The internet wasn't helping. Every article said something different. Every guru had a "must-do" platform. Every YouTube video left me with more tabs open than I started with. What I needed wasn't more information. I was drowning in information. What I needed was someone to say, calmly: here is one path. Pick a platform you actually enjoy. Here are the only kinds of posts you need to know how to write. Here is how to talk about your planners or your colouring books or your puzzle books without feeling weird about it. And here is what to do when you sit down and your brain goes blank. That's it. That's the whole thing. So a few weeks ago I built that for the self-publishers inside my membership. A short course called Promote Your Books with Confidence. Five lessons. A weekly planner. A library of prompts they can use to write captions in their own voice without staring at a blank screen for ten minutes. One of my members sent me a message after she finished it. "Hi Nuria, I have just completed the course and absolutely love it. You explain it so simply, making it easy to follow." That's all I ever wanted to hear. Because the problem was never that self-publishers don't want to promote their books. The problem is that nobody has ever explained it simply. Especially not for the kind of books most of us are actually making. Planners. Journals. Puzzle books. Colouring books. Children's books. The "show, don't tell" rules built for novelists don't quite fit when your product is a beautifully designed gratitude journal or a 100-page sudoku book. If you've been sitting with that blinking cursor too, wondering which platform, which account, which post, which day, which strategy, I want you to know it isn't a personal failing. It's a sign that you've been trying to figure out something that nobody has bothered to walk you through properly. That's what the Publishing Academy is for. The Promote Your Books with Confidence course sits inside it, alongside everything else I've built for self-publishers who want a clear path instead of a hundred open tabs. It's £37 a month and you can leave any time. Give it a try, I think you're going to like it there.
If you've been craving a joyful creative practice that's fun and feels like play... this is your moment. Not just saving inspiration to a Pinterest board and calling it a day. But actually watching something take shape in your sketchbook, step by step, until it becomes something real. Something you can hold and say, I did that. I made that! ✨That’s the magic of Pattern Week.✨ Next week. from May 18–22, you'll get to experience the same playful pattern making that Pattern Play members look forward to every single month. Here’s what we’ll do together: 🌿 Gather inspiration and build a color story that feels like you 🌿 Fill your sketchbook with loose, imperfect, surprisingly beautiful marks 🌿 Turn those marks into a seamless repeat pattern in Illustrator 🌿 Bring your design to life on real product like: fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap 🌿 End the week holding proof that you didn’t just imagine it… you made it There’s something kindddd of magical about that moment. When an idea that lives quietly in your head suddenly exists in the world… in color, in pattern, in form. And the best part is, this isn’t reserved for “real artists” or people who already know what they’re doing. It’s designed to guide you there, gently and clearly, one step at a time. It’s just $10 to join, so you can step into the experience, follow your curiosity, and see what’s possible for you without overthinking it. Five days. One finished pattern. A completely different way of seeing yourself creatively. That sketchbook has been waiting long enough, are you in? 🤔 Let’s begin!
If you've been craving a joyful creative practice that's fun and feels like play... this is your moment. Not just saving inspiration to a Pinterest board and calling it a day. But actually watching something take shape in your sketchbook, step by step, until it becomes something real. Something you can hold and say, I did that. I made that! ✨That’s the magic of Pattern Week.✨ Next week. from May 18–22, you'll get to experience the same playful pattern making that Pattern Play members look forward to every single month. Here’s what we’ll do together: 🌿 Gather inspiration and build a color story that feels like you 🌿 Fill your sketchbook with loose, imperfect, surprisingly beautiful marks 🌿 Turn those marks into a seamless repeat pattern in Illustrator 🌿 Bring your design to life on real product like: fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap 🌿 End the week holding proof that you didn’t just imagine it… you made it There’s something kindddd of magical about that moment. When an idea that lives quietly in your head suddenly exists in the world… in color, in pattern, in form. And the best part is, this isn’t reserved for “real artists” or people who already know what they’re doing. It’s designed to guide you there, gently and clearly, one step at a time. It’s just $10 to join, so you can step into the experience, follow your curiosity, and see what’s possible for you without overthinking it. Five days. One finished pattern. A completely different way of seeing yourself creatively. That sketchbook has been waiting long enough, are you in? 🤔 Let’s begin!
If you've been craving a joyful creative practice that's fun and feels like play... this is your moment. Not just saving inspiration to a Pinterest board and calling it a day. But actually watching something take shape in your sketchbook, step by step, until it becomes something real. Something you can hold and say, I did that. I made that! ✨That’s the magic of Pattern Week.✨ Next week. from May 18–22, you'll get to experience the same playful pattern making that Pattern Play members look forward to every single month. Here’s what we’ll do together: 🌿 Gather inspiration and build a color story that feels like you 🌿 Fill your sketchbook with loose, imperfect, surprisingly beautiful marks 🌿 Turn those marks into a seamless repeat pattern in Illustrator 🌿 Bring your design to life on real product like: fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap 🌿 End the week holding proof that you didn’t just imagine it… you made it There’s something kindddd of magical about that moment. When an idea that lives quietly in your head suddenly exists in the world… in color, in pattern, in form. And the best part is, this isn’t reserved for “real artists” or people who already know what they’re doing. It’s designed to guide you there, gently and clearly, one step at a time. It’s just $10 to join, so you can step into the experience, follow your curiosity, and see what’s possible for you without overthinking it. Five days. One finished pattern. A completely different way of seeing yourself creatively. That sketchbook has been waiting long enough, are you in? 🤔 Let’s begin!
If you've been craving a joyful creative practice that's fun and feels like play... this is your moment. Not just saving inspiration to a Pinterest board and calling it a day. But actually watching something take shape in your sketchbook, step by step, until it becomes something real. Something you can hold and say, I did that. I made that! ✨That’s the magic of Pattern Week.✨ Next week. from May 18–22, you'll get to experience the same playful pattern making that Pattern Play members look forward to every single month. Here’s what we’ll do together: 🌿 Gather inspiration and build a color story that feels like you 🌿 Fill your sketchbook with loose, imperfect, surprisingly beautiful marks 🌿 Turn those marks into a seamless repeat pattern in Illustrator 🌿 Bring your design to life on real product like: fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap 🌿 End the week holding proof that you didn’t just imagine it… you made it There’s something kindddd of magical about that moment. When an idea that lives quietly in your head suddenly exists in the world… in color, in pattern, in form. And the best part is, this isn’t reserved for “real artists” or people who already know what they’re doing. It’s designed to guide you there, gently and clearly, one step at a time. It’s just $10 to join, so you can step into the experience, follow your curiosity, and see what’s possible for you without overthinking it. Five days. One finished pattern. A completely different way of seeing yourself creatively. That sketchbook has been waiting long enough, are you in? 🤔 Let’s begin!
If you've been craving a joyful creative practice that's fun and feels like play... this is your moment. Not just saving inspiration to a Pinterest board and calling it a day. But actually watching something take shape in your sketchbook, step by step, until it becomes something real. Something you can hold and say, I did that. I made that! ✨That’s the magic of Pattern Week.✨ Next week. from May 18–22, you'll get to experience the same playful pattern making that Pattern Play members look forward to every single month. Here’s what we’ll do together: 🌿 Gather inspiration and build a color story that feels like you 🌿 Fill your sketchbook with loose, imperfect, surprisingly beautiful marks 🌿 Turn those marks into a seamless repeat pattern in Illustrator 🌿 Bring your design to life on real product like: fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap 🌿 End the week holding proof that you didn’t just imagine it… you made it There’s something kindddd of magical about that moment. When an idea that lives quietly in your head suddenly exists in the world… in color, in pattern, in form. And the best part is, this isn’t reserved for “real artists” or people who already know what they’re doing. It’s designed to guide you there, gently and clearly, one step at a time. It’s just $10 to join, so you can step into the experience, follow your curiosity, and see what’s possible for you without overthinking it. Five days. One finished pattern. A completely different way of seeing yourself creatively. That sketchbook has been waiting long enough, are you in? 🤔 Let’s begin!
If you've been craving a joyful creative practice that's fun and feels like play... this is your moment. Not just saving inspiration to a Pinterest board and calling it a day. But actually watching something take shape in your sketchbook, step by step, until it becomes something real. Something you can hold and say, I did that. I made that! ✨That’s the magic of Pattern Week.✨ Next week. from May 18–22, you'll get to experience the same playful pattern making that Pattern Play members look forward to every single month. Here’s what we’ll do together: 🌿 Gather inspiration and build a color story that feels like you 🌿 Fill your sketchbook with loose, imperfect, surprisingly beautiful marks 🌿 Turn those marks into a seamless repeat pattern in Illustrator 🌿 Bring your design to life on real product like: fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap 🌿 End the week holding proof that you didn’t just imagine it… you made it There’s something kindddd of magical about that moment. When an idea that lives quietly in your head suddenly exists in the world… in color, in pattern, in form. And the best part is, this isn’t reserved for “real artists” or people who already know what they’re doing. It’s designed to guide you there, gently and clearly, one step at a time. It’s just $10 to join, so you can step into the experience, follow your curiosity, and see what’s possible for you without overthinking it. Five days. One finished pattern. A completely different way of seeing yourself creatively. That sketchbook has been waiting long enough, are you in? 🤔 Let’s begin!
If you've been craving a joyful creative practice that's fun and feels like play... this is your moment. Not just saving inspiration to a Pinterest board and calling it a day. But actually watching something take shape in your sketchbook, step by step, until it becomes something real. Something you can hold and say, I did that. I made that! ✨That’s the magic of Pattern Week.✨ Next week. from May 18–22, you'll get to experience the same playful pattern making that Pattern Play members look forward to every single month. Here’s what we’ll do together: 🌿 Gather inspiration and build a color story that feels like you 🌿 Fill your sketchbook with loose, imperfect, surprisingly beautiful marks 🌿 Turn those marks into a seamless repeat pattern in Illustrator 🌿 Bring your design to life on real product like: fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap 🌿 End the week holding proof that you didn’t just imagine it… you made it There’s something kindddd of magical about that moment. When an idea that lives quietly in your head suddenly exists in the world… in color, in pattern, in form. And the best part is, this isn’t reserved for “real artists” or people who already know what they’re doing. It’s designed to guide you there, gently and clearly, one step at a time. It’s just $10 to join, so you can step into the experience, follow your curiosity, and see what’s possible for you without overthinking it. Five days. One finished pattern. A completely different way of seeing yourself creatively. That sketchbook has been waiting long enough, are you in? 🤔 Let’s begin!
If you've been craving a joyful creative practice that's fun and feels like play... this is your moment. Not just saving inspiration to a Pinterest board and calling it a day. But actually watching something take shape in your sketchbook, step by step, until it becomes something real. Something you can hold and say, I did that. I made that! ✨That’s the magic of Pattern Week.✨ Next week. from May 18–22, you'll get to experience the same playful pattern making that Pattern Play members look forward to every single month. Here’s what we’ll do together: 🌿 Gather inspiration and build a color story that feels like you 🌿 Fill your sketchbook with loose, imperfect, surprisingly beautiful marks 🌿 Turn those marks into a seamless repeat pattern in Illustrator 🌿 Bring your design to life on real product like: fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap 🌿 End the week holding proof that you didn’t just imagine it… you made it There’s something kindddd of magical about that moment. When an idea that lives quietly in your head suddenly exists in the world… in color, in pattern, in form. And the best part is, this isn’t reserved for “real artists” or people who already know what they’re doing. It’s designed to guide you there, gently and clearly, one step at a time. It’s just $10 to join, so you can step into the experience, follow your curiosity, and see what’s possible for you without overthinking it. Five days. One finished pattern. A completely different way of seeing yourself creatively. That sketchbook has been waiting long enough, are you in? 🤔 Let’s begin!
If you've been craving a joyful creative practice that's fun and feels like play... this is your moment. Not just saving inspiration to a Pinterest board and calling it a day. But actually watching something take shape in your sketchbook, step by step, until it becomes something real. Something you can hold and say, I did that. I made that! ✨That’s the magic of Pattern Week.✨ Next week. from May 18–22, you'll get to experience the same playful pattern making that Pattern Play members look forward to every single month. Here’s what we’ll do together: 🌿 Gather inspiration and build a color story that feels like you 🌿 Fill your sketchbook with loose, imperfect, surprisingly beautiful marks 🌿 Turn those marks into a seamless repeat pattern in Illustrator 🌿 Bring your design to life on real product like: fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap 🌿 End the week holding proof that you didn’t just imagine it… you made it There’s something kindddd of magical about that moment. When an idea that lives quietly in your head suddenly exists in the world… in color, in pattern, in form. And the best part is, this isn’t reserved for “real artists” or people who already know what they’re doing. It’s designed to guide you there, gently and clearly, one step at a time. It’s just $10 to join, so you can step into the experience, follow your curiosity, and see what’s possible for you without overthinking it. Five days. One finished pattern. A completely different way of seeing yourself creatively. That sketchbook has been waiting long enough, are you in? 🤔 Let’s begin!
If you've been craving a joyful creative practice that's fun and feels like play... this is your moment. Not just saving inspiration to a Pinterest board and calling it a day. But actually watching something take shape in your sketchbook, step by step, until it becomes something real. Something you can hold and say, I did that. I made that! ✨That’s the magic of Pattern Week.✨ Next week. from May 18–22, you'll get to experience the same playful pattern making that Pattern Play members look forward to every single month. Here’s what we’ll do together: 🌿 Gather inspiration and build a color story that feels like you 🌿 Fill your sketchbook with loose, imperfect, surprisingly beautiful marks 🌿 Turn those marks into a seamless repeat pattern in Illustrator 🌿 Bring your design to life on real product like: fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap 🌿 End the week holding proof that you didn’t just imagine it… you made it There’s something kindddd of magical about that moment. When an idea that lives quietly in your head suddenly exists in the world… in color, in pattern, in form. And the best part is, this isn’t reserved for “real artists” or people who already know what they’re doing. It’s designed to guide you there, gently and clearly, one step at a time. It’s just $10 to join, so you can step into the experience, follow your curiosity, and see what’s possible for you without overthinking it. Five days. One finished pattern. A completely different way of seeing yourself creatively. That sketchbook has been waiting long enough, are you in? 🤔 Let’s begin!
If you've been craving a joyful creative practice that's fun and feels like play... this is your moment. Not just saving inspiration to a Pinterest board and calling it a day. But actually watching something take shape in your sketchbook, step by step, until it becomes something real. Something you can hold and say, I did that. I made that! ✨That’s the magic of Pattern Week.✨ Next week. from May 18–22, you'll get to experience the same playful pattern making that Pattern Play members look forward to every single month. Here’s what we’ll do together: 🌿 Gather inspiration and build a color story that feels like you 🌿 Fill your sketchbook with loose, imperfect, surprisingly beautiful marks 🌿 Turn those marks into a seamless repeat pattern in Illustrator 🌿 Bring your design to life on real product like: fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap 🌿 End the week holding proof that you didn’t just imagine it… you made it There’s something kindddd of magical about that moment. When an idea that lives quietly in your head suddenly exists in the world… in color, in pattern, in form. And the best part is, this isn’t reserved for “real artists” or people who already know what they’re doing. It’s designed to guide you there, gently and clearly, one step at a time. It’s just $10 to join, so you can step into the experience, follow your curiosity, and see what’s possible for you without overthinking it. Five days. One finished pattern. A completely different way of seeing yourself creatively. That sketchbook has been waiting long enough, are you in? 🤔 Let’s begin!
If you've been craving a joyful creative practice that's fun and feels like play... this is your moment. Not just saving inspiration to a Pinterest board and calling it a day. But actually watching something take shape in your sketchbook, step by step, until it becomes something real. Something you can hold and say, I did that. I made that! ✨That’s the magic of Pattern Week.✨ Next week. from May 18–22, you'll get to experience the same playful pattern making that Pattern Play members look forward to every single month. Here’s what we’ll do together: 🌿 Gather inspiration and build a color story that feels like you 🌿 Fill your sketchbook with loose, imperfect, surprisingly beautiful marks 🌿 Turn those marks into a seamless repeat pattern in Illustrator 🌿 Bring your design to life on real product like: fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap 🌿 End the week holding proof that you didn’t just imagine it… you made it There’s something kindddd of magical about that moment. When an idea that lives quietly in your head suddenly exists in the world… in color, in pattern, in form. And the best part is, this isn’t reserved for “real artists” or people who already know what they’re doing. It’s designed to guide you there, gently and clearly, one step at a time. It’s just $10 to join, so you can step into the experience, follow your curiosity, and see what’s possible for you without overthinking it. Five days. One finished pattern. A completely different way of seeing yourself creatively. That sketchbook has been waiting long enough, are you in? 🤔 Let’s begin!
If you've been craving a joyful creative practice that's fun and feels like play... this is your moment. Not just saving inspiration to a Pinterest board and calling it a day. But actually watching something take shape in your sketchbook, step by step, until it becomes something real. Something you can hold and say, I did that. I made that! ✨That’s the magic of Pattern Week.✨ Next week. from May 18–22, you'll get to experience the same playful pattern making that Pattern Play members look forward to every single month. Here’s what we’ll do together: 🌿 Gather inspiration and build a color story that feels like you 🌿 Fill your sketchbook with loose, imperfect, surprisingly beautiful marks 🌿 Turn those marks into a seamless repeat pattern in Illustrator 🌿 Bring your design to life on real product like: fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap 🌿 End the week holding proof that you didn’t just imagine it… you made it There’s something kindddd of magical about that moment. When an idea that lives quietly in your head suddenly exists in the world… in color, in pattern, in form. And the best part is, this isn’t reserved for “real artists” or people who already know what they’re doing. It’s designed to guide you there, gently and clearly, one step at a time. It’s just $10 to join, so you can step into the experience, follow your curiosity, and see what’s possible for you without overthinking it. Five days. One finished pattern. A completely different way of seeing yourself creatively. That sketchbook has been waiting long enough, are you in? 🤔 Let’s begin!
If you've been craving a joyful creative practice that's fun and feels like play... this is your moment. Not just saving inspiration to a Pinterest board and calling it a day. But actually watching something take shape in your sketchbook, step by step, until it becomes something real. Something you can hold and say, I did that. I made that! ✨That’s the magic of Pattern Week.✨ Next week. from May 18–22, you'll get to experience the same playful pattern making that Pattern Play members look forward to every single month. Here’s what we’ll do together: 🌿 Gather inspiration and build a color story that feels like you 🌿 Fill your sketchbook with loose, imperfect, surprisingly beautiful marks 🌿 Turn those marks into a seamless repeat pattern in Illustrator 🌿 Bring your design to life on real product like: fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap 🌿 End the week holding proof that you didn’t just imagine it… you made it There’s something kindddd of magical about that moment. When an idea that lives quietly in your head suddenly exists in the world… in color, in pattern, in form. And the best part is, this isn’t reserved for “real artists” or people who already know what they’re doing. It’s designed to guide you there, gently and clearly, one step at a time. It’s just $10 to join, so you can step into the experience, follow your curiosity, and see what’s possible for you without overthinking it. Five days. One finished pattern. A completely different way of seeing yourself creatively. That sketchbook has been waiting long enough, are you in? 🤔 Let’s begin!
If you've been craving a joyful creative practice that's fun and feels like play... this is your moment. Not just saving inspiration to a Pinterest board and calling it a day. But actually watching something take shape in your sketchbook, step by step, until it becomes something real. Something you can hold and say, I did that. I made that! ✨That’s the magic of Pattern Week.✨ Next week. from May 18–22, you'll get to experience the same playful pattern making that Pattern Play members look forward to every single month. Here’s what we’ll do together: 🌿 Gather inspiration and build a color story that feels like you 🌿 Fill your sketchbook with loose, imperfect, surprisingly beautiful marks 🌿 Turn those marks into a seamless repeat pattern in Illustrator 🌿 Bring your design to life on real product like: fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap 🌿 End the week holding proof that you didn’t just imagine it… you made it There’s something kindddd of magical about that moment. When an idea that lives quietly in your head suddenly exists in the world… in color, in pattern, in form. And the best part is, this isn’t reserved for “real artists” or people who already know what they’re doing. It’s designed to guide you there, gently and clearly, one step at a time. It’s just $10 to join, so you can step into the experience, follow your curiosity, and see what’s possible for you without overthinking it. Five days. One finished pattern. A completely different way of seeing yourself creatively. That sketchbook has been waiting long enough, are you in? 🤔 Let’s begin!
If you've been craving a joyful creative practice that's fun and feels like play... this is your moment. Not just saving inspiration to a Pinterest board and calling it a day. But actually watching something take shape in your sketchbook, step by step, until it becomes something real. Something you can hold and say, I did that. I made that! ✨That’s the magic of Pattern Week.✨ Next week. from May 18–22, you'll get to experience the same playful pattern making that Pattern Play members look forward to every single month. Here’s what we’ll do together: 🌿 Gather inspiration and build a color story that feels like you 🌿 Fill your sketchbook with loose, imperfect, surprisingly beautiful marks 🌿 Turn those marks into a seamless repeat pattern in Illustrator 🌿 Bring your design to life on real product like: fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap 🌿 End the week holding proof that you didn’t just imagine it… you made it There’s something kindddd of magical about that moment. When an idea that lives quietly in your head suddenly exists in the world… in color, in pattern, in form. And the best part is, this isn’t reserved for “real artists” or people who already know what they’re doing. It’s designed to guide you there, gently and clearly, one step at a time. It’s just $10 to join, so you can step into the experience, follow your curiosity, and see what’s possible for you without overthinking it. Five days. One finished pattern. A completely different way of seeing yourself creatively. That sketchbook has been waiting long enough, are you in? 🤔 Let’s begin!
If you've been craving a joyful creative practice that's fun and feels like play... this is your moment. Not just saving inspiration to a Pinterest board and calling it a day. But actually watching something take shape in your sketchbook, step by step, until it becomes something real. Something you can hold and say, I did that. I made that! ✨That’s the magic of Pattern Week.✨ Next week. from May 18–22, you'll get to experience the same playful pattern making that Pattern Play members look forward to every single month. Here’s what we’ll do together: 🌿 Gather inspiration and build a color story that feels like you 🌿 Fill your sketchbook with loose, imperfect, surprisingly beautiful marks 🌿 Turn those marks into a seamless repeat pattern in Illustrator 🌿 Bring your design to life on real product like: fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap 🌿 End the week holding proof that you didn’t just imagine it… you made it There’s something kindddd of magical about that moment. When an idea that lives quietly in your head suddenly exists in the world… in color, in pattern, in form. And the best part is, this isn’t reserved for “real artists” or people who already know what they’re doing. It’s designed to guide you there, gently and clearly, one step at a time. It’s just $10 to join, so you can step into the experience, follow your curiosity, and see what’s possible for you without overthinking it. Five days. One finished pattern. A completely different way of seeing yourself creatively. That sketchbook has been waiting long enough, are you in? 🤔 Let’s begin!
If you've been craving a joyful creative practice that's fun and feels like play... this is your moment. Not just saving inspiration to a Pinterest board and calling it a day. But actually watching something take shape in your sketchbook, step by step, until it becomes something real. Something you can hold and say, I did that. I made that! ✨That’s the magic of Pattern Week.✨ Next week. from May 18–22, you'll get to experience the same playful pattern making that Pattern Play members look forward to every single month. Here’s what we’ll do together: 🌿 Gather inspiration and build a color story that feels like you 🌿 Fill your sketchbook with loose, imperfect, surprisingly beautiful marks 🌿 Turn those marks into a seamless repeat pattern in Illustrator 🌿 Bring your design to life on real product like: fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap 🌿 End the week holding proof that you didn’t just imagine it… you made it There’s something kindddd of magical about that moment. When an idea that lives quietly in your head suddenly exists in the world… in color, in pattern, in form. And the best part is, this isn’t reserved for “real artists” or people who already know what they’re doing. It’s designed to guide you there, gently and clearly, one step at a time. It’s just $10 to join, so you can step into the experience, follow your curiosity, and see what’s possible for you without overthinking it. Five days. One finished pattern. A completely different way of seeing yourself creatively. That sketchbook has been waiting long enough, are you in? 🤔 Let’s begin!
If you've been craving a joyful creative practice that's fun and feels like play... this is your moment. Not just saving inspiration to a Pinterest board and calling it a day. But actually watching something take shape in your sketchbook, step by step, until it becomes something real. Something you can hold and say, I did that. I made that! ✨That’s the magic of Pattern Week.✨ Next week. from May 18–22, you'll get to experience the same playful pattern making that Pattern Play members look forward to every single month. Here’s what we’ll do together: 🌿 Gather inspiration and build a color story that feels like you 🌿 Fill your sketchbook with loose, imperfect, surprisingly beautiful marks 🌿 Turn those marks into a seamless repeat pattern in Illustrator 🌿 Bring your design to life on real product like: fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap 🌿 End the week holding proof that you didn’t just imagine it… you made it There’s something kindddd of magical about that moment. When an idea that lives quietly in your head suddenly exists in the world… in color, in pattern, in form. And the best part is, this isn’t reserved for “real artists” or people who already know what they’re doing. It’s designed to guide you there, gently and clearly, one step at a time. It’s just $10 to join, so you can step into the experience, follow your curiosity, and see what’s possible for you without overthinking it. Five days. One finished pattern. A completely different way of seeing yourself creatively. That sketchbook has been waiting long enough, are you in? 🤔 Let’s begin!
If you've been craving a joyful creative practice that's fun and feels like play... this is your moment. Not just saving inspiration to a Pinterest board and calling it a day. But actually watching something take shape in your sketchbook, step by step, until it becomes something real. Something you can hold and say, I did that. I made that! ✨That’s the magic of Pattern Week.✨ Next week. from May 18–22, you'll get to experience the same playful pattern making that Pattern Play members look forward to every single month. Here’s what we’ll do together: 🌿 Gather inspiration and build a color story that feels like you 🌿 Fill your sketchbook with loose, imperfect, surprisingly beautiful marks 🌿 Turn those marks into a seamless repeat pattern in Illustrator 🌿 Bring your design to life on real product like: fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap 🌿 End the week holding proof that you didn’t just imagine it… you made it There’s something kindddd of magical about that moment. When an idea that lives quietly in your head suddenly exists in the world… in color, in pattern, in form. And the best part is, this isn’t reserved for “real artists” or people who already know what they’re doing. It’s designed to guide you there, gently and clearly, one step at a time. It’s just $10 to join, so you can step into the experience, follow your curiosity, and see what’s possible for you without overthinking it. Five days. One finished pattern. A completely different way of seeing yourself creatively. That sketchbook has been waiting long enough, are you in? 🤔 Let’s begin!
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He can’t regret losing a woman who is still acting as his emotional safety net. You think you’re being 'patient,' but you’re actually just giving him a soft place to land while he looks for your replacement... I didn't want to believe that. I convinced myself that silence was a sign of strength, a dignified way of showing him I was 'healing.' But the truth finally caught up to me on a Tuesday afternoon in May, sitting in the car outside the shopping mall. I was staring at a text I'd rewritten eleven times—just four words: 'Hope you're doing well.' I realized that my 'patience' wasn't a strategy—it was a cage. Where I was waiting for him, waiting for him to notice the void, I was too terrified to actually leave. I never thought this could happen to me. I'm thirty-seven. I've closed business deals that made my boss cry with relief. And yet here I was, paralyzed by four words to a man who hadn't called me in six weeks. I never sent it. Instead, I sat there for twenty minutes, watching other people load groceries into their trunks, living normal lives, while I slowly unraveled in the front seat. The breakup itself was quiet. No screaming. No drama. Just him saying, 'I think we want different things,' and me nodding like I understood, even though I didn't. What I heard was, 'You're not enough.' I thought if I gave him space, he'd realize what he lost. That's what all the articles said. Go silent. Work on yourself. So I did. I unfollowed him. I started yoga. I bought new clothes. But at night, I was checking his profile from my backup Instagram account. I was looking for clues. A new woman. A sad song lyric. Anything that meant I still mattered. There was nothing. He looked fine. Better than fine. He looked free. That's when the shame started to creep in. Not the kind you feel after a mistake. But the kind that whispers, 'Maybe you were always too much. Maybe he's relieved.' I started replaying every fight we ever had. Every time I asked where we were going. Every time I wanted more, he pulled back. I convinced myself that if I had just been cooler, less needy, and more patient—he'd still be here. I became obsessed with the idea of the woman he'd date next. She'd be effortless. She wouldn't ask questions. She wouldn't need reassurance. She'd be everything I couldn't figure out how to be. The breaking point came eight weeks in. I was at a friend's birthday dinner, forcing myself to be social, when someone mentioned his name. My stomach dropped. Apparently, he'd been seeing someone. Not seriously. Just 'casually hanging out'. But it was enough to confirm that while I was sitting at home performing my healing journey like a one-woman stage show, he was out there moving on. I left early. I told everyone I had a headache, but really, I just needed to cry in private. That night I finally asked myself the question I'd been avoiding: What if he never comes back? What if I did all of this—the silence, the self-improvement, the pretending—and it didn't matter? So I did what I always do when I'm lost. I researched. Not the Pinterest quotes or the 'trust the universe' blogs. I wanted to understand what actually happens in a man's brain after a breakup. Why wasn't my absence affecting him? That's how I found this app. I almost didn't click. I expected some kind of affirmations. But the quiz was different. It didn't ask me about soulmates or zodiac signs. It asked about power dynamics. About who ended conversations first. About what I said during our last argument and how he responded. The results were uncomfortably accurate. It explained something called the Comfort Trap. It said that by disappearing and waiting, I'd actually made it easier for him to move on. I wasn't creating mystery. I was creating relief. His brain had categorized me as 'handled'—a chapter closed, not a loss to grieve. It hurt to read. But it also made sense in a way nothing else had. The app didn't tell me to text him or beg. It didn't tell me to post thirst traps or make him jealous. It gave me a step-by-step plan to shift the psychological weight. Week one, I sent a message the app scripted for me. It wasn't emotional. It wasn't needy. It was calm and surprising, and it ended on my terms. I didn't ask for anything. For the first time in two months, I wasn't chasing. By week three, he was reaching out first. Small things. A song that reminded him of me. A joke I would've appreciated. I wanted to dive in, to pour my heart out, to tell him I missed him. But the app told me exactly how to respond—and more importantly, when to pull back. The night he called, I almost didn't pick up. It was late. But his voice sounded different. Uncertain. He said, 'I've been thinking about us a lot lately. ' Not 'I miss you.' Not 'I made a mistake. Just that. And for the first time, I didn't rush to fill the silence. We met for drinks two weeks later. He looked at me like he was seeing me for the first time. He said, 'You seem different.' I was. Because I stopped abandoning myself to keep him comfortable. If you're reading this and you're stuck in the waiting. Hoping he'll wake up and realize what he lost. Please hear me. He won't. Not while you're still energetically bounded to him. Not while he knows you're there, hoping. You have to shift the psychology. Not with games. Not with manipulation. With clarity. This app gave me a roadmap when I had none. It showed me what I was doing wrong and how to fix it. Not in theory. In practice. Message by message. Day by day. Take the quiz. Let the app analyze what's happening and give you the path back to being his priority. The link is below. Those 3 minutes might be the moment you stop being the one he forgets and start being the one he can't afford to lose. Please, just give it a try...
He can’t regret losing a woman who is still acting as his emotional safety net. You think you’re being 'patient,' but you’re actually just giving him a soft place to land while he looks for your replacement... I didn't want to believe that. I convinced myself that silence was a sign of strength, a dignified way of showing him I was 'healing.' But the truth finally caught up to me on a Tuesday afternoon in May, sitting in the car outside the shopping mall. I was staring at a text I'd rewritten eleven times—just four words: 'Hope you're doing well.' I realized that my 'patience' wasn't a strategy—it was a cage. Where I was waiting for him, waiting for him to notice the void, I was too terrified to actually leave. I never thought this could happen to me. I'm thirty-seven. I've closed business deals that made my boss cry with relief. And yet here I was, paralyzed by four words to a man who hadn't called me in six weeks. I never sent it. Instead, I sat there for twenty minutes, watching other people load groceries into their trunks, living normal lives, while I slowly unraveled in the front seat. The breakup itself was quiet. No screaming. No drama. Just him saying, 'I think we want different things,' and me nodding like I understood, even though I didn't. What I heard was, 'You're not enough.' I thought if I gave him space, he'd realize what he lost. That's what all the articles said. Go silent. Work on yourself. So I did. I unfollowed him. I started yoga. I bought new clothes. But at night, I was checking his profile from my backup Instagram account. I was looking for clues. A new woman. A sad song lyric. Anything that meant I still mattered. There was nothing. He looked fine. Better than fine. He looked free. That's when the shame started to creep in. Not the kind you feel after a mistake. But the kind that whispers, 'Maybe you were always too much. Maybe he's relieved.' I started replaying every fight we ever had. Every time I asked where we were going. Every time I wanted more, he pulled back. I convinced myself that if I had just been cooler, less needy, and more patient—he'd still be here. I became obsessed with the idea of the woman he'd date next. She'd be effortless. She wouldn't ask questions. She wouldn't need reassurance. She'd be everything I couldn't figure out how to be. The breaking point came eight weeks in. I was at a friend's birthday dinner, forcing myself to be social, when someone mentioned his name. My stomach dropped. Apparently, he'd been seeing someone. Not seriously. Just 'casually hanging out'. But it was enough to confirm that while I was sitting at home performing my healing journey like a one-woman stage show, he was out there moving on. I left early. I told everyone I had a headache, but really, I just needed to cry in private. That night I finally asked myself the question I'd been avoiding: What if he never comes back? What if I did all of this—the silence, the self-improvement, the pretending—and it didn't matter? So I did what I always do when I'm lost. I researched. Not the Pinterest quotes or the 'trust the universe' blogs. I wanted to understand what actually happens in a man's brain after a breakup. Why wasn't my absence affecting him? That's how I found this app. I almost didn't click. I expected some kind of affirmations. But the quiz was different. It didn't ask me about soulmates or zodiac signs. It asked about power dynamics. About who ended conversations first. About what I said during our last argument and how he responded. The results were uncomfortably accurate. It explained something called the Comfort Trap. It said that by disappearing and waiting, I'd actually made it easier for him to move on. I wasn't creating mystery. I was creating relief. His brain had categorized me as 'handled'—a chapter closed, not a loss to grieve. It hurt to read. But it also made sense in a way nothing else had. The app didn't tell me to text him or beg. It didn't tell me to post thirst traps or make him jealous. It gave me a step-by-step plan to shift the psychological weight. Week one, I sent a message the app scripted for me. It wasn't emotional. It wasn't needy. It was calm and surprising, and it ended on my terms. I didn't ask for anything. For the first time in two months, I wasn't chasing. By week three, he was reaching out first. Small things. A song that reminded him of me. A joke I would've appreciated. I wanted to dive in, to pour my heart out, to tell him I missed him. But the app told me exactly how to respond—and more importantly, when to pull back. The night he called, I almost didn't pick up. It was late. But his voice sounded different. Uncertain. He said, 'I've been thinking about us a lot lately. ' Not 'I miss you.' Not 'I made a mistake. Just that. And for the first time, I didn't rush to fill the silence. We met for drinks two weeks later. He looked at me like he was seeing me for the first time. He said, 'You seem different.' I was. Because I stopped abandoning myself to keep him comfortable. If you're reading this and you're stuck in the waiting. Hoping he'll wake up and realize what he lost. Please hear me. He won't. Not while you're still energetically bounded to him. Not while he knows you're there, hoping. You have to shift the psychology. Not with games. Not with manipulation. With clarity. This app gave me a roadmap when I had none. It showed me what I was doing wrong and how to fix it. Not in theory. In practice. Message by message. Day by day. Take the quiz. Let the app analyze what's happening and give you the path back to being his priority. The link is below. Those 3 minutes might be the moment you stop being the one he forgets and start being the one he can't afford to lose. Please, just give it a try...
He can’t regret losing a woman who is still acting as his emotional safety net. You think you’re being 'patient,' but you’re actually just giving him a soft place to land while he looks for your replacement... I didn't want to believe that. I convinced myself that silence was a sign of strength, a dignified way of showing him I was 'healing.' But the truth finally caught up to me on a Tuesday afternoon in May, sitting in the car outside the shopping mall. I was staring at a text I'd rewritten eleven times—just four words: 'Hope you're doing well.' I realized that my 'patience' wasn't a strategy—it was a cage. Where I was waiting for him, waiting for him to notice the void, I was too terrified to actually leave. I never thought this could happen to me. I'm thirty-seven. I've closed business deals that made my boss cry with relief. And yet here I was, paralyzed by four words to a man who hadn't called me in six weeks. I never sent it. Instead, I sat there for twenty minutes, watching other people load groceries into their trunks, living normal lives, while I slowly unraveled in the front seat. The breakup itself was quiet. No screaming. No drama. Just him saying, 'I think we want different things,' and me nodding like I understood, even though I didn't. What I heard was, 'You're not enough.' I thought if I gave him space, he'd realize what he lost. That's what all the articles said. Go silent. Work on yourself. So I did. I unfollowed him. I started yoga. I bought new clothes. But at night, I was checking his profile from my backup Instagram account. I was looking for clues. A new woman. A sad song lyric. Anything that meant I still mattered. There was nothing. He looked fine. Better than fine. He looked free. That's when the shame started to creep in. Not the kind you feel after a mistake. But the kind that whispers, 'Maybe you were always too much. Maybe he's relieved.' I started replaying every fight we ever had. Every time I asked where we were going. Every time I wanted more, he pulled back. I convinced myself that if I had just been cooler, less needy, and more patient—he'd still be here. I became obsessed with the idea of the woman he'd date next. She'd be effortless. She wouldn't ask questions. She wouldn't need reassurance. She'd be everything I couldn't figure out how to be. The breaking point came eight weeks in. I was at a friend's birthday dinner, forcing myself to be social, when someone mentioned his name. My stomach dropped. Apparently, he'd been seeing someone. Not seriously. Just 'casually hanging out'. But it was enough to confirm that while I was sitting at home performing my healing journey like a one-woman stage show, he was out there moving on. I left early. I told everyone I had a headache, but really, I just needed to cry in private. That night I finally asked myself the question I'd been avoiding: What if he never comes back? What if I did all of this—the silence, the self-improvement, the pretending—and it didn't matter? So I did what I always do when I'm lost. I researched. Not the Pinterest quotes or the 'trust the universe' blogs. I wanted to understand what actually happens in a man's brain after a breakup. Why wasn't my absence affecting him? That's how I found this app. I almost didn't click. I expected some kind of affirmations. But the quiz was different. It didn't ask me about soulmates or zodiac signs. It asked about power dynamics. About who ended conversations first. About what I said during our last argument and how he responded. The results were uncomfortably accurate. It explained something called the Comfort Trap. It said that by disappearing and waiting, I'd actually made it easier for him to move on. I wasn't creating mystery. I was creating relief. His brain had categorized me as 'handled'—a chapter closed, not a loss to grieve. It hurt to read. But it also made sense in a way nothing else had. The app didn't tell me to text him or beg. It didn't tell me to post thirst traps or make him jealous. It gave me a step-by-step plan to shift the psychological weight. Week one, I sent a message the app scripted for me. It wasn't emotional. It wasn't needy. It was calm and surprising, and it ended on my terms. I didn't ask for anything. For the first time in two months, I wasn't chasing. By week three, he was reaching out first. Small things. A song that reminded him of me. A joke I would've appreciated. I wanted to dive in, to pour my heart out, to tell him I missed him. But the app told me exactly how to respond—and more importantly, when to pull back. The night he called, I almost didn't pick up. It was late. But his voice sounded different. Uncertain. He said, 'I've been thinking about us a lot lately. ' Not 'I miss you.' Not 'I made a mistake. Just that. And for the first time, I didn't rush to fill the silence. We met for drinks two weeks later. He looked at me like he was seeing me for the first time. He said, 'You seem different.' I was. Because I stopped abandoning myself to keep him comfortable. If you're reading this and you're stuck in the waiting. Hoping he'll wake up and realize what he lost. Please hear me. He won't. Not while you're still energetically bounded to him. Not while he knows you're there, hoping. You have to shift the psychology. Not with games. Not with manipulation. With clarity. This app gave me a roadmap when I had none. It showed me what I was doing wrong and how to fix it. Not in theory. In practice. Message by message. Day by day. Take the quiz. Let the app analyze what's happening and give you the path back to being his priority. The link is below. Those 3 minutes might be the moment you stop being the one he forgets and start being the one he can't afford to lose. Please, just give it a try...
If you've been craving a joyful creative practice that's fun and feels like play... this is your moment. Not just saving inspiration to a Pinterest board and calling it a day. But actually watching something take shape in your sketchbook, step by step, until it becomes something real. Something you can hold and say, I did that. I made that! ✨That’s the magic of Pattern Week.✨ Next week. from May 18–22, you'll get to experience the same playful pattern making that Pattern Play members look forward to every single month. Here’s what we’ll do together: 🌿 Gather inspiration and build a color story that feels like you 🌿 Fill your sketchbook with loose, imperfect, surprisingly beautiful marks 🌿 Turn those marks into a seamless repeat pattern in Illustrator 🌿 Bring your design to life on real product like: fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap 🌿 End the week holding proof that you didn’t just imagine it… you made it There’s something kindddd of magical about that moment. When an idea that lives quietly in your head suddenly exists in the world… in color, in pattern, in form. And the best part is, this isn’t reserved for “real artists” or people who already know what they’re doing. It’s designed to guide you there, gently and clearly, one step at a time. It’s just $10 to join, so you can step into the experience, follow your curiosity, and see what’s possible for you without overthinking it. Five days. One finished pattern. A completely different way of seeing yourself creatively. That sketchbook has been waiting long enough, are you in? 🤔 Let’s begin!
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I spent 4.5 hours searching for an SVG file last Tuesday. Tonight I made 7 projects in 3 hours. My name is Emma. I’m 41, marketing coordinator, mom of three. Not a professional crafter. Just someone who loves making things. Or at least, I used to love it. Six months ago, my sister asked me to make a custom mug for her best friend's birthday. Simple request. Dog's name, some paw prints, maybe a cute saying. “No problem,” I told her. “Give me a week.” That Tuesday night, after the kids went to bed, I sat down to find the perfect design. Opened my laptop at 8:47 PM. “This should take 20 minutes,” I thought. I searched Etsy. Found one. Cute but not quite right. Searched Creative Fabrica. Found another. Close, but the font was wrong. Checked Pinterest for inspiration. Clicked through to three different sites. Each design was almost perfect. But not quite. Too cartoony. Too serious. Too generic. Too busy. By 10 PM, I had 19 browser tabs open. By 11 PM, I’d downloaded three “free samples” that looked terrible once I opened them. By midnight, I’d bought two designs for $8.99 each. Neither was exactly what I wanted. I finally closed my laptop at 1:14 AM. Empty-handed. Exhausted. Frustrated. My husband walked by. “Still working on that?” That TONE. Like I was being ridiculous. Like I was wasting time on something stupid. I wanted to explain that I wasn’t being picky. That I was just trying to find the RIGHT design. That it shouldn’t be this hard. But I couldn’t explain it. Because he was right. Four and a half hours. For a mug design. The next day, I told my sister I was too busy. She bought a mug from Target instead. That’s when I started keeping track. I created a note in my phone. Just timestamps. “Started looking: 9:15 PM” “Gave up: 11:42 PM” Time wasted: 2 hours 27 minutes. “Started looking: 2:30 PM Saturday” “Finally settled: 6:18 PM” Time wasted: 3 hours 48 minutes. “Started looking: 8:00 PM” “Still looking: 12:35 AM” Time wasted: 4 hours 35 minutes. In three weeks, I’d spent 23 hours searching for designs. TWENTY-THREE HOURS. That’s almost a full work day. Three nights of sleep. An entire weekend. And you know what I made during those 23 hours? Nothing. Because I spent all my “craft time” looking. Not creating. My daughter asked me to help with a poster for her Heritage Day project. I said no. Not because I couldn’t help. Because I couldn’t face another 4-hour search session. My neighbor mentioned she wanted custom party decorations. I changed the subject. A coworker asked if I still do “that Cricut stuff.” “Not really anymore,” I lied. I’d stopped calling it a hobby. It had become a source of stress. 80% searching. 20% making. And the 20% was never even that good, because by the time I found a design, I was too exhausted to care about the actual crafting. Three weeks ago, I couldn’t sleep. Lying in bed at 2:30 AM, scrolling Instagram. I saw a post from someone in a craft group. She’d made 12 different projects that week. Twelve. THAT WEEK. I’d made one project in the last month. Someone commented: “How do you find time for all this??” Her response: “I stopped wasting time searching. Invested in a massive design bundle a year ago. Now I just make stuff.” I clicked her profile. She wasn’t some Instagram influencer. She was a middle school teacher with two kids. Just like me. Except she was actually CREATING. I DMed her at 2:47 AM. “Can I ask what bundle you use? I spend hours searching and I’m losing my mind.” She responded the next morning. “Cutify Studio. 150,000 designs. I know that sounds insane but I haven’t searched for an SVG in over a year. When I need something, I search MY library. Takes 2 minutes max.” Two minutes. I’d spent 4.5 hours last Tuesday. That afternoon, I bought it. $39 during their sale. I almost didn’t. “What if I still can’t find what I need?” “What if it’s overwhelming?” “What if it’s a waste?” But I thought about those 23 hours. About my sister’s mug I never made. About my daughter’s poster I said no to. I downloaded it that night. Opened the folder. Typed “dog paw” in the search. Sixty-three results appeared instantly. Different styles. Different vibes. Cute, elegant, funny, minimal. I picked one. Downloaded it. Opened Design Space. Total time: 90 seconds. I sat there staring at my screen. Ninety seconds. What used to take me 4.5 hours took 90 seconds. That weekend, I made my sister’s mug. Found the design in 45 seconds. Made the actual mug in 20 minutes. Then I made a birthday card for my nephew. Found a dinosaur design in 30 seconds. Then wine glass markers for a friend. Found the perfect sayings in under a minute. By Sunday night, I’d made 7 projects. Seven. In one weekend. Do you know how many projects I made the ENTIRE previous month? One. Because I’d spent all my time searching instead of creating. Monday morning, my daughter asked again about her Heritage Day poster. “Can you help me make it really special?” “Yes,” I said immediately. We made it together that night. Italian flag elements. Shamrocks. Family photos. Custom text. Found every design I needed in under 5 minutes total. Spent 90 minutes actually CREATING with her. She brought it to school. Texted me at lunch: “Everyone is asking if you do this for other people!!” That weekend, three moms from her school reached out. One wanted birthday party decorations. $85. One wanted teacher appreciation gifts. $120. One wanted custom tumblers for her book club. $140. I said yes to all three. Because I wasn’t afraid anymore. I wasn’t afraid of losing entire evenings to searching. I wasn’t afraid of frustration and wasted time. I knew I could find what I needed in minutes, not hours. Last month, I made $380 from craft projects. This month I’m at $520. But honestly? The money isn’t even the best part. The best part is my husband walking by and seeing me MAKING something. Not scrolling. Not searching. Not frustrated. Actually creating. The best part is saying YES when my daughter asks for help. The best part is going to bed at 10:30 instead of 1 AM because I’m not trapped in a search spiral. The best part is loving this again. Last night, I made four custom frames for a client. Start to finish: 2 hours. Six months ago, I would have spent 2 hours just LOOKING for the designs. And I would have been too exhausted to actually make anything. I’m not sharing this because I work for some SVG company. I’m sharing this because if you’re reading this at midnight with 20 browser tabs open… If you’ve ever said no to someone because you couldn’t face another search session… If you’ve spent more time looking than making… It’s not you. You’re not being too picky. You’re not being indecisive. You’re not bad at this. You’re just searching in the wrong place. You need what that Instagram teacher had. What I have now. A library so complete that you never leave it. Because the real joy of crafting isn’t in finding the perfect design. It’s in having an idea and bringing it to life immediately. The bundle that changed everything for me is called Cutify Studio. Same sale I bought it during is happening now. I can’t tell you what to do. But I can tell you that I wish someone had told me about this six months ago. I would have saved 23 hours in just three weeks. That’s 23 hours I could have spent actually creating. Or with my kids. Or sleeping. Instead of searching. Check your phone. Look at your timestamps. Add up your hours. Then ask yourself: What would you do with that time back? Because you can get it back. Starting tonight. 👉 https://cutifystudio.com/premiumsvgs-eu-eng | I spent 4.5 hours searching for an SVG file last Tuesday. Tonight I made 7 projects in 3 hours. My name is Emma. I’m 41, marketing coordinator, mom of three. Not a professional crafter. Just someone who loves making things. Or at least, I used to love it. Six months ago, my sister asked me to make a custom mug for her best friend's birthday. Simple request. Dog's name, some paw prints, maybe a cute saying. “No problem,” I told her. “Give me a week.” That Tuesday night, after the kids went to bed, I sat down to find the perfect design. Opened my laptop at 8:47 PM. “This should take 20 minutes,” I thought. I searched Etsy. Found one. Cute but not quite right. Searched Creative Fabrica. Found another. Close, but the font was wrong. Checked Pinterest for inspiration. Clicked through to three different sites. Each design was almost perfect. But not quite. Too cartoony. Too serious. Too generic. Too busy. By 10 PM, I had 19 browser tabs open. By 11 PM, I’d downloaded three “free samples” that looked terrible once I opened them. By midnight, I’d bought two designs for $8.99 each. Neither was exactly what I wanted. I finally closed my laptop at 1:14 AM. Empty-handed. Exhausted. Frustrated. My husband walked by. “Still working on that?” That TONE. Like I was being ridiculous. Like I was wasting time on something stupid. I wanted to explain that I wasn’t being picky. That I was just trying to find the RIGHT design. That it shouldn’t be this hard. But I couldn’t explain it. Because he was right. Four and a half hours. For a mug design. The next day, I told my sister I was too busy. She bought a mug from Target instead. That’s when I started keeping track. I created a note in my phone. Just timestamps. “Started looking: 9:15 PM” “Gave up: 11:42 PM” Time wasted: 2 hours 27 minutes. “Started looking: 2:30 PM Saturday” “Finally settled: 6:18 PM” Time wasted: 3 hours 48 minutes. “Started looking: 8:00 PM” “Still looking: 12:35 AM” Time wasted: 4 hours 35 minutes. In three weeks, I’d spent 23 hours searching for designs. TWENTY-THREE HOURS. That’s almost a full work day. Three nights of sleep. An entire weekend. And you know what I made during those 23 hours? Nothing. Because I spent all my “craft time” looking. Not creating. My daughter asked me to help with a poster for her Heritage Day project. I said no. Not because I couldn’t help. Because I couldn’t face another 4-hour search session. My neighbor mentioned she wanted custom party decorations. I changed the subject. A coworker asked if I still do “that Cricut stuff.” “Not really anymore,” I lied. I’d stopped calling it a hobby. It had become a source of stress. 80% searching. 20% making. And the 20% was never even that good, because by the time I found a design, I was too exhausted to care about the actual crafting. Three weeks ago, I couldn’t sleep. Lying in bed at 2:30 AM, scrolling Instagram. I saw a post from someone in a craft group. She’d made 12 different projects that week. Twelve. THAT WEEK. I’d made one project in the last month. Someone commented: “How do you find time for all this??” Her response: “I stopped wasting time searching. Invested in a massive design bundle a year ago. Now I just make stuff.” I clicked her profile. She wasn’t some Instagram influencer. She was a middle school teacher with two kids. Just like me. Except she was actually CREATING. I DMed her at 2:47 AM. “Can I ask what bundle you use? I spend hours searching and I’m losing my mind.” She responded the next morning. “Cutify Studio. 150,000 designs. I know that sounds insane but I haven’t searched for an SVG in over a year. When I need something, I search MY library. Takes 2 minutes max.” Two minutes. I’d spent 4.5 hours last Tuesday. That afternoon, I bought it. $39 during their sale. I almost didn’t. “What if I still can’t find what I need?” “What if it’s overwhelming?” “What if it’s a waste?” But I thought about those 23 hours. About my sister’s mug I never made. About my daughter’s poster I said no to. I downloaded it that night. Opened the folder. Typed “dog paw” in the search. Sixty-three results appeared instantly. Different styles. Different vibes. Cute, elegant, funny, minimal. I picked one. Downloaded it. Opened Design Space. Total time: 90 seconds. I sat there staring at my screen. Ninety seconds. What used to take me 4.5 hours took 90 seconds. That weekend, I made my sister’s mug. Found the design in 45 seconds. Made the actual mug in 20 minutes. Then I made a birthday card for my nephew. Found a dinosaur design in 30 seconds. Then wine glass markers for a friend. Found the perfect sayings in under a minute. By Sunday night, I’d made 7 projects. Seven. In one weekend. Do you know how many projects I made the ENTIRE previous month? One. Because I’d spent all my time searching instead of creating. Monday morning, my daughter asked again about her Heritage Day poster. “Can you help me make it really special?” “Yes,” I said immediately. We made it together that night. Italian flag elements. Shamrocks. Family photos. Custom text. Found every design I needed in under 5 minutes total. Spent 90 minutes actually CREATING with her. She brought it to school. Texted me at lunch: “Everyone is asking if you do this for other people!!” That weekend, three moms from her school reached out. One wanted birthday party decorations. $85. One wanted teacher appreciation gifts. $120. One wanted custom tumblers for her book club. $140. I said yes to all three. Because I wasn’t afraid anymore. I wasn’t afraid of losing entire evenings to searching. I wasn’t afraid of frustration and wasted time. I knew I could find what I needed in minutes, not hours. Last month, I made $380 from craft projects. This month I’m at $520. But honestly? The money isn’t even the best part. The best part is my husband walking by and seeing me MAKING something. Not scrolling. Not searching. Not frustrated. Actually creating. The best part is saying YES when my daughter asks for help. The best part is going to bed at 10:30 instead of 1 AM because I’m not trapped in a search spiral. The best part is loving this again. Last night, I made four custom frames for a client. Start to finish: 2 hours. Six months ago, I would have spent 2 hours just LOOKING for the designs. And I would have been too exhausted to actually make anything. I’m not sharing this because I work for some SVG company. I’m sharing this because if you’re reading this at midnight with 20 browser tabs open… If you’ve ever said no to someone because you couldn’t face another search session… If you’ve spent more time looking than making… It’s not you. You’re not being too picky. You’re not being indecisive. You’re not bad at this. You’re just searching in the wrong place. You need what that Instagram teacher had. What I have now. A library so complete that you never leave it. Because the real joy of crafting isn’t in finding the perfect design. It’s in having an idea and bringing it to life immediately. The bundle that changed everything for me is called Cutify Studio. Same sale I bought it during is happening now. I can’t tell you what to do. But I can tell you that I wish someone had told me about this six months ago. I would have saved 23 hours in just three weeks. That’s 23 hours I could have spent actually creating. Or with my kids. Or sleeping. Instead of searching. Check your phone. Look at your timestamps. Add up your hours. Then ask yourself: What would you do with that time back? Because you can get it back. Starting tonight. 👉 https://cutifystudio.com/premiumsvgs-eu-eng | I spent 4.5 hours searching for an SVG file last Tuesday. Tonight I made 7 projects in 3 hours. My name is Emma. I’m 41, marketing coordinator, mom of three. Not a professional crafter. Just someone who loves making things. Or at least, I used to love it. Six months ago, my sister asked me to make a custom mug for her best friend's birthday. Simple request. Dog's name, some paw prints, maybe a cute saying. “No problem,” I told her. “Give me a week.” That Tuesday night, after the kids went to bed, I sat down to find the perfect design. Opened my laptop at 8:47 PM. “This should take 20 minutes,” I thought. I searched Etsy. Found one. Cute but not quite right. Searched Creative Fabrica. Found another. Close, but the font was wrong. Checked Pinterest for inspiration. Clicked through to three different sites. Each design was almost perfect. But not quite. Too cartoony. Too serious. Too generic. Too busy. By 10 PM, I had 19 browser tabs open. By 11 PM, I’d downloaded three “free samples” that looked terrible once I opened them. By midnight, I’d bought two designs for $8.99 each. Neither was exactly what I wanted. I finally closed my laptop at 1:14 AM. Empty-handed. Exhausted. Frustrated. My husband walked by. “Still working on that?” That TONE. Like I was being ridiculous. Like I was wasting time on something stupid. I wanted to explain that I wasn’t being picky. That I was just trying to find the RIGHT design. That it shouldn’t be this hard. But I couldn’t explain it. Because he was right. Four and a half hours. For a mug design. The next day, I told my sister I was too busy. She bought a mug from Target instead. That’s when I started keeping track. I created a note in my phone. Just timestamps. “Started looking: 9:15 PM” “Gave up: 11:42 PM” Time wasted: 2 hours 27 minutes. “Started looking: 2:30 PM Saturday” “Finally settled: 6:18 PM” Time wasted: 3 hours 48 minutes. “Started looking: 8:00 PM” “Still looking: 12:35 AM” Time wasted: 4 hours 35 minutes. In three weeks, I’d spent 23 hours searching for designs. TWENTY-THREE HOURS. That’s almost a full work day. Three nights of sleep. An entire weekend. And you know what I made during those 23 hours? Nothing. Because I spent all my “craft time” looking. Not creating. My daughter asked me to help with a poster for her Heritage Day project. I said no. Not because I couldn’t help. Because I couldn’t face another 4-hour search session. My neighbor mentioned she wanted custom party decorations. I changed the subject. A coworker asked if I still do “that Cricut stuff.” “Not really anymore,” I lied. I’d stopped calling it a hobby. It had become a source of stress. 80% searching. 20% making. And the 20% was never even that good, because by the time I found a design, I was too exhausted to care about the actual crafting. Three weeks ago, I couldn’t sleep. Lying in bed at 2:30 AM, scrolling Instagram. I saw a post from someone in a craft group. She’d made 12 different projects that week. Twelve. THAT WEEK. I’d made one project in the last month. Someone commented: “How do you find time for all this??” Her response: “I stopped wasting time searching. Invested in a massive design bundle a year ago. Now I just make stuff.” I clicked her profile. She wasn’t some Instagram influencer. She was a middle school teacher with two kids. Just like me. Except she was actually CREATING. I DMed her at 2:47 AM. “Can I ask what bundle you use? I spend hours searching and I’m losing my mind.” She responded the next morning. “Cutify Studio. 150,000 designs. I know that sounds insane but I haven’t searched for an SVG in over a year. When I need something, I search MY library. Takes 2 minutes max.” Two minutes. I’d spent 4.5 hours last Tuesday. That afternoon, I bought it. $39 during their sale. I almost didn’t. “What if I still can’t find what I need?” “What if it’s overwhelming?” “What if it’s a waste?” But I thought about those 23 hours. About my sister’s mug I never made. About my daughter’s poster I said no to. I downloaded it that night. Opened the folder. Typed “dog paw” in the search. Sixty-three results appeared instantly. Different styles. Different vibes. Cute, elegant, funny, minimal. I picked one. Downloaded it. Opened Design Space. Total time: 90 seconds. I sat there staring at my screen. Ninety seconds. What used to take me 4.5 hours took 90 seconds. That weekend, I made my sister’s mug. Found the design in 45 seconds. Made the actual mug in 20 minutes. Then I made a birthday card for my nephew. Found a dinosaur design in 30 seconds. Then wine glass markers for a friend. Found the perfect sayings in under a minute. By Sunday night, I’d made 7 projects. Seven. In one weekend. Do you know how many projects I made the ENTIRE previous month? One. Because I’d spent all my time searching instead of creating. Monday morning, my daughter asked again about her Heritage Day poster. “Can you help me make it really special?” “Yes,” I said immediately. We made it together that night. Italian flag elements. Shamrocks. Family photos. Custom text. Found every design I needed in under 5 minutes total. Spent 90 minutes actually CREATING with her. She brought it to school. Texted me at lunch: “Everyone is asking if you do this for other people!!” That weekend, three moms from her school reached out. One wanted birthday party decorations. $85. One wanted teacher appreciation gifts. $120. One wanted custom tumblers for her book club. $140. I said yes to all three. Because I wasn’t afraid anymore. I wasn’t afraid of losing entire evenings to searching. I wasn’t afraid of frustration and wasted time. I knew I could find what I needed in minutes, not hours. Last month, I made $380 from craft projects. This month I’m at $520. But honestly? The money isn’t even the best part. The best part is my husband walking by and seeing me MAKING something. Not scrolling. Not searching. Not frustrated. Actually creating. The best part is saying YES when my daughter asks for help. The best part is going to bed at 10:30 instead of 1 AM because I’m not trapped in a search spiral. The best part is loving this again. Last night, I made four custom frames for a client. Start to finish: 2 hours. Six months ago, I would have spent 2 hours just LOOKING for the designs. And I would have been too exhausted to actually make anything. I’m not sharing this because I work for some SVG company. I’m sharing this because if you’re reading this at midnight with 20 browser tabs open… If you’ve ever said no to someone because you couldn’t face another search session… If you’ve spent more time looking than making… It’s not you. You’re not being too picky. You’re not being indecisive. You’re not bad at this. You’re just searching in the wrong place. You need what that Instagram teacher had. What I have now. A library so complete that you never leave it. Because the real joy of crafting isn’t in finding the perfect design. It’s in having an idea and bringing it to life immediately. The bundle that changed everything for me is called Cutify Studio. Same sale I bought it during is happening now. I can’t tell you what to do. But I can tell you that I wish someone had told me about this six months ago. I would have saved 23 hours in just three weeks. That’s 23 hours I could have spent actually creating. Or with my kids. Or sleeping. Instead of searching. Check your phone. Look at your timestamps. Add up your hours. Then ask yourself: What would you do with that time back? Because you can get it back. Starting tonight. 👉 https://cutifystudio.com/premiumsvgs-eu-eng
I spent 4.5 hours searching for an SVG file last Tuesday. Tonight I made 7 projects in 3 hours. My name is Emma. I’m 41, marketing coordinator, mom of three. Not a professional crafter. Just someone who loves making things. Or at least, I used to love it. Six months ago, my sister asked me to make a custom mug for her best friend's birthday. Simple request. Dog's name, some paw prints, maybe a cute saying. “No problem,” I told her. “Give me a week.” That Tuesday night, after the kids went to bed, I sat down to find the perfect design. Opened my laptop at 8:47 PM. “This should take 20 minutes,” I thought. I searched Etsy. Found one. Cute but not quite right. Searched Creative Fabrica. Found another. Close, but the font was wrong. Checked Pinterest for inspiration. Clicked through to three different sites. Each design was almost perfect. But not quite. Too cartoony. Too serious. Too generic. Too busy. By 10 PM, I had 19 browser tabs open. By 11 PM, I’d downloaded three “free samples” that looked terrible once I opened them. By midnight, I’d bought two designs for $8.99 each. Neither was exactly what I wanted. I finally closed my laptop at 1:14 AM. Empty-handed. Exhausted. Frustrated. My husband walked by. “Still working on that?” That TONE. Like I was being ridiculous. Like I was wasting time on something stupid. I wanted to explain that I wasn’t being picky. That I was just trying to find the RIGHT design. That it shouldn’t be this hard. But I couldn’t explain it. Because he was right. Four and a half hours. For a mug design. The next day, I told my sister I was too busy. She bought a mug from Target instead. That’s when I started keeping track. I created a note in my phone. Just timestamps. “Started looking: 9:15 PM” “Gave up: 11:42 PM” Time wasted: 2 hours 27 minutes. “Started looking: 2:30 PM Saturday” “Finally settled: 6:18 PM” Time wasted: 3 hours 48 minutes. “Started looking: 8:00 PM” “Still looking: 12:35 AM” Time wasted: 4 hours 35 minutes. In three weeks, I’d spent 23 hours searching for designs. TWENTY-THREE HOURS. That’s almost a full work day. Three nights of sleep. An entire weekend. And you know what I made during those 23 hours? Nothing. Because I spent all my “craft time” looking. Not creating. My daughter asked me to help with a poster for her Heritage Day project. I said no. Not because I couldn’t help. Because I couldn’t face another 4-hour search session. My neighbor mentioned she wanted custom party decorations. I changed the subject. A coworker asked if I still do “that Cricut stuff.” “Not really anymore,” I lied. I’d stopped calling it a hobby. It had become a source of stress. 80% searching. 20% making. And the 20% was never even that good, because by the time I found a design, I was too exhausted to care about the actual crafting. Three weeks ago, I couldn’t sleep. Lying in bed at 2:30 AM, scrolling Instagram. I saw a post from someone in a craft group. She’d made 12 different projects that week. Twelve. THAT WEEK. I’d made one project in the last month. Someone commented: “How do you find time for all this??” Her response: “I stopped wasting time searching. Invested in a massive design bundle a year ago. Now I just make stuff.” I clicked her profile. She wasn’t some Instagram influencer. She was a middle school teacher with two kids. Just like me. Except she was actually CREATING. I DMed her at 2:47 AM. “Can I ask what bundle you use? I spend hours searching and I’m losing my mind.” She responded the next morning. “Cutify Studio. 150,000 designs. I know that sounds insane but I haven’t searched for an SVG in over a year. When I need something, I search MY library. Takes 2 minutes max.” Two minutes. I’d spent 4.5 hours last Tuesday. That afternoon, I bought it. $39 during their sale. I almost didn’t. “What if I still can’t find what I need?” “What if it’s overwhelming?” “What if it’s a waste?” But I thought about those 23 hours. About my sister’s mug I never made. About my daughter’s poster I said no to. I downloaded it that night. Opened the folder. Typed “dog paw” in the search. Sixty-three results appeared instantly. Different styles. Different vibes. Cute, elegant, funny, minimal. I picked one. Downloaded it. Opened Design Space. Total time: 90 seconds. I sat there staring at my screen. Ninety seconds. What used to take me 4.5 hours took 90 seconds. That weekend, I made my sister’s mug. Found the design in 45 seconds. Made the actual mug in 20 minutes. Then I made a birthday card for my nephew. Found a dinosaur design in 30 seconds. Then wine glass markers for a friend. Found the perfect sayings in under a minute. By Sunday night, I’d made 7 projects. Seven. In one weekend. Do you know how many projects I made the ENTIRE previous month? One. Because I’d spent all my time searching instead of creating. Monday morning, my daughter asked again about her Heritage Day poster. “Can you help me make it really special?” “Yes,” I said immediately. We made it together that night. Italian flag elements. Shamrocks. Family photos. Custom text. Found every design I needed in under 5 minutes total. Spent 90 minutes actually CREATING with her. She brought it to school. Texted me at lunch: “Everyone is asking if you do this for other people!!” That weekend, three moms from her school reached out. One wanted birthday party decorations. $85. One wanted teacher appreciation gifts. $120. One wanted custom tumblers for her book club. $140. I said yes to all three. Because I wasn’t afraid anymore. I wasn’t afraid of losing entire evenings to searching. I wasn’t afraid of frustration and wasted time. I knew I could find what I needed in minutes, not hours. Last month, I made $380 from craft projects. This month I’m at $520. But honestly? The money isn’t even the best part. The best part is my husband walking by and seeing me MAKING something. Not scrolling. Not searching. Not frustrated. Actually creating. The best part is saying YES when my daughter asks for help. The best part is going to bed at 10:30 instead of 1 AM because I’m not trapped in a search spiral. The best part is loving this again. Last night, I made four custom frames for a client. Start to finish: 2 hours. Six months ago, I would have spent 2 hours just LOOKING for the designs. And I would have been too exhausted to actually make anything. I’m not sharing this because I work for some SVG company. I’m sharing this because if you’re reading this at midnight with 20 browser tabs open… If you’ve ever said no to someone because you couldn’t face another search session… If you’ve spent more time looking than making… It’s not you. You’re not being too picky. You’re not being indecisive. You’re not bad at this. You’re just searching in the wrong place. You need what that Instagram teacher had. What I have now. A library so complete that you never leave it. Because the real joy of crafting isn’t in finding the perfect design. It’s in having an idea and bringing it to life immediately. The bundle that changed everything for me is called Cutify Studio. Same sale I bought it during is happening now. I can’t tell you what to do. But I can tell you that I wish someone had told me about this six months ago. I would have saved 23 hours in just three weeks. That’s 23 hours I could have spent actually creating. Or with my kids. Or sleeping. Instead of searching. Check your phone. Look at your timestamps. Add up your hours. Then ask yourself: What would you do with that time back? Because you can get it back. Starting tonight. 👉 https://cutifystudio.com/premiumsvgs-eu-eng | I spent 4.5 hours searching for an SVG file last Tuesday. Tonight I made 7 projects in 3 hours. My name is Emma. I’m 41, marketing coordinator, mom of three. Not a professional crafter. Just someone who loves making things. Or at least, I used to love it. Six months ago, my sister asked me to make a custom mug for her best friend's birthday. Simple request. Dog's name, some paw prints, maybe a cute saying. “No problem,” I told her. “Give me a week.” That Tuesday night, after the kids went to bed, I sat down to find the perfect design. Opened my laptop at 8:47 PM. “This should take 20 minutes,” I thought. I searched Etsy. Found one. Cute but not quite right. Searched Creative Fabrica. Found another. Close, but the font was wrong. Checked Pinterest for inspiration. Clicked through to three different sites. Each design was almost perfect. But not quite. Too cartoony. Too serious. Too generic. Too busy. By 10 PM, I had 19 browser tabs open. By 11 PM, I’d downloaded three “free samples” that looked terrible once I opened them. By midnight, I’d bought two designs for $8.99 each. Neither was exactly what I wanted. I finally closed my laptop at 1:14 AM. Empty-handed. Exhausted. Frustrated. My husband walked by. “Still working on that?” That TONE. Like I was being ridiculous. Like I was wasting time on something stupid. I wanted to explain that I wasn’t being picky. That I was just trying to find the RIGHT design. That it shouldn’t be this hard. But I couldn’t explain it. Because he was right. Four and a half hours. For a mug design. The next day, I told my sister I was too busy. She bought a mug from Target instead. That’s when I started keeping track. I created a note in my phone. Just timestamps. “Started looking: 9:15 PM” “Gave up: 11:42 PM” Time wasted: 2 hours 27 minutes. “Started looking: 2:30 PM Saturday” “Finally settled: 6:18 PM” Time wasted: 3 hours 48 minutes. “Started looking: 8:00 PM” “Still looking: 12:35 AM” Time wasted: 4 hours 35 minutes. In three weeks, I’d spent 23 hours searching for designs. TWENTY-THREE HOURS. That’s almost a full work day. Three nights of sleep. An entire weekend. And you know what I made during those 23 hours? Nothing. Because I spent all my “craft time” looking. Not creating. My daughter asked me to help with a poster for her Heritage Day project. I said no. Not because I couldn’t help. Because I couldn’t face another 4-hour search session. My neighbor mentioned she wanted custom party decorations. I changed the subject. A coworker asked if I still do “that Cricut stuff.” “Not really anymore,” I lied. I’d stopped calling it a hobby. It had become a source of stress. 80% searching. 20% making. And the 20% was never even that good, because by the time I found a design, I was too exhausted to care about the actual crafting. Three weeks ago, I couldn’t sleep. Lying in bed at 2:30 AM, scrolling Instagram. I saw a post from someone in a craft group. She’d made 12 different projects that week. Twelve. THAT WEEK. I’d made one project in the last month. Someone commented: “How do you find time for all this??” Her response: “I stopped wasting time searching. Invested in a massive design bundle a year ago. Now I just make stuff.” I clicked her profile. She wasn’t some Instagram influencer. She was a middle school teacher with two kids. Just like me. Except she was actually CREATING. I DMed her at 2:47 AM. “Can I ask what bundle you use? I spend hours searching and I’m losing my mind.” She responded the next morning. “Cutify Studio. 150,000 designs. I know that sounds insane but I haven’t searched for an SVG in over a year. When I need something, I search MY library. Takes 2 minutes max.” Two minutes. I’d spent 4.5 hours last Tuesday. That afternoon, I bought it. $39 during their sale. I almost didn’t. “What if I still can’t find what I need?” “What if it’s overwhelming?” “What if it’s a waste?” But I thought about those 23 hours. About my sister’s mug I never made. About my daughter’s poster I said no to. I downloaded it that night. Opened the folder. Typed “dog paw” in the search. Sixty-three results appeared instantly. Different styles. Different vibes. Cute, elegant, funny, minimal. I picked one. Downloaded it. Opened Design Space. Total time: 90 seconds. I sat there staring at my screen. Ninety seconds. What used to take me 4.5 hours took 90 seconds. That weekend, I made my sister’s mug. Found the design in 45 seconds. Made the actual mug in 20 minutes. Then I made a birthday card for my nephew. Found a dinosaur design in 30 seconds. Then wine glass markers for a friend. Found the perfect sayings in under a minute. By Sunday night, I’d made 7 projects. Seven. In one weekend. Do you know how many projects I made the ENTIRE previous month? One. Because I’d spent all my time searching instead of creating. Monday morning, my daughter asked again about her Heritage Day poster. “Can you help me make it really special?” “Yes,” I said immediately. We made it together that night. Italian flag elements. Shamrocks. Family photos. Custom text. Found every design I needed in under 5 minutes total. Spent 90 minutes actually CREATING with her. She brought it to school. Texted me at lunch: “Everyone is asking if you do this for other people!!” That weekend, three moms from her school reached out. One wanted birthday party decorations. $85. One wanted teacher appreciation gifts. $120. One wanted custom tumblers for her book club. $140. I said yes to all three. Because I wasn’t afraid anymore. I wasn’t afraid of losing entire evenings to searching. I wasn’t afraid of frustration and wasted time. I knew I could find what I needed in minutes, not hours. Last month, I made $380 from craft projects. This month I’m at $520. But honestly? The money isn’t even the best part. The best part is my husband walking by and seeing me MAKING something. Not scrolling. Not searching. Not frustrated. Actually creating. The best part is saying YES when my daughter asks for help. The best part is going to bed at 10:30 instead of 1 AM because I’m not trapped in a search spiral. The best part is loving this again. Last night, I made four custom frames for a client. Start to finish: 2 hours. Six months ago, I would have spent 2 hours just LOOKING for the designs. And I would have been too exhausted to actually make anything. I’m not sharing this because I work for some SVG company. I’m sharing this because if you’re reading this at midnight with 20 browser tabs open… If you’ve ever said no to someone because you couldn’t face another search session… If you’ve spent more time looking than making… It’s not you. You’re not being too picky. You’re not being indecisive. You’re not bad at this. You’re just searching in the wrong place. You need what that Instagram teacher had. What I have now. A library so complete that you never leave it. Because the real joy of crafting isn’t in finding the perfect design. It’s in having an idea and bringing it to life immediately. The bundle that changed everything for me is called Cutify Studio. Same sale I bought it during is happening now. I can’t tell you what to do. But I can tell you that I wish someone had told me about this six months ago. I would have saved 23 hours in just three weeks. That’s 23 hours I could have spent actually creating. Or with my kids. Or sleeping. Instead of searching. Check your phone. Look at your timestamps. Add up your hours. Then ask yourself: What would you do with that time back? Because you can get it back. Starting tonight. 👉 https://cutifystudio.com/premiumsvgs-eu-eng | I spent 4.5 hours searching for an SVG file last Tuesday. Tonight I made 7 projects in 3 hours. My name is Emma. I’m 41, marketing coordinator, mom of three. Not a professional crafter. Just someone who loves making things. Or at least, I used to love it. Six months ago, my sister asked me to make a custom mug for her best friend's birthday. Simple request. Dog's name, some paw prints, maybe a cute saying. “No problem,” I told her. “Give me a week.” That Tuesday night, after the kids went to bed, I sat down to find the perfect design. Opened my laptop at 8:47 PM. “This should take 20 minutes,” I thought. I searched Etsy. Found one. Cute but not quite right. Searched Creative Fabrica. Found another. Close, but the font was wrong. Checked Pinterest for inspiration. Clicked through to three different sites. Each design was almost perfect. But not quite. Too cartoony. Too serious. Too generic. Too busy. By 10 PM, I had 19 browser tabs open. By 11 PM, I’d downloaded three “free samples” that looked terrible once I opened them. By midnight, I’d bought two designs for $8.99 each. Neither was exactly what I wanted. I finally closed my laptop at 1:14 AM. Empty-handed. Exhausted. Frustrated. My husband walked by. “Still working on that?” That TONE. Like I was being ridiculous. Like I was wasting time on something stupid. I wanted to explain that I wasn’t being picky. That I was just trying to find the RIGHT design. That it shouldn’t be this hard. But I couldn’t explain it. Because he was right. Four and a half hours. For a mug design. The next day, I told my sister I was too busy. She bought a mug from Target instead. That’s when I started keeping track. I created a note in my phone. Just timestamps. “Started looking: 9:15 PM” “Gave up: 11:42 PM” Time wasted: 2 hours 27 minutes. “Started looking: 2:30 PM Saturday” “Finally settled: 6:18 PM” Time wasted: 3 hours 48 minutes. “Started looking: 8:00 PM” “Still looking: 12:35 AM” Time wasted: 4 hours 35 minutes. In three weeks, I’d spent 23 hours searching for designs. TWENTY-THREE HOURS. That’s almost a full work day. Three nights of sleep. An entire weekend. And you know what I made during those 23 hours? Nothing. Because I spent all my “craft time” looking. Not creating. My daughter asked me to help with a poster for her Heritage Day project. I said no. Not because I couldn’t help. Because I couldn’t face another 4-hour search session. My neighbor mentioned she wanted custom party decorations. I changed the subject. A coworker asked if I still do “that Cricut stuff.” “Not really anymore,” I lied. I’d stopped calling it a hobby. It had become a source of stress. 80% searching. 20% making. And the 20% was never even that good, because by the time I found a design, I was too exhausted to care about the actual crafting. Three weeks ago, I couldn’t sleep. Lying in bed at 2:30 AM, scrolling Instagram. I saw a post from someone in a craft group. She’d made 12 different projects that week. Twelve. THAT WEEK. I’d made one project in the last month. Someone commented: “How do you find time for all this??” Her response: “I stopped wasting time searching. Invested in a massive design bundle a year ago. Now I just make stuff.” I clicked her profile. She wasn’t some Instagram influencer. She was a middle school teacher with two kids. Just like me. Except she was actually CREATING. I DMed her at 2:47 AM. “Can I ask what bundle you use? I spend hours searching and I’m losing my mind.” She responded the next morning. “Cutify Studio. 150,000 designs. I know that sounds insane but I haven’t searched for an SVG in over a year. When I need something, I search MY library. Takes 2 minutes max.” Two minutes. I’d spent 4.5 hours last Tuesday. That afternoon, I bought it. $39 during their sale. I almost didn’t. “What if I still can’t find what I need?” “What if it’s overwhelming?” “What if it’s a waste?” But I thought about those 23 hours. About my sister’s mug I never made. About my daughter’s poster I said no to. I downloaded it that night. Opened the folder. Typed “dog paw” in the search. Sixty-three results appeared instantly. Different styles. Different vibes. Cute, elegant, funny, minimal. I picked one. Downloaded it. Opened Design Space. Total time: 90 seconds. I sat there staring at my screen. Ninety seconds. What used to take me 4.5 hours took 90 seconds. That weekend, I made my sister’s mug. Found the design in 45 seconds. Made the actual mug in 20 minutes. Then I made a birthday card for my nephew. Found a dinosaur design in 30 seconds. Then wine glass markers for a friend. Found the perfect sayings in under a minute. By Sunday night, I’d made 7 projects. Seven. In one weekend. Do you know how many projects I made the ENTIRE previous month? One. Because I’d spent all my time searching instead of creating. Monday morning, my daughter asked again about her Heritage Day poster. “Can you help me make it really special?” “Yes,” I said immediately. We made it together that night. Italian flag elements. Shamrocks. Family photos. Custom text. Found every design I needed in under 5 minutes total. Spent 90 minutes actually CREATING with her. She brought it to school. Texted me at lunch: “Everyone is asking if you do this for other people!!” That weekend, three moms from her school reached out. One wanted birthday party decorations. $85. One wanted teacher appreciation gifts. $120. One wanted custom tumblers for her book club. $140. I said yes to all three. Because I wasn’t afraid anymore. I wasn’t afraid of losing entire evenings to searching. I wasn’t afraid of frustration and wasted time. I knew I could find what I needed in minutes, not hours. Last month, I made $380 from craft projects. This month I’m at $520. But honestly? The money isn’t even the best part. The best part is my husband walking by and seeing me MAKING something. Not scrolling. Not searching. Not frustrated. Actually creating. The best part is saying YES when my daughter asks for help. The best part is going to bed at 10:30 instead of 1 AM because I’m not trapped in a search spiral. The best part is loving this again. Last night, I made four custom frames for a client. Start to finish: 2 hours. Six months ago, I would have spent 2 hours just LOOKING for the designs. And I would have been too exhausted to actually make anything. I’m not sharing this because I work for some SVG company. I’m sharing this because if you’re reading this at midnight with 20 browser tabs open… If you’ve ever said no to someone because you couldn’t face another search session… If you’ve spent more time looking than making… It’s not you. You’re not being too picky. You’re not being indecisive. You’re not bad at this. You’re just searching in the wrong place. You need what that Instagram teacher had. What I have now. A library so complete that you never leave it. Because the real joy of crafting isn’t in finding the perfect design. It’s in having an idea and bringing it to life immediately. The bundle that changed everything for me is called Cutify Studio. Same sale I bought it during is happening now. I can’t tell you what to do. But I can tell you that I wish someone had told me about this six months ago. I would have saved 23 hours in just three weeks. That’s 23 hours I could have spent actually creating. Or with my kids. Or sleeping. Instead of searching. Check your phone. Look at your timestamps. Add up your hours. Then ask yourself: What would you do with that time back? Because you can get it back. Starting tonight. 👉 https://cutifystudio.com/premiumsvgs-eu-eng
I spent 4.5 hours searching for an SVG file last Tuesday. Tonight I made 7 projects in 3 hours. My name is Emma. I’m 41, marketing coordinator, mom of three. Not a professional crafter. Just someone who loves making things. Or at least, I used to love it. Six months ago, my sister asked me to make a custom mug for her best friend's birthday. Simple request. Dog's name, some paw prints, maybe a cute saying. “No problem,” I told her. “Give me a week.” That Tuesday night, after the kids went to bed, I sat down to find the perfect design. Opened my laptop at 8:47 PM. “This should take 20 minutes,” I thought. I searched Etsy. Found one. Cute but not quite right. Searched Creative Fabrica. Found another. Close, but the font was wrong. Checked Pinterest for inspiration. Clicked through to three different sites. Each design was almost perfect. But not quite. Too cartoony. Too serious. Too generic. Too busy. By 10 PM, I had 19 browser tabs open. By 11 PM, I’d downloaded three “free samples” that looked terrible once I opened them. By midnight, I’d bought two designs for $8.99 each. Neither was exactly what I wanted. I finally closed my laptop at 1:14 AM. Empty-handed. Exhausted. Frustrated. My husband walked by. “Still working on that?” That TONE. Like I was being ridiculous. Like I was wasting time on something stupid. I wanted to explain that I wasn’t being picky. That I was just trying to find the RIGHT design. That it shouldn’t be this hard. But I couldn’t explain it. Because he was right. Four and a half hours. For a mug design. The next day, I told my sister I was too busy. She bought a mug from Target instead. That’s when I started keeping track. I created a note in my phone. Just timestamps. “Started looking: 9:15 PM” “Gave up: 11:42 PM” Time wasted: 2 hours 27 minutes. “Started looking: 2:30 PM Saturday” “Finally settled: 6:18 PM” Time wasted: 3 hours 48 minutes. “Started looking: 8:00 PM” “Still looking: 12:35 AM” Time wasted: 4 hours 35 minutes. In three weeks, I’d spent 23 hours searching for designs. TWENTY-THREE HOURS. That’s almost a full work day. Three nights of sleep. An entire weekend. And you know what I made during those 23 hours? Nothing. Because I spent all my “craft time” looking. Not creating. My daughter asked me to help with a poster for her Heritage Day project. I said no. Not because I couldn’t help. Because I couldn’t face another 4-hour search session. My neighbor mentioned she wanted custom party decorations. I changed the subject. A coworker asked if I still do “that Cricut stuff.” “Not really anymore,” I lied. I’d stopped calling it a hobby. It had become a source of stress. 80% searching. 20% making. And the 20% was never even that good, because by the time I found a design, I was too exhausted to care about the actual crafting. Three weeks ago, I couldn’t sleep. Lying in bed at 2:30 AM, scrolling Instagram. I saw a post from someone in a craft group. She’d made 12 different projects that week. Twelve. THAT WEEK. I’d made one project in the last month. Someone commented: “How do you find time for all this??” Her response: “I stopped wasting time searching. Invested in a massive design bundle a year ago. Now I just make stuff.” I clicked her profile. She wasn’t some Instagram influencer. She was a middle school teacher with two kids. Just like me. Except she was actually CREATING. I DMed her at 2:47 AM. “Can I ask what bundle you use? I spend hours searching and I’m losing my mind.” She responded the next morning. “Cutify Studio. 150,000 designs. I know that sounds insane but I haven’t searched for an SVG in over a year. When I need something, I search MY library. Takes 2 minutes max.” Two minutes. I’d spent 4.5 hours last Tuesday. That afternoon, I bought it. $39 during their sale. I almost didn’t. “What if I still can’t find what I need?” “What if it’s overwhelming?” “What if it’s a waste?” But I thought about those 23 hours. About my sister’s mug I never made. About my daughter’s poster I said no to. I downloaded it that night. Opened the folder. Typed “dog paw” in the search. Sixty-three results appeared instantly. Different styles. Different vibes. Cute, elegant, funny, minimal. I picked one. Downloaded it. Opened Design Space. Total time: 90 seconds. I sat there staring at my screen. Ninety seconds. What used to take me 4.5 hours took 90 seconds. That weekend, I made my sister’s mug. Found the design in 45 seconds. Made the actual mug in 20 minutes. Then I made a birthday card for my nephew. Found a dinosaur design in 30 seconds. Then wine glass markers for a friend. Found the perfect sayings in under a minute. By Sunday night, I’d made 7 projects. Seven. In one weekend. Do you know how many projects I made the ENTIRE previous month? One. Because I’d spent all my time searching instead of creating. Monday morning, my daughter asked again about her Heritage Day poster. “Can you help me make it really special?” “Yes,” I said immediately. We made it together that night. Italian flag elements. Shamrocks. Family photos. Custom text. Found every design I needed in under 5 minutes total. Spent 90 minutes actually CREATING with her. She brought it to school. Texted me at lunch: “Everyone is asking if you do this for other people!!” That weekend, three moms from her school reached out. One wanted birthday party decorations. $85. One wanted teacher appreciation gifts. $120. One wanted custom tumblers for her book club. $140. I said yes to all three. Because I wasn’t afraid anymore. I wasn’t afraid of losing entire evenings to searching. I wasn’t afraid of frustration and wasted time. I knew I could find what I needed in minutes, not hours. Last month, I made $380 from craft projects. This month I’m at $520. But honestly? The money isn’t even the best part. The best part is my husband walking by and seeing me MAKING something. Not scrolling. Not searching. Not frustrated. Actually creating. The best part is saying YES when my daughter asks for help. The best part is going to bed at 10:30 instead of 1 AM because I’m not trapped in a search spiral. The best part is loving this again. Last night, I made four custom frames for a client. Start to finish: 2 hours. Six months ago, I would have spent 2 hours just LOOKING for the designs. And I would have been too exhausted to actually make anything. I’m not sharing this because I work for some SVG company. I’m sharing this because if you’re reading this at midnight with 20 browser tabs open… If you’ve ever said no to someone because you couldn’t face another search session… If you’ve spent more time looking than making… It’s not you. You’re not being too picky. You’re not being indecisive. You’re not bad at this. You’re just searching in the wrong place. You need what that Instagram teacher had. What I have now. A library so complete that you never leave it. Because the real joy of crafting isn’t in finding the perfect design. It’s in having an idea and bringing it to life immediately. The bundle that changed everything for me is called Cutify Studio. Same sale I bought it during is happening now. I can’t tell you what to do. But I can tell you that I wish someone had told me about this six months ago. I would have saved 23 hours in just three weeks. That’s 23 hours I could have spent actually creating. Or with my kids. Or sleeping. Instead of searching. Check your phone. Look at your timestamps. Add up your hours. Then ask yourself: What would you do with that time back? Because you can get it back. Starting tonight. 👉 https://cutifystudio.com/premiumsvgs-eu-eng | I spent 4.5 hours searching for an SVG file last Tuesday. Tonight I made 7 projects in 3 hours. My name is Emma. I’m 41, marketing coordinator, mom of three. Not a professional crafter. Just someone who loves making things. Or at least, I used to love it. Six months ago, my sister asked me to make a custom mug for her best friend's birthday. Simple request. Dog's name, some paw prints, maybe a cute saying. “No problem,” I told her. “Give me a week.” That Tuesday night, after the kids went to bed, I sat down to find the perfect design. Opened my laptop at 8:47 PM. “This should take 20 minutes,” I thought. I searched Etsy. Found one. Cute but not quite right. Searched Creative Fabrica. Found another. Close, but the font was wrong. Checked Pinterest for inspiration. Clicked through to three different sites. Each design was almost perfect. But not quite. Too cartoony. Too serious. Too generic. Too busy. By 10 PM, I had 19 browser tabs open. By 11 PM, I’d downloaded three “free samples” that looked terrible once I opened them. By midnight, I’d bought two designs for $8.99 each. Neither was exactly what I wanted. I finally closed my laptop at 1:14 AM. Empty-handed. Exhausted. Frustrated. My husband walked by. “Still working on that?” That TONE. Like I was being ridiculous. Like I was wasting time on something stupid. I wanted to explain that I wasn’t being picky. That I was just trying to find the RIGHT design. That it shouldn’t be this hard. But I couldn’t explain it. Because he was right. Four and a half hours. For a mug design. The next day, I told my sister I was too busy. She bought a mug from Target instead. That’s when I started keeping track. I created a note in my phone. Just timestamps. “Started looking: 9:15 PM” “Gave up: 11:42 PM” Time wasted: 2 hours 27 minutes. “Started looking: 2:30 PM Saturday” “Finally settled: 6:18 PM” Time wasted: 3 hours 48 minutes. “Started looking: 8:00 PM” “Still looking: 12:35 AM” Time wasted: 4 hours 35 minutes. In three weeks, I’d spent 23 hours searching for designs. TWENTY-THREE HOURS. That’s almost a full work day. Three nights of sleep. An entire weekend. And you know what I made during those 23 hours? Nothing. Because I spent all my “craft time” looking. Not creating. My daughter asked me to help with a poster for her Heritage Day project. I said no. Not because I couldn’t help. Because I couldn’t face another 4-hour search session. My neighbor mentioned she wanted custom party decorations. I changed the subject. A coworker asked if I still do “that Cricut stuff.” “Not really anymore,” I lied. I’d stopped calling it a hobby. It had become a source of stress. 80% searching. 20% making. And the 20% was never even that good, because by the time I found a design, I was too exhausted to care about the actual crafting. Three weeks ago, I couldn’t sleep. Lying in bed at 2:30 AM, scrolling Instagram. I saw a post from someone in a craft group. She’d made 12 different projects that week. Twelve. THAT WEEK. I’d made one project in the last month. Someone commented: “How do you find time for all this??” Her response: “I stopped wasting time searching. Invested in a massive design bundle a year ago. Now I just make stuff.” I clicked her profile. She wasn’t some Instagram influencer. She was a middle school teacher with two kids. Just like me. Except she was actually CREATING. I DMed her at 2:47 AM. “Can I ask what bundle you use? I spend hours searching and I’m losing my mind.” She responded the next morning. “Cutify Studio. 150,000 designs. I know that sounds insane but I haven’t searched for an SVG in over a year. When I need something, I search MY library. Takes 2 minutes max.” Two minutes. I’d spent 4.5 hours last Tuesday. That afternoon, I bought it. $39 during their sale. I almost didn’t. “What if I still can’t find what I need?” “What if it’s overwhelming?” “What if it’s a waste?” But I thought about those 23 hours. About my sister’s mug I never made. About my daughter’s poster I said no to. I downloaded it that night. Opened the folder. Typed “dog paw” in the search. Sixty-three results appeared instantly. Different styles. Different vibes. Cute, elegant, funny, minimal. I picked one. Downloaded it. Opened Design Space. Total time: 90 seconds. I sat there staring at my screen. Ninety seconds. What used to take me 4.5 hours took 90 seconds. That weekend, I made my sister’s mug. Found the design in 45 seconds. Made the actual mug in 20 minutes. Then I made a birthday card for my nephew. Found a dinosaur design in 30 seconds. Then wine glass markers for a friend. Found the perfect sayings in under a minute. By Sunday night, I’d made 7 projects. Seven. In one weekend. Do you know how many projects I made the ENTIRE previous month? One. Because I’d spent all my time searching instead of creating. Monday morning, my daughter asked again about her Heritage Day poster. “Can you help me make it really special?” “Yes,” I said immediately. We made it together that night. Italian flag elements. Shamrocks. Family photos. Custom text. Found every design I needed in under 5 minutes total. Spent 90 minutes actually CREATING with her. She brought it to school. Texted me at lunch: “Everyone is asking if you do this for other people!!” That weekend, three moms from her school reached out. One wanted birthday party decorations. $85. One wanted teacher appreciation gifts. $120. One wanted custom tumblers for her book club. $140. I said yes to all three. Because I wasn’t afraid anymore. I wasn’t afraid of losing entire evenings to searching. I wasn’t afraid of frustration and wasted time. I knew I could find what I needed in minutes, not hours. Last month, I made $380 from craft projects. This month I’m at $520. But honestly? The money isn’t even the best part. The best part is my husband walking by and seeing me MAKING something. Not scrolling. Not searching. Not frustrated. Actually creating. The best part is saying YES when my daughter asks for help. The best part is going to bed at 10:30 instead of 1 AM because I’m not trapped in a search spiral. The best part is loving this again. Last night, I made four custom frames for a client. Start to finish: 2 hours. Six months ago, I would have spent 2 hours just LOOKING for the designs. And I would have been too exhausted to actually make anything. I’m not sharing this because I work for some SVG company. I’m sharing this because if you’re reading this at midnight with 20 browser tabs open… If you’ve ever said no to someone because you couldn’t face another search session… If you’ve spent more time looking than making… It’s not you. You’re not being too picky. You’re not being indecisive. You’re not bad at this. You’re just searching in the wrong place. You need what that Instagram teacher had. What I have now. A library so complete that you never leave it. Because the real joy of crafting isn’t in finding the perfect design. It’s in having an idea and bringing it to life immediately. The bundle that changed everything for me is called Cutify Studio. Same sale I bought it during is happening now. I can’t tell you what to do. But I can tell you that I wish someone had told me about this six months ago. I would have saved 23 hours in just three weeks. That’s 23 hours I could have spent actually creating. Or with my kids. Or sleeping. Instead of searching. Check your phone. Look at your timestamps. Add up your hours. Then ask yourself: What would you do with that time back? Because you can get it back. Starting tonight. 👉 https://cutifystudio.com/premiumsvgs-eu-eng | I spent 4.5 hours searching for an SVG file last Tuesday. Tonight I made 7 projects in 3 hours. My name is Emma. I’m 41, marketing coordinator, mom of three. Not a professional crafter. Just someone who loves making things. Or at least, I used to love it. Six months ago, my sister asked me to make a custom mug for her best friend's birthday. Simple request. Dog's name, some paw prints, maybe a cute saying. “No problem,” I told her. “Give me a week.” That Tuesday night, after the kids went to bed, I sat down to find the perfect design. Opened my laptop at 8:47 PM. “This should take 20 minutes,” I thought. I searched Etsy. Found one. Cute but not quite right. Searched Creative Fabrica. Found another. Close, but the font was wrong. Checked Pinterest for inspiration. Clicked through to three different sites. Each design was almost perfect. But not quite. Too cartoony. Too serious. Too generic. Too busy. By 10 PM, I had 19 browser tabs open. By 11 PM, I’d downloaded three “free samples” that looked terrible once I opened them. By midnight, I’d bought two designs for $8.99 each. Neither was exactly what I wanted. I finally closed my laptop at 1:14 AM. Empty-handed. Exhausted. Frustrated. My husband walked by. “Still working on that?” That TONE. Like I was being ridiculous. Like I was wasting time on something stupid. I wanted to explain that I wasn’t being picky. That I was just trying to find the RIGHT design. That it shouldn’t be this hard. But I couldn’t explain it. Because he was right. Four and a half hours. For a mug design. The next day, I told my sister I was too busy. She bought a mug from Target instead. That’s when I started keeping track. I created a note in my phone. Just timestamps. “Started looking: 9:15 PM” “Gave up: 11:42 PM” Time wasted: 2 hours 27 minutes. “Started looking: 2:30 PM Saturday” “Finally settled: 6:18 PM” Time wasted: 3 hours 48 minutes. “Started looking: 8:00 PM” “Still looking: 12:35 AM” Time wasted: 4 hours 35 minutes. In three weeks, I’d spent 23 hours searching for designs. TWENTY-THREE HOURS. That’s almost a full work day. Three nights of sleep. An entire weekend. And you know what I made during those 23 hours? Nothing. Because I spent all my “craft time” looking. Not creating. My daughter asked me to help with a poster for her Heritage Day project. I said no. Not because I couldn’t help. Because I couldn’t face another 4-hour search session. My neighbor mentioned she wanted custom party decorations. I changed the subject. A coworker asked if I still do “that Cricut stuff.” “Not really anymore,” I lied. I’d stopped calling it a hobby. It had become a source of stress. 80% searching. 20% making. And the 20% was never even that good, because by the time I found a design, I was too exhausted to care about the actual crafting. Three weeks ago, I couldn’t sleep. Lying in bed at 2:30 AM, scrolling Instagram. I saw a post from someone in a craft group. She’d made 12 different projects that week. Twelve. THAT WEEK. I’d made one project in the last month. Someone commented: “How do you find time for all this??” Her response: “I stopped wasting time searching. Invested in a massive design bundle a year ago. Now I just make stuff.” I clicked her profile. She wasn’t some Instagram influencer. She was a middle school teacher with two kids. Just like me. Except she was actually CREATING. I DMed her at 2:47 AM. “Can I ask what bundle you use? I spend hours searching and I’m losing my mind.” She responded the next morning. “Cutify Studio. 150,000 designs. I know that sounds insane but I haven’t searched for an SVG in over a year. When I need something, I search MY library. Takes 2 minutes max.” Two minutes. I’d spent 4.5 hours last Tuesday. That afternoon, I bought it. $39 during their sale. I almost didn’t. “What if I still can’t find what I need?” “What if it’s overwhelming?” “What if it’s a waste?” But I thought about those 23 hours. About my sister’s mug I never made. About my daughter’s poster I said no to. I downloaded it that night. Opened the folder. Typed “dog paw” in the search. Sixty-three results appeared instantly. Different styles. Different vibes. Cute, elegant, funny, minimal. I picked one. Downloaded it. Opened Design Space. Total time: 90 seconds. I sat there staring at my screen. Ninety seconds. What used to take me 4.5 hours took 90 seconds. That weekend, I made my sister’s mug. Found the design in 45 seconds. Made the actual mug in 20 minutes. Then I made a birthday card for my nephew. Found a dinosaur design in 30 seconds. Then wine glass markers for a friend. Found the perfect sayings in under a minute. By Sunday night, I’d made 7 projects. Seven. In one weekend. Do you know how many projects I made the ENTIRE previous month? One. Because I’d spent all my time searching instead of creating. Monday morning, my daughter asked again about her Heritage Day poster. “Can you help me make it really special?” “Yes,” I said immediately. We made it together that night. Italian flag elements. Shamrocks. Family photos. Custom text. Found every design I needed in under 5 minutes total. Spent 90 minutes actually CREATING with her. She brought it to school. Texted me at lunch: “Everyone is asking if you do this for other people!!” That weekend, three moms from her school reached out. One wanted birthday party decorations. $85. One wanted teacher appreciation gifts. $120. One wanted custom tumblers for her book club. $140. I said yes to all three. Because I wasn’t afraid anymore. I wasn’t afraid of losing entire evenings to searching. I wasn’t afraid of frustration and wasted time. I knew I could find what I needed in minutes, not hours. Last month, I made $380 from craft projects. This month I’m at $520. But honestly? The money isn’t even the best part. The best part is my husband walking by and seeing me MAKING something. Not scrolling. Not searching. Not frustrated. Actually creating. The best part is saying YES when my daughter asks for help. The best part is going to bed at 10:30 instead of 1 AM because I’m not trapped in a search spiral. The best part is loving this again. Last night, I made four custom frames for a client. Start to finish: 2 hours. Six months ago, I would have spent 2 hours just LOOKING for the designs. And I would have been too exhausted to actually make anything. I’m not sharing this because I work for some SVG company. I’m sharing this because if you’re reading this at midnight with 20 browser tabs open… If you’ve ever said no to someone because you couldn’t face another search session… If you’ve spent more time looking than making… It’s not you. You’re not being too picky. You’re not being indecisive. You’re not bad at this. You’re just searching in the wrong place. You need what that Instagram teacher had. What I have now. A library so complete that you never leave it. Because the real joy of crafting isn’t in finding the perfect design. It’s in having an idea and bringing it to life immediately. The bundle that changed everything for me is called Cutify Studio. Same sale I bought it during is happening now. I can’t tell you what to do. But I can tell you that I wish someone had told me about this six months ago. I would have saved 23 hours in just three weeks. That’s 23 hours I could have spent actually creating. Or with my kids. Or sleeping. Instead of searching. Check your phone. Look at your timestamps. Add up your hours. Then ask yourself: What would you do with that time back? Because you can get it back. Starting tonight. 👉 https://cutifystudio.com/premiumsvgs-eu-eng | I spent 4.5 hours searching for an SVG file last Tuesday. Tonight I made 7 projects in 3 hours. My name is Emma. I’m 41, marketing coordinator, mom of three. Not a professional crafter. Just someone who loves making things. Or at least, I used to love it. Six months ago, my sister asked me to make a custom mug for her best friend's birthday. Simple request. Dog's name, some paw prints, maybe a cute saying. “No problem,” I told her. “Give me a week.” That Tuesday night, after the kids went to bed, I sat down to find the perfect design. Opened my laptop at 8:47 PM. “This should take 20 minutes,” I thought. I searched Etsy. Found one. Cute but not quite right. Searched Creative Fabrica. Found another. Close, but the font was wrong. Checked Pinterest for inspiration. Clicked through to three different sites. Each design was almost perfect. But not quite. Too cartoony. Too serious. Too generic. Too busy. By 10 PM, I had 19 browser tabs open. By 11 PM, I’d downloaded three “free samples” that looked terrible once I opened them. By midnight, I’d bought two designs for $8.99 each. Neither was exactly what I wanted. I finally closed my laptop at 1:14 AM. Empty-handed. Exhausted. Frustrated. My husband walked by. “Still working on that?” That TONE. Like I was being ridiculous. Like I was wasting time on something stupid. I wanted to explain that I wasn’t being picky. That I was just trying to find the RIGHT design. That it shouldn’t be this hard. But I couldn’t explain it. Because he was right. Four and a half hours. For a mug design. The next day, I told my sister I was too busy. She bought a mug from Target instead. That’s when I started keeping track. I created a note in my phone. Just timestamps. “Started looking: 9:15 PM” “Gave up: 11:42 PM” Time wasted: 2 hours 27 minutes. “Started looking: 2:30 PM Saturday” “Finally settled: 6:18 PM” Time wasted: 3 hours 48 minutes. “Started looking: 8:00 PM” “Still looking: 12:35 AM” Time wasted: 4 hours 35 minutes. In three weeks, I’d spent 23 hours searching for designs. TWENTY-THREE HOURS. That’s almost a full work day. Three nights of sleep. An entire weekend. And you know what I made during those 23 hours? Nothing. Because I spent all my “craft time” looking. Not creating. My daughter asked me to help with a poster for her Heritage Day project. I said no. Not because I couldn’t help. Because I couldn’t face another 4-hour search session. My neighbor mentioned she wanted custom party decorations. I changed the subject. A coworker asked if I still do “that Cricut stuff.” “Not really anymore,” I lied. I’d stopped calling it a hobby. It had become a source of stress. 80% searching. 20% making. And the 20% was never even that good, because by the time I found a design, I was too exhausted to care about the actual crafting. Three weeks ago, I couldn’t sleep. Lying in bed at 2:30 AM, scrolling Instagram. I saw a post from someone in a craft group. She’d made 12 different projects that week. Twelve. THAT WEEK. I’d made one project in the last month. Someone commented: “How do you find time for all this??” Her response: “I stopped wasting time searching. Invested in a massive design bundle a year ago. Now I just make stuff.” I clicked her profile. She wasn’t some Instagram influencer. She was a middle school teacher with two kids. Just like me. Except she was actually CREATING. I DMed her at 2:47 AM. “Can I ask what bundle you use? I spend hours searching and I’m losing my mind.” She responded the next morning. “Cutify Studio. 150,000 designs. I know that sounds insane but I haven’t searched for an SVG in over a year. When I need something, I search MY library. Takes 2 minutes max.” Two minutes. I’d spent 4.5 hours last Tuesday. That afternoon, I bought it. $39 during their sale. I almost didn’t. “What if I still can’t find what I need?” “What if it’s overwhelming?” “What if it’s a waste?” But I thought about those 23 hours. About my sister’s mug I never made. About my daughter’s poster I said no to. I downloaded it that night. Opened the folder. Typed “dog paw” in the search. Sixty-three results appeared instantly. Different styles. Different vibes. Cute, elegant, funny, minimal. I picked one. Downloaded it. Opened Design Space. Total time: 90 seconds. I sat there staring at my screen. Ninety seconds. What used to take me 4.5 hours took 90 seconds. That weekend, I made my sister’s mug. Found the design in 45 seconds. Made the actual mug in 20 minutes. Then I made a birthday card for my nephew. Found a dinosaur design in 30 seconds. Then wine glass markers for a friend. Found the perfect sayings in under a minute. By Sunday night, I’d made 7 projects. Seven. In one weekend. Do you know how many projects I made the ENTIRE previous month? One. Because I’d spent all my time searching instead of creating. Monday morning, my daughter asked again about her Heritage Day poster. “Can you help me make it really special?” “Yes,” I said immediately. We made it together that night. Italian flag elements. Shamrocks. Family photos. Custom text. Found every design I needed in under 5 minutes total. Spent 90 minutes actually CREATING with her. She brought it to school. Texted me at lunch: “Everyone is asking if you do this for other people!!” That weekend, three moms from her school reached out. One wanted birthday party decorations. $85. One wanted teacher appreciation gifts. $120. One wanted custom tumblers for her book club. $140. I said yes to all three. Because I wasn’t afraid anymore. I wasn’t afraid of losing entire evenings to searching. I wasn’t afraid of frustration and wasted time. I knew I could find what I needed in minutes, not hours. Last month, I made $380 from craft projects. This month I’m at $520. But honestly? The money isn’t even the best part. The best part is my husband walking by and seeing me MAKING something. Not scrolling. Not searching. Not frustrated. Actually creating. The best part is saying YES when my daughter asks for help. The best part is going to bed at 10:30 instead of 1 AM because I’m not trapped in a search spiral. The best part is loving this again. Last night, I made four custom frames for a client. Start to finish: 2 hours. Six months ago, I would have spent 2 hours just LOOKING for the designs. And I would have been too exhausted to actually make anything. I’m not sharing this because I work for some SVG company. I’m sharing this because if you’re reading this at midnight with 20 browser tabs open… If you’ve ever said no to someone because you couldn’t face another search session… If you’ve spent more time looking than making… It’s not you. You’re not being too picky. You’re not being indecisive. You’re not bad at this. You’re just searching in the wrong place. You need what that Instagram teacher had. What I have now. A library so complete that you never leave it. Because the real joy of crafting isn’t in finding the perfect design. It’s in having an idea and bringing it to life immediately. The bundle that changed everything for me is called Cutify Studio. Same sale I bought it during is happening now. I can’t tell you what to do. But I can tell you that I wish someone had told me about this six months ago. I would have saved 23 hours in just three weeks. That’s 23 hours I could have spent actually creating. Or with my kids. Or sleeping. Instead of searching. Check your phone. Look at your timestamps. Add up your hours. Then ask yourself: What would you do with that time back? Because you can get it back. Starting tonight. 👉 https://cutifystudio.com/premiumsvgs-eu-eng
I turned down a $400 project last month because I didn't have the right designs. This week I accepted a $950 one. My name is Rachel. I’m 36, fourth-grade teacher, married, no kids yet. I’ve been crafting for three years. Not as a business. Just for fun. For gifts. For me. But last spring, something shifted. My sister-in-law was planning her daughter's mermaid birthday party. Fifty people. Custom everything. She asked if I could make the decorations. “Banners, centerpieces, cake topper, favor boxes, photo props. Whatever you can do. I’ll pay you.” “How much?” I asked carefully. “I don’t know, what do people charge? $300? $400?” $400. For a weekend of work. I should have said yes immediately. Instead, I said: “Let me think about it.” Because the first thing I thought wasn’t “yes!” Or “how exciting!” It was: “Do I have mermaid designs?” I went home and checked my SVG folder. I had four mermaid files. FOUR. For an entire party theme. They were… fine. Basic. The kind you see at every mermaid party. Not special. Not $400 worth of custom work. I searched Etsy that night. Found some better options, but they still didn’t match each other. Different styles. Different vibes. I’d have to cobble together designs from six different sellers. And hope they looked cohesive. And hope they actually worked when I cut them. I texted my sister-in-law the next day. “I’m so sorry, I’m swamped with end-of-school-year stuff. I don’t think I can do it.” She understood. Hired someone on Etsy instead. I went to the party. The decorations were BEAUTIFUL. Cohesive. Professional. Exactly what I would have wanted to make. And they weren’t more complex than what I could do. They were just… unlimited. The designer hadn’t been constrained by a small collection. She’d imagined freely and executed perfectly. I drove home feeling sick. Not jealous. Just disappointed in myself. I’d said no to $400 because I didn’t have $20 worth of design files. The math was humiliating. But more than the money… I’d said no to creating something beautiful. To making my niece’s party special. To doing what I actually love. All because my design collection was limiting my creative potential. That night, I opened my project notebook. Pages and pages of “someday” ideas. A memory box for my grandmother’s 80th birthday (four months ago, never made it). Custom wedding gift for my best friend (engaged for 9 months, still nothing). Teacher appreciation gifts (ended up buying gift cards). Halloween decorations for my classroom (ran out of time, bought generic ones). Christmas ornaments with each family member’s personality (never started). Every single one marked: “Need to find designs.” Forty-seven projects. FORTY-SEVEN things I wanted to make and didn’t. Not because I couldn’t. But because I’d trained myself to only have ideas that matched my current design folder. I’d stopped imagining. Started browsing my files first and letting THEM tell me what was possible. Like looking in your fridge and only cooking what you already have instead of deciding what you want to eat and then getting ingredients. Backwards. Two weeks later, my principal asked if I could make door decorations for teacher appreciation week. “Something special. All 35 classroom doors. Custom for each teacher.” Old me would have been thrilled. Instead, I immediately thought: “Do I have 35 different designs?” No. I had maybe 20 usable files total. “I don’t think I have enough variety,” I admitted. She looked confused. “But you’re so creative.” I wasn’t creative anymore. I was creatively constipated. Designing within the limits of my file folder instead of creating from imagination. That Friday night, I was scrolling a craft group at 11 PM. Someone posted: “Just finished my 200th custom order this year!” 200? I’d done maybe 15 projects total. Someone asked: “How do you have designs for so many different requests?” Her answer: “I invested in a massive bundle two years ago. 150,000 files. Sounds excessive but I’ve never hit a limit. No matter what someone asks for, I have options.” 150,000. I had 94 files in my entire collection. I clicked through to see what she was talking about. At first, I felt overwhelmed. “That’s TOO many. I’d never use that many. What a waste.” But then I read the category list. Every holiday. Every theme. Every style. Every aesthetic. Animals. Quotes. Sports. Professions. Hobbies. Patterns. Florals. Geometric. Vintage. Modern. Kids. Adult. Weddings. Parties. Seasons. Occasions. And something clicked. This wasn’t about USING 150,000 designs. This was about never having to say “I don’t have that” again. This was about unshackling my imagination. I bought it at 11:47 PM. $39 during a launch sale. Downloaded it immediately. Opened the folder. Searched “mermaid.” Eighty-three results. Different styles. Different vibes. Modern, vintage, cute, elegant. Shells. Tails. Scales. Underwater scenes. Typography. Everything I would have needed for my niece’s party. And that was ONE search term. I searched “teacher.” Ninety-six results. “Christmas.” Three hundred forty-seven results. “Wedding.” Two hundred twelve results. My hands were shaking. Not because of the quantity. But because I suddenly realized… I could say YES now. To any project. To any request. To any idea I had at 10 PM on a random Tuesday. The barrier was gone. That weekend, I called my sister-in-law. “Is it too late to make something for Sophia’s birthday? I know the party passed, but maybe a special gift?” “Oh my gosh, yes! She’d love that.” I made a custom memory box. Mermaids. Her name. Her birth date. Decorative elements. Found every single design I needed in under 10 minutes. Spent three hours actually CREATING. She cried when I gave it to her. “This is more special than anything at the party. Thank you.” She posted it on Instagram. I got six DMs that weekend. Birthday decorations: $150. Baby shower centerpieces: $200. Bridal shower photo props: $180. I said yes to all of them. Because I wasn’t constrained anymore. My principal asked again about teacher appreciation doors. “Actually, yes. I can do that.” I made 35 custom door signs. Every single one unique. Every single one matched to that teacher’s personality. Math teacher: equations and calculators. Art teacher: paint splashes and brushes. PE teacher: sports equipment. Music teacher: notes and instruments. Found all the designs I needed in one evening. The teachers loved them. Two asked if I do wedding decor. One hired me for her daughter’s graduation party. Last month I made $890 from craft projects. This month I’m on track for $1,200. But the real transformation isn’t the money. It’s that I’m creating from imagination again. Not from limitations. My husband asked what changed. “You’re making stuff constantly now. You seem… excited again.” “I am,” I said. “I’m free now.” Free to have an idea at 10 PM and start it at 10:05 PM. Free to say yes when someone asks for help. Free to look at Pinterest without that sinking feeling of “I could never make that.” Free to imagine first and find designs second. Instead of browsing designs and hoping for inspiration. I’m not sharing this because everyone needs 150,000 SVG files. I’m sharing this because if you’ve been choosing projects based on what you have instead of what you imagine… If you’ve said no to opportunities because your design folder felt too small… If you’ve stopped dreaming up projects because you’re tired of the disappointment… You’re not being practical. You’re being creatively imprisoned. And the key is cheaper than you think. The bundle that unlocked everything for me is called Cutify Studio. Same sale I bought during is running now. I can’t tell you what to do. But I can tell you that the distance between “I wish I could make that” and “I made that” used to feel impossibly far. Now it’s measured in minutes. My sister-in-law just asked if I can do decorations for Sophia’s birthday next year. “Different theme though. She’s into unicorns now.” “No problem,” I said without hesitation. Because I already searched. 127 unicorn designs. And THAT confidence? That “yes, no problem” instead of “let me check if I have designs”… That’s not about having files. That’s about remembering who you were before you learned to dream smaller. 👉 https://cutifystudio.com/premiumsvgs-eu-eng | I turned down a $400 project last month because I didn't have the right designs. This week I accepted a $950 one. My name is Rachel. I’m 36, fourth-grade teacher, married, no kids yet. I’ve been crafting for three years. Not as a business. Just for fun. For gifts. For me. But last spring, something shifted. My sister-in-law was planning her daughter's mermaid birthday party. Fifty people. Custom everything. She asked if I could make the decorations. “Banners, centerpieces, cake topper, favor boxes, photo props. Whatever you can do. I’ll pay you.” “How much?” I asked carefully. “I don’t know, what do people charge? $300? $400?” $400. For a weekend of work. I should have said yes immediately. Instead, I said: “Let me think about it.” Because the first thing I thought wasn’t “yes!” Or “how exciting!” It was: “Do I have mermaid designs?” I went home and checked my SVG folder. I had four mermaid files. FOUR. For an entire party theme. They were… fine. Basic. The kind you see at every mermaid party. Not special. Not $400 worth of custom work. I searched Etsy that night. Found some better options, but they still didn’t match each other. Different styles. Different vibes. I’d have to cobble together designs from six different sellers. And hope they looked cohesive. And hope they actually worked when I cut them. I texted my sister-in-law the next day. “I’m so sorry, I’m swamped with end-of-school-year stuff. I don’t think I can do it.” She understood. Hired someone on Etsy instead. I went to the party. The decorations were BEAUTIFUL. Cohesive. Professional. Exactly what I would have wanted to make. And they weren’t more complex than what I could do. They were just… unlimited. The designer hadn’t been constrained by a small collection. She’d imagined freely and executed perfectly. I drove home feeling sick. Not jealous. Just disappointed in myself. I’d said no to $400 because I didn’t have $20 worth of design files. The math was humiliating. But more than the money… I’d said no to creating something beautiful. To making my niece’s party special. To doing what I actually love. All because my design collection was limiting my creative potential. That night, I opened my project notebook. Pages and pages of “someday” ideas. A memory box for my grandmother’s 80th birthday (four months ago, never made it). Custom wedding gift for my best friend (engaged for 9 months, still nothing). Teacher appreciation gifts (ended up buying gift cards). Halloween decorations for my classroom (ran out of time, bought generic ones). Christmas ornaments with each family member’s personality (never started). Every single one marked: “Need to find designs.” Forty-seven projects. FORTY-SEVEN things I wanted to make and didn’t. Not because I couldn’t. But because I’d trained myself to only have ideas that matched my current design folder. I’d stopped imagining. Started browsing my files first and letting THEM tell me what was possible. Like looking in your fridge and only cooking what you already have instead of deciding what you want to eat and then getting ingredients. Backwards. Two weeks later, my principal asked if I could make door decorations for teacher appreciation week. “Something special. All 35 classroom doors. Custom for each teacher.” Old me would have been thrilled. Instead, I immediately thought: “Do I have 35 different designs?” No. I had maybe 20 usable files total. “I don’t think I have enough variety,” I admitted. She looked confused. “But you’re so creative.” I wasn’t creative anymore. I was creatively constipated. Designing within the limits of my file folder instead of creating from imagination. That Friday night, I was scrolling a craft group at 11 PM. Someone posted: “Just finished my 200th custom order this year!” 200? I’d done maybe 15 projects total. Someone asked: “How do you have designs for so many different requests?” Her answer: “I invested in a massive bundle two years ago. 150,000 files. Sounds excessive but I’ve never hit a limit. No matter what someone asks for, I have options.” 150,000. I had 94 files in my entire collection. I clicked through to see what she was talking about. At first, I felt overwhelmed. “That’s TOO many. I’d never use that many. What a waste.” But then I read the category list. Every holiday. Every theme. Every style. Every aesthetic. Animals. Quotes. Sports. Professions. Hobbies. Patterns. Florals. Geometric. Vintage. Modern. Kids. Adult. Weddings. Parties. Seasons. Occasions. And something clicked. This wasn’t about USING 150,000 designs. This was about never having to say “I don’t have that” again. This was about unshackling my imagination. I bought it at 11:47 PM. $39 during a launch sale. Downloaded it immediately. Opened the folder. Searched “mermaid.” Eighty-three results. Different styles. Different vibes. Modern, vintage, cute, elegant. Shells. Tails. Scales. Underwater scenes. Typography. Everything I would have needed for my niece’s party. And that was ONE search term. I searched “teacher.” Ninety-six results. “Christmas.” Three hundred forty-seven results. “Wedding.” Two hundred twelve results. My hands were shaking. Not because of the quantity. But because I suddenly realized… I could say YES now. To any project. To any request. To any idea I had at 10 PM on a random Tuesday. The barrier was gone. That weekend, I called my sister-in-law. “Is it too late to make something for Sophia’s birthday? I know the party passed, but maybe a special gift?” “Oh my gosh, yes! She’d love that.” I made a custom memory box. Mermaids. Her name. Her birth date. Decorative elements. Found every single design I needed in under 10 minutes. Spent three hours actually CREATING. She cried when I gave it to her. “This is more special than anything at the party. Thank you.” She posted it on Instagram. I got six DMs that weekend. Birthday decorations: $150. Baby shower centerpieces: $200. Bridal shower photo props: $180. I said yes to all of them. Because I wasn’t constrained anymore. My principal asked again about teacher appreciation doors. “Actually, yes. I can do that.” I made 35 custom door signs. Every single one unique. Every single one matched to that teacher’s personality. Math teacher: equations and calculators. Art teacher: paint splashes and brushes. PE teacher: sports equipment. Music teacher: notes and instruments. Found all the designs I needed in one evening. The teachers loved them. Two asked if I do wedding decor. One hired me for her daughter’s graduation party. Last month I made $890 from craft projects. This month I’m on track for $1,200. But the real transformation isn’t the money. It’s that I’m creating from imagination again. Not from limitations. My husband asked what changed. “You’re making stuff constantly now. You seem… excited again.” “I am,” I said. “I’m free now.” Free to have an idea at 10 PM and start it at 10:05 PM. Free to say yes when someone asks for help. Free to look at Pinterest without that sinking feeling of “I could never make that.” Free to imagine first and find designs second. Instead of browsing designs and hoping for inspiration. I’m not sharing this because everyone needs 150,000 SVG files. I’m sharing this because if you’ve been choosing projects based on what you have instead of what you imagine… If you’ve said no to opportunities because your design folder felt too small… If you’ve stopped dreaming up projects because you’re tired of the disappointment… You’re not being practical. You’re being creatively imprisoned. And the key is cheaper than you think. The bundle that unlocked everything for me is called Cutify Studio. Same sale I bought during is running now. I can’t tell you what to do. But I can tell you that the distance between “I wish I could make that” and “I made that” used to feel impossibly far. Now it’s measured in minutes. My sister-in-law just asked if I can do decorations for Sophia’s birthday next year. “Different theme though. She’s into unicorns now.” “No problem,” I said without hesitation. Because I already searched. 127 unicorn designs. And THAT confidence? That “yes, no problem” instead of “let me check if I have designs”… That’s not about having files. That’s about remembering who you were before you learned to dream smaller. 👉 https://cutifystudio.com/premiumsvgs-eu-eng
The best relationships are 50% love, 50% roasting each other daily. Upload your photos and our AI turns your relationship dynamic into hilarious caricature tees that are way too accurate. Matching shirts finally became dangerous. Alternative primary texts: Some couples buy matching hoodies. You two? You publicly expose each other for fun. Honestly… healthier. Your partner deserves a personalized caricature roast. And deep down? You know it. AI-generated couple roasts printed on premium tees. Because “I love you” is nice. But “emotionally dramatic goblin” lasts forever. No cringe. No generic romance quotes. No fake Pinterest energy. Just brutally honest couple shirts.
🚨LAST SPOTS 🚨 Taking over Bristol from June 12th to July 10th. If you’re looking for high-end Anime, Manga, or Realism tattoos, you’re in the right place. Have a look at my latest work—no generic Pinterest copies, only custom designs tailored to your anatomy. 👀 Check the profile and hit follow to see the latest projects!
🚨LAST SPOTS 🚨 Taking over Bristol from June 12th to July 10th. If you’re looking for high-end Anime, Manga, or Realism tattoos, you’re in the right place. Have a look at my latest work—no generic Pinterest copies, only custom designs tailored to your anatomy. 👀 Check the profile and hit follow to see the latest projects!
🚨LAST SPOTS 🚨 Taking over Bristol from June 12th to July 10th. If you’re looking for high-end Anime, Manga, or Realism tattoos, you’re in the right place. Have a look at my latest work—no generic Pinterest copies, only custom designs tailored to your anatomy. 👀 Check the profile and hit follow to see the latest projects!
Stop spending hours searching for activities before every session. Pinterest. Google. YouTube. You still walk in unsure. 222 Drama Games → 222 tested activities in one place. $27. Use it tomorrow.
Have you ever wished you could peek behind the curtain before committing to something new? Not just read about it or watch someone else do it, but actually experience it for yourself? 👀 Pattern Week is exactly that. Five low-stakes, high-joy days of creativity. Sounds like a dream, right? 💭 Hi! 👋 I’m Bonnie, and next week we’re going from blank page on Monday, to your very own pattern on a product by Friday (for just $10!). ✨ Think of it as your backstage pass to everything Pattern Play members look forward to every single month: Inspiration kit, live drawing session, Illustrator tutorial, and a finished patterned product. Here’s what we’ll be doing together next week: 🌿We’ll start with inspiration so you’re not staring at a blank page wondering what to make 🌿We’ll fill our sketchbooks side by side (no pressure, no perfection… just making) 🌿I’ll show you how to turn those drawings into a repeat pattern in Illustrator (beginner-friendly, promise) 🌿Then we’ll bring it to life on fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap 🌿And by the end… you’ll have something real that you made What I love most about this process isn’t just the final piece, it’s what happens after. You start showing up differently. You stop overthinking every step. You build momentum, and suddenly you’re not just “trying to be creative,” you actually are. If you’ve been wanting a creative practice that feels joyful, doable, and actually leads somewhere… this is a warm place to begin. 🌿 See you on Monday, May 18th! – Bonnie 🫶 | Have you ever wished you could peek behind the curtain before committing to something new? Not just read about it or watch someone else do it, but actually experience it for yourself? 👀 Pattern Week is exactly that. Five low-stakes, high-joy days of creativity. Sounds like a dream, right? 💭 Hi! 👋 I’m Bonnie, and next week we’re going from blank page on Monday, to your very own pattern on a product by Friday (for just $10!). ✨ Think of it as your backstage pass to everything Pattern Play members look forward to every single month: Inspiration kit, live drawing session, Illustrator tutorial, and a finished patterned product. Here’s what we’ll be doing together next week: 🌿We’ll start with inspiration so you’re not staring at a blank page wondering what to make 🌿We’ll fill our sketchbooks side by side (no pressure, no perfection… just making) 🌿I’ll show you how to turn those drawings into a repeat pattern in Illustrator (beginner-friendly, promise) 🌿Then we’ll bring it to life on fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap 🌿And by the end… you’ll have something real that you made What I love most about this process isn’t just the final piece, it’s what happens after. You start showing up differently. You stop overthinking every step. You build momentum, and suddenly you’re not just “trying to be creative,” you actually are. If you’ve been wanting a creative practice that feels joyful, doable, and actually leads somewhere… this is a warm place to begin. 🌿 See you on Monday, May 18th! – Bonnie 🫶 | Have you ever wished you could peek behind the curtain before committing to something new? Not just read about it or watch someone else do it, but actually experience it for yourself? 👀 Pattern Week is exactly that. Five low-stakes, high-joy days of creativity. Sounds like a dream, right? 💭 Hi! 👋 I’m Bonnie, and next week we’re going from blank page on Monday, to your very own pattern on a product by Friday (for just $10!). ✨ Think of it as your backstage pass to everything Pattern Play members look forward to every single month: Inspiration kit, live drawing session, Illustrator tutorial, and a finished patterned product. Here’s what we’ll be doing together next week: 🌿We’ll start with inspiration so you’re not staring at a blank page wondering what to make 🌿We’ll fill our sketchbooks side by side (no pressure, no perfection… just making) 🌿I’ll show you how to turn those drawings into a repeat pattern in Illustrator (beginner-friendly, promise) 🌿Then we’ll bring it to life on fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap 🌿And by the end… you’ll have something real that you made What I love most about this process isn’t just the final piece, it’s what happens after. You start showing up differently. You stop overthinking every step. You build momentum, and suddenly you’re not just “trying to be creative,” you actually are. If you’ve been wanting a creative practice that feels joyful, doable, and actually leads somewhere… this is a warm place to begin. 🌿 See you on Monday, May 18th! – Bonnie 🫶
Have you ever wished you could peek behind the curtain before committing to something new? Not just read about it or watch someone else do it, but actually experience it for yourself? 👀 Pattern Week is exactly that. Five low-stakes, high-joy days of creativity. Sounds like a dream, right? 💭 Hi! 👋 I’m Bonnie, and next week we’re going from blank page on Monday, to your very own pattern on a product by Friday (for just $10!). ✨ Think of it as your backstage pass to everything Pattern Play members look forward to every single month: Inspiration kit, live drawing session, Illustrator tutorial, and a finished patterned product. Here’s what we’ll be doing together next week: 🌿We’ll start with inspiration so you’re not staring at a blank page wondering what to make 🌿We’ll fill our sketchbooks side by side (no pressure, no perfection… just making) 🌿I’ll show you how to turn those drawings into a repeat pattern in Illustrator (beginner-friendly, promise) 🌿Then we’ll bring it to life on fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap 🌿And by the end… you’ll have something real that you made What I love most about this process isn’t just the final piece, it’s what happens after. You start showing up differently. You stop overthinking every step. You build momentum, and suddenly you’re not just “trying to be creative,” you actually are. If you’ve been wanting a creative practice that feels joyful, doable, and actually leads somewhere… this is a warm place to begin. 🌿 See you on Monday, May 18th! – Bonnie 🫶 | Have you ever wished you could peek behind the curtain before committing to something new? Not just read about it or watch someone else do it, but actually experience it for yourself? 👀 Pattern Week is exactly that. Five low-stakes, high-joy days of creativity. Sounds like a dream, right? 💭 Hi! 👋 I’m Bonnie, and next week we’re going from blank page on Monday, to your very own pattern on a product by Friday (for just $10!). ✨ Think of it as your backstage pass to everything Pattern Play members look forward to every single month: Inspiration kit, live drawing session, Illustrator tutorial, and a finished patterned product. Here’s what we’ll be doing together next week: 🌿We’ll start with inspiration so you’re not staring at a blank page wondering what to make 🌿We’ll fill our sketchbooks side by side (no pressure, no perfection… just making) 🌿I’ll show you how to turn those drawings into a repeat pattern in Illustrator (beginner-friendly, promise) 🌿Then we’ll bring it to life on fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap 🌿And by the end… you’ll have something real that you made What I love most about this process isn’t just the final piece, it’s what happens after. You start showing up differently. You stop overthinking every step. You build momentum, and suddenly you’re not just “trying to be creative,” you actually are. If you’ve been wanting a creative practice that feels joyful, doable, and actually leads somewhere… this is a warm place to begin. 🌿 See you on Monday, May 18th! – Bonnie 🫶 | Have you ever wished you could peek behind the curtain before committing to something new? Not just read about it or watch someone else do it, but actually experience it for yourself? 👀 Pattern Week is exactly that. Five low-stakes, high-joy days of creativity. Sounds like a dream, right? 💭 Hi! 👋 I’m Bonnie, and next week we’re going from blank page on Monday, to your very own pattern on a product by Friday (for just $10!). ✨ Think of it as your backstage pass to everything Pattern Play members look forward to every single month: Inspiration kit, live drawing session, Illustrator tutorial, and a finished patterned product. Here’s what we’ll be doing together next week: 🌿We’ll start with inspiration so you’re not staring at a blank page wondering what to make 🌿We’ll fill our sketchbooks side by side (no pressure, no perfection… just making) 🌿I’ll show you how to turn those drawings into a repeat pattern in Illustrator (beginner-friendly, promise) 🌿Then we’ll bring it to life on fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap 🌿And by the end… you’ll have something real that you made What I love most about this process isn’t just the final piece, it’s what happens after. You start showing up differently. You stop overthinking every step. You build momentum, and suddenly you’re not just “trying to be creative,” you actually are. If you’ve been wanting a creative practice that feels joyful, doable, and actually leads somewhere… this is a warm place to begin. 🌿 See you on Monday, May 18th! – Bonnie 🫶
Can I tell you something about the people who show up for Pattern Week? A lot of them have never opened Adobe Illustrator before. A lot of them haven't picked up a sketchbook in years. A lot of them almost didn't sign up because they were convinced they weren't ready yet, or skilled enough, or creative enough to be here. And then they made a pattern. A real one. And then that pattern became something… fabric, wallpaper, gift wrap, something physical, something theirs. And they cried. 🥹 "I had never opened Adobe Illustrator in my life. I made a color repeat pattern that I actually love. I am moved to tears." - Gesine Pattern Week (happening May 18th - 22nd) was built specifically for you. If creativity keeps getting pushed to tomorrow, or your sketchbook has been sitting there a little too quietly, this is for you. Here’s what we’ll do together next week: 📅Monday: A curated inspiration kit with mood board, color palette, and motif ideas 📅Tuesday: A drawing session where we fill our sketchbooks side by side, no experience needed 📅 Wednesday: A beginner-friendly Illustrator tutorial that turns your sketch into a seamless repeat pattern 📅Thursday: A step-by-step walkthrough for getting your design onto real fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap 📅 Friday: We celebrate your finished project and have a party! Can't join us live? No worries, replays are yours through May 26th. Here’s the thing, you don’t need a picture-perfect studio, an art degree, or to even feel “ready.” If you've been craving a joyful creative practice that's fun and playful... this is your moment. I’ll see you on May 18th! 🤍 - Bonnie | Can I tell you something about the people who show up for Pattern Week? A lot of them have never opened Adobe Illustrator before. A lot of them haven't picked up a sketchbook in years. A lot of them almost didn't sign up because they were convinced they weren't ready yet, or skilled enough, or creative enough to be here. And then they made a pattern. A real one. And then that pattern became something… fabric, wallpaper, gift wrap, something physical, something theirs. And they cried. 🥹 "I had never opened Adobe Illustrator in my life. I made a color repeat pattern that I actually love. I am moved to tears." - Gesine Pattern Week (happening May 18th - 22nd) was built specifically for you. If creativity keeps getting pushed to tomorrow, or your sketchbook has been sitting there a little too quietly, this is for you. Here’s what we’ll do together next week: 📅Monday: A curated inspiration kit with mood board, color palette, and motif ideas 📅Tuesday: A drawing session where we fill our sketchbooks side by side, no experience needed 📅 Wednesday: A beginner-friendly Illustrator tutorial that turns your sketch into a seamless repeat pattern 📅Thursday: A step-by-step walkthrough for getting your design onto real fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap 📅 Friday: We celebrate your finished project and have a party! Can't join us live? No worries, replays are yours through May 26th. Here’s the thing, you don’t need a picture-perfect studio, an art degree, or to even feel “ready.” If you've been craving a joyful creative practice that's fun and playful... this is your moment. I’ll see you on May 18th! 🤍 - Bonnie | Can I tell you something about the people who show up for Pattern Week? A lot of them have never opened Adobe Illustrator before. A lot of them haven't picked up a sketchbook in years. A lot of them almost didn't sign up because they were convinced they weren't ready yet, or skilled enough, or creative enough to be here. And then they made a pattern. A real one. And then that pattern became something… fabric, wallpaper, gift wrap, something physical, something theirs. And they cried. 🥹 "I had never opened Adobe Illustrator in my life. I made a color repeat pattern that I actually love. I am moved to tears." - Gesine Pattern Week (happening May 18th - 22nd) was built specifically for you. If creativity keeps getting pushed to tomorrow, or your sketchbook has been sitting there a little too quietly, this is for you. Here’s what we’ll do together next week: 📅Monday: A curated inspiration kit with mood board, color palette, and motif ideas 📅Tuesday: A drawing session where we fill our sketchbooks side by side, no experience needed 📅 Wednesday: A beginner-friendly Illustrator tutorial that turns your sketch into a seamless repeat pattern 📅Thursday: A step-by-step walkthrough for getting your design onto real fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap 📅 Friday: We celebrate your finished project and have a party! Can't join us live? No worries, replays are yours through May 26th. Here’s the thing, you don’t need a picture-perfect studio, an art degree, or to even feel “ready.” If you've been craving a joyful creative practice that's fun and playful... this is your moment. I’ll see you on May 18th! 🤍 - Bonnie
If you've been craving a joyful creative practice that's fun and feels like play... this is your moment. Not just saving inspiration to a Pinterest board and calling it a day. But actually watching something take shape in your sketchbook, step by step, until it becomes something real. Something you can hold and say, I did that. I made that! ✨That’s the magic of Pattern Week.✨ Next week. from May 18–22, you'll get to experience the same playful pattern making that Pattern Play members look forward to every single month. Here’s what we’ll do together: 🌿 Gather inspiration and build a color story that feels like you 🌿 Fill your sketchbook with loose, imperfect, surprisingly beautiful marks 🌿 Turn those marks into a seamless repeat pattern in Illustrator 🌿 Bring your design to life on real product like: fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap 🌿 End the week holding proof that you didn’t just imagine it… you made it There’s something kindddd of magical about that moment. When an idea that lives quietly in your head suddenly exists in the world… in color, in pattern, in form. And the best part is, this isn’t reserved for “real artists” or people who already know what they’re doing. It’s designed to guide you there, gently and clearly, one step at a time. It’s just $10 to join, so you can step into the experience, follow your curiosity, and see what’s possible for you without overthinking it. Five days. One finished pattern. A completely different way of seeing yourself creatively. That sketchbook has been waiting long enough, are you in? 🤔 Let’s begin! | If you've been craving a joyful creative practice that's fun and feels like play... this is your moment. Not just saving inspiration to a Pinterest board and calling it a day. But actually watching something take shape in your sketchbook, step by step, until it becomes something real. Something you can hold and say, I did that. I made that! ✨That’s the magic of Pattern Week.✨ Next week. from May 18–22, you'll get to experience the same playful pattern making that Pattern Play members look forward to every single month. Here’s what we’ll do together: 🌿 Gather inspiration and build a color story that feels like you 🌿 Fill your sketchbook with loose, imperfect, surprisingly beautiful marks 🌿 Turn those marks into a seamless repeat pattern in Illustrator 🌿 Bring your design to life on real product like: fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap 🌿 End the week holding proof that you didn’t just imagine it… you made it There’s something kindddd of magical about that moment. When an idea that lives quietly in your head suddenly exists in the world… in color, in pattern, in form. And the best part is, this isn’t reserved for “real artists” or people who already know what they’re doing. It’s designed to guide you there, gently and clearly, one step at a time. It’s just $10 to join, so you can step into the experience, follow your curiosity, and see what’s possible for you without overthinking it. Five days. One finished pattern. A completely different way of seeing yourself creatively. That sketchbook has been waiting long enough, are you in? 🤔 Let’s begin! | If you've been craving a joyful creative practice that's fun and feels like play... this is your moment. Not just saving inspiration to a Pinterest board and calling it a day. But actually watching something take shape in your sketchbook, step by step, until it becomes something real. Something you can hold and say, I did that. I made that! ✨That’s the magic of Pattern Week.✨ Next week. from May 18–22, you'll get to experience the same playful pattern making that Pattern Play members look forward to every single month. Here’s what we’ll do together: 🌿 Gather inspiration and build a color story that feels like you 🌿 Fill your sketchbook with loose, imperfect, surprisingly beautiful marks 🌿 Turn those marks into a seamless repeat pattern in Illustrator 🌿 Bring your design to life on real product like: fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap 🌿 End the week holding proof that you didn’t just imagine it… you made it There’s something kindddd of magical about that moment. When an idea that lives quietly in your head suddenly exists in the world… in color, in pattern, in form. And the best part is, this isn’t reserved for “real artists” or people who already know what they’re doing. It’s designed to guide you there, gently and clearly, one step at a time. It’s just $10 to join, so you can step into the experience, follow your curiosity, and see what’s possible for you without overthinking it. Five days. One finished pattern. A completely different way of seeing yourself creatively. That sketchbook has been waiting long enough, are you in? 🤔 Let’s begin!
If you've been craving a joyful creative practice that's fun and feels like play... this is your moment. Not just saving inspiration to a Pinterest board and calling it a day. But actually watching something take shape in your sketchbook, step by step, until it becomes something real. Something you can hold and say, I did that. I made that! ✨That’s the magic of Pattern Week.✨ Next week. from May 18–22, you'll get to experience the same playful pattern making that Pattern Play members look forward to every single month. Here’s what we’ll do together: 🌿 Gather inspiration and build a color story that feels like you 🌿 Fill your sketchbook with loose, imperfect, surprisingly beautiful marks 🌿 Turn those marks into a seamless repeat pattern in Illustrator 🌿 Bring your design to life on real product like: fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap 🌿 End the week holding proof that you didn’t just imagine it… you made it There’s something kindddd of magical about that moment. When an idea that lives quietly in your head suddenly exists in the world… in color, in pattern, in form. And the best part is, this isn’t reserved for “real artists” or people who already know what they’re doing. It’s designed to guide you there, gently and clearly, one step at a time. It’s just $10 to join, so you can step into the experience, follow your curiosity, and see what’s possible for you without overthinking it. Five days. One finished pattern. A completely different way of seeing yourself creatively. That sketchbook has been waiting long enough, are you in? 🤔 Let’s begin! | If you've been craving a joyful creative practice that's fun and feels like play... this is your moment. Not just saving inspiration to a Pinterest board and calling it a day. But actually watching something take shape in your sketchbook, step by step, until it becomes something real. Something you can hold and say, I did that. I made that! ✨That’s the magic of Pattern Week.✨ Next week. from May 18–22, you'll get to experience the same playful pattern making that Pattern Play members look forward to every single month. Here’s what we’ll do together: 🌿 Gather inspiration and build a color story that feels like you 🌿 Fill your sketchbook with loose, imperfect, surprisingly beautiful marks 🌿 Turn those marks into a seamless repeat pattern in Illustrator 🌿 Bring your design to life on real product like: fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap 🌿 End the week holding proof that you didn’t just imagine it… you made it There’s something kindddd of magical about that moment. When an idea that lives quietly in your head suddenly exists in the world… in color, in pattern, in form. And the best part is, this isn’t reserved for “real artists” or people who already know what they’re doing. It’s designed to guide you there, gently and clearly, one step at a time. It’s just $10 to join, so you can step into the experience, follow your curiosity, and see what’s possible for you without overthinking it. Five days. One finished pattern. A completely different way of seeing yourself creatively. That sketchbook has been waiting long enough, are you in? 🤔 Let’s begin! | If you've been craving a joyful creative practice that's fun and feels like play... this is your moment. Not just saving inspiration to a Pinterest board and calling it a day. But actually watching something take shape in your sketchbook, step by step, until it becomes something real. Something you can hold and say, I did that. I made that! ✨That’s the magic of Pattern Week.✨ Next week. from May 18–22, you'll get to experience the same playful pattern making that Pattern Play members look forward to every single month. Here’s what we’ll do together: 🌿 Gather inspiration and build a color story that feels like you 🌿 Fill your sketchbook with loose, imperfect, surprisingly beautiful marks 🌿 Turn those marks into a seamless repeat pattern in Illustrator 🌿 Bring your design to life on real product like: fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap 🌿 End the week holding proof that you didn’t just imagine it… you made it There’s something kindddd of magical about that moment. When an idea that lives quietly in your head suddenly exists in the world… in color, in pattern, in form. And the best part is, this isn’t reserved for “real artists” or people who already know what they’re doing. It’s designed to guide you there, gently and clearly, one step at a time. It’s just $10 to join, so you can step into the experience, follow your curiosity, and see what’s possible for you without overthinking it. Five days. One finished pattern. A completely different way of seeing yourself creatively. That sketchbook has been waiting long enough, are you in? 🤔 Let’s begin!
If you've been craving a joyful creative practice that's fun and feels like play... this is your moment. Not just saving inspiration to a Pinterest board and calling it a day. But actually watching something take shape in your sketchbook, step by step, until it becomes something real. Something you can hold and say, I did that. I made that! ✨That’s the magic of Pattern Week.✨ Next week. from May 18–22, you'll get to experience the same playful pattern making that Pattern Play members look forward to every single month. Here’s what we’ll do together: 🌿 Gather inspiration and build a color story that feels like you 🌿 Fill your sketchbook with loose, imperfect, surprisingly beautiful marks 🌿 Turn those marks into a seamless repeat pattern in Illustrator 🌿 Bring your design to life on real product like: fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap 🌿 End the week holding proof that you didn’t just imagine it… you made it There’s something kindddd of magical about that moment. When an idea that lives quietly in your head suddenly exists in the world… in color, in pattern, in form. And the best part is, this isn’t reserved for “real artists” or people who already know what they’re doing. It’s designed to guide you there, gently and clearly, one step at a time. It’s just $10 to join, so you can step into the experience, follow your curiosity, and see what’s possible for you without overthinking it. Five days. One finished pattern. A completely different way of seeing yourself creatively. That sketchbook has been waiting long enough, are you in? 🤔 Let’s begin! | If you've been craving a joyful creative practice that's fun and feels like play... this is your moment. Not just saving inspiration to a Pinterest board and calling it a day. But actually watching something take shape in your sketchbook, step by step, until it becomes something real. Something you can hold and say, I did that. I made that! ✨That’s the magic of Pattern Week.✨ Next week. from May 18–22, you'll get to experience the same playful pattern making that Pattern Play members look forward to every single month. Here’s what we’ll do together: 🌿 Gather inspiration and build a color story that feels like you 🌿 Fill your sketchbook with loose, imperfect, surprisingly beautiful marks 🌿 Turn those marks into a seamless repeat pattern in Illustrator 🌿 Bring your design to life on real product like: fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap 🌿 End the week holding proof that you didn’t just imagine it… you made it There’s something kindddd of magical about that moment. When an idea that lives quietly in your head suddenly exists in the world… in color, in pattern, in form. And the best part is, this isn’t reserved for “real artists” or people who already know what they’re doing. It’s designed to guide you there, gently and clearly, one step at a time. It’s just $10 to join, so you can step into the experience, follow your curiosity, and see what’s possible for you without overthinking it. Five days. One finished pattern. A completely different way of seeing yourself creatively. That sketchbook has been waiting long enough, are you in? 🤔 Let’s begin! | If you've been craving a joyful creative practice that's fun and feels like play... this is your moment. Not just saving inspiration to a Pinterest board and calling it a day. But actually watching something take shape in your sketchbook, step by step, until it becomes something real. Something you can hold and say, I did that. I made that! ✨That’s the magic of Pattern Week.✨ Next week. from May 18–22, you'll get to experience the same playful pattern making that Pattern Play members look forward to every single month. Here’s what we’ll do together: 🌿 Gather inspiration and build a color story that feels like you 🌿 Fill your sketchbook with loose, imperfect, surprisingly beautiful marks 🌿 Turn those marks into a seamless repeat pattern in Illustrator 🌿 Bring your design to life on real product like: fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap 🌿 End the week holding proof that you didn’t just imagine it… you made it There’s something kindddd of magical about that moment. When an idea that lives quietly in your head suddenly exists in the world… in color, in pattern, in form. And the best part is, this isn’t reserved for “real artists” or people who already know what they’re doing. It’s designed to guide you there, gently and clearly, one step at a time. It’s just $10 to join, so you can step into the experience, follow your curiosity, and see what’s possible for you without overthinking it. Five days. One finished pattern. A completely different way of seeing yourself creatively. That sketchbook has been waiting long enough, are you in? 🤔 Let’s begin!
If you've been craving a joyful creative practice that's fun and feels like play... this is your moment. Not just saving inspiration to a Pinterest board and calling it a day. But actually watching something take shape in your sketchbook, step by step, until it becomes something real. Something you can hold and say, I did that. I made that! ✨That’s the magic of Pattern Week.✨ Next week. from May 18–22, you'll get to experience the same playful pattern making that Pattern Play members look forward to every single month. Here’s what we’ll do together: 🌿 Gather inspiration and build a color story that feels like you 🌿 Fill your sketchbook with loose, imperfect, surprisingly beautiful marks 🌿 Turn those marks into a seamless repeat pattern in Illustrator 🌿 Bring your design to life on real product like: fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap 🌿 End the week holding proof that you didn’t just imagine it… you made it There’s something kindddd of magical about that moment. When an idea that lives quietly in your head suddenly exists in the world… in color, in pattern, in form. And the best part is, this isn’t reserved for “real artists” or people who already know what they’re doing. It’s designed to guide you there, gently and clearly, one step at a time. It’s just $10 to join, so you can step into the experience, follow your curiosity, and see what’s possible for you without overthinking it. Five days. One finished pattern. A completely different way of seeing yourself creatively. That sketchbook has been waiting long enough, are you in? 🤔 Let’s begin! | If you've been craving a joyful creative practice that's fun and feels like play... this is your moment. Not just saving inspiration to a Pinterest board and calling it a day. But actually watching something take shape in your sketchbook, step by step, until it becomes something real. Something you can hold and say, I did that. I made that! ✨That’s the magic of Pattern Week.✨ Next week. from May 18–22, you'll get to experience the same playful pattern making that Pattern Play members look forward to every single month. Here’s what we’ll do together: 🌿 Gather inspiration and build a color story that feels like you 🌿 Fill your sketchbook with loose, imperfect, surprisingly beautiful marks 🌿 Turn those marks into a seamless repeat pattern in Illustrator 🌿 Bring your design to life on real product like: fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap 🌿 End the week holding proof that you didn’t just imagine it… you made it There’s something kindddd of magical about that moment. When an idea that lives quietly in your head suddenly exists in the world… in color, in pattern, in form. And the best part is, this isn’t reserved for “real artists” or people who already know what they’re doing. It’s designed to guide you there, gently and clearly, one step at a time. It’s just $10 to join, so you can step into the experience, follow your curiosity, and see what’s possible for you without overthinking it. Five days. One finished pattern. A completely different way of seeing yourself creatively. That sketchbook has been waiting long enough, are you in? 🤔 Let’s begin! | If you've been craving a joyful creative practice that's fun and feels like play... this is your moment. Not just saving inspiration to a Pinterest board and calling it a day. But actually watching something take shape in your sketchbook, step by step, until it becomes something real. Something you can hold and say, I did that. I made that! ✨That’s the magic of Pattern Week.✨ Next week. from May 18–22, you'll get to experience the same playful pattern making that Pattern Play members look forward to every single month. Here’s what we’ll do together: 🌿 Gather inspiration and build a color story that feels like you 🌿 Fill your sketchbook with loose, imperfect, surprisingly beautiful marks 🌿 Turn those marks into a seamless repeat pattern in Illustrator 🌿 Bring your design to life on real product like: fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap 🌿 End the week holding proof that you didn’t just imagine it… you made it There’s something kindddd of magical about that moment. When an idea that lives quietly in your head suddenly exists in the world… in color, in pattern, in form. And the best part is, this isn’t reserved for “real artists” or people who already know what they’re doing. It’s designed to guide you there, gently and clearly, one step at a time. It’s just $10 to join, so you can step into the experience, follow your curiosity, and see what’s possible for you without overthinking it. Five days. One finished pattern. A completely different way of seeing yourself creatively. That sketchbook has been waiting long enough, are you in? 🤔 Let’s begin!
I spent 4.5 hours searching for an SVG file last Tuesday. Tonight I made 7 projects in 3 hours. My name is Emma. I’m 41, marketing coordinator, mom of three. Not a professional crafter. Just someone who loves making things. Or at least, I used to love it. Six months ago, my sister asked me to make a custom mug for her best friend's birthday. Simple request. Dog's name, some paw prints, maybe a cute saying. “No problem,” I told her. “Give me a week.” That Tuesday night, after the kids went to bed, I sat down to find the perfect design. Opened my laptop at 8:47 PM. “This should take 20 minutes,” I thought. I searched Etsy. Found one. Cute but not quite right. Searched Creative Fabrica. Found another. Close, but the font was wrong. Checked Pinterest for inspiration. Clicked through to three different sites. Each design was almost perfect. But not quite. Too cartoony. Too serious. Too generic. Too busy. By 10 PM, I had 19 browser tabs open. By 11 PM, I’d downloaded three “free samples” that looked terrible once I opened them. By midnight, I’d bought two designs for $8.99 each. Neither was exactly what I wanted. I finally closed my laptop at 1:14 AM. Empty-handed. Exhausted. Frustrated. My husband walked by. “Still working on that?” That TONE. Like I was being ridiculous. Like I was wasting time on something stupid. I wanted to explain that I wasn’t being picky. That I was just trying to find the RIGHT design. That it shouldn’t be this hard. But I couldn’t explain it. Because he was right. Four and a half hours. For a mug design. The next day, I told my sister I was too busy. She bought a mug from Target instead. That’s when I started keeping track. I created a note in my phone. Just timestamps. “Started looking: 9:15 PM” “Gave up: 11:42 PM” Time wasted: 2 hours 27 minutes. “Started looking: 2:30 PM Saturday” “Finally settled: 6:18 PM” Time wasted: 3 hours 48 minutes. “Started looking: 8:00 PM” “Still looking: 12:35 AM” Time wasted: 4 hours 35 minutes. In three weeks, I’d spent 23 hours searching for designs. TWENTY-THREE HOURS. That’s almost a full work day. Three nights of sleep. An entire weekend. And you know what I made during those 23 hours? Nothing. Because I spent all my “craft time” looking. Not creating. My daughter asked me to help with a poster for her Heritage Day project. I said no. Not because I couldn’t help. Because I couldn’t face another 4-hour search session. My neighbor mentioned she wanted custom party decorations. I changed the subject. A coworker asked if I still do “that Cricut stuff.” “Not really anymore,” I lied. I’d stopped calling it a hobby. It had become a source of stress. 80% searching. 20% making. And the 20% was never even that good, because by the time I found a design, I was too exhausted to care about the actual crafting. Three weeks ago, I couldn’t sleep. Lying in bed at 2:30 AM, scrolling Instagram. I saw a post from someone in a craft group. She’d made 12 different projects that week. Twelve. THAT WEEK. I’d made one project in the last month. Someone commented: “How do you find time for all this??” Her response: “I stopped wasting time searching. Invested in a massive design bundle a year ago. Now I just make stuff.” I clicked her profile. She wasn’t some Instagram influencer. She was a middle school teacher with two kids. Just like me. Except she was actually CREATING. I DMed her at 2:47 AM. “Can I ask what bundle you use? I spend hours searching and I’m losing my mind.” She responded the next morning. “Cutify Studio. 150,000 designs. I know that sounds insane but I haven’t searched for an SVG in over a year. When I need something, I search MY library. Takes 2 minutes max.” Two minutes. I’d spent 4.5 hours last Tuesday. That afternoon, I bought it. $39 during their sale. I almost didn’t. “What if I still can’t find what I need?” “What if it’s overwhelming?” “What if it’s a waste?” But I thought about those 23 hours. About my sister’s mug I never made. About my daughter’s poster I said no to. I downloaded it that night. Opened the folder. Typed “dog paw” in the search. Sixty-three results appeared instantly. Different styles. Different vibes. Cute, elegant, funny, minimal. I picked one. Downloaded it. Opened Design Space. Total time: 90 seconds. I sat there staring at my screen. Ninety seconds. What used to take me 4.5 hours took 90 seconds. That weekend, I made my sister’s mug. Found the design in 45 seconds. Made the actual mug in 20 minutes. Then I made a birthday card for my nephew. Found a dinosaur design in 30 seconds. Then wine glass markers for a friend. Found the perfect sayings in under a minute. By Sunday night, I’d made 7 projects. Seven. In one weekend. Do you know how many projects I made the ENTIRE previous month? One. Because I’d spent all my time searching instead of creating. Monday morning, my daughter asked again about her Heritage Day poster. “Can you help me make it really special?” “Yes,” I said immediately. We made it together that night. Italian flag elements. Shamrocks. Family photos. Custom text. Found every design I needed in under 5 minutes total. Spent 90 minutes actually CREATING with her. She brought it to school. Texted me at lunch: “Everyone is asking if you do this for other people!!” That weekend, three moms from her school reached out. One wanted birthday party decorations. $85. One wanted teacher appreciation gifts. $120. One wanted custom tumblers for her book club. $140. I said yes to all three. Because I wasn’t afraid anymore. I wasn’t afraid of losing entire evenings to searching. I wasn’t afraid of frustration and wasted time. I knew I could find what I needed in minutes, not hours. Last month, I made $380 from craft projects. This month I’m at $520. But honestly? The money isn’t even the best part. The best part is my husband walking by and seeing me MAKING something. Not scrolling. Not searching. Not frustrated. Actually creating. The best part is saying YES when my daughter asks for help. The best part is going to bed at 10:30 instead of 1 AM because I’m not trapped in a search spiral. The best part is loving this again. Last night, I made four custom frames for a client. Start to finish: 2 hours. Six months ago, I would have spent 2 hours just LOOKING for the designs. And I would have been too exhausted to actually make anything. I’m not sharing this because I work for some SVG company. I’m sharing this because if you’re reading this at midnight with 20 browser tabs open… If you’ve ever said no to someone because you couldn’t face another search session… If you’ve spent more time looking than making… It’s not you. You’re not being too picky. You’re not being indecisive. You’re not bad at this. You’re just searching in the wrong place. You need what that Instagram teacher had. What I have now. A library so complete that you never leave it. Because the real joy of crafting isn’t in finding the perfect design. It’s in having an idea and bringing it to life immediately. The bundle that changed everything for me is called Cutify Studio. Same sale I bought it during is happening now. I can’t tell you what to do. But I can tell you that I wish someone had told me about this six months ago. I would have saved 23 hours in just three weeks. That’s 23 hours I could have spent actually creating. Or with my kids. Or sleeping. Instead of searching. Check your phone. Look at your timestamps. Add up your hours. Then ask yourself: What would you do with that time back? Because you can get it back. Starting tonight. 👉 https://cutifystudio.com/premiumsvgs-eu-eng | I spent 4.5 hours searching for an SVG file last Tuesday. Tonight I made 7 projects in 3 hours. My name is Emma. I’m 41, marketing coordinator, mom of three. Not a professional crafter. Just someone who loves making things. Or at least, I used to love it. Six months ago, my sister asked me to make a custom mug for her best friend's birthday. Simple request. Dog's name, some paw prints, maybe a cute saying. “No problem,” I told her. “Give me a week.” That Tuesday night, after the kids went to bed, I sat down to find the perfect design. Opened my laptop at 8:47 PM. “This should take 20 minutes,” I thought. I searched Etsy. Found one. Cute but not quite right. Searched Creative Fabrica. Found another. Close, but the font was wrong. Checked Pinterest for inspiration. Clicked through to three different sites. Each design was almost perfect. But not quite. Too cartoony. Too serious. Too generic. Too busy. By 10 PM, I had 19 browser tabs open. By 11 PM, I’d downloaded three “free samples” that looked terrible once I opened them. By midnight, I’d bought two designs for $8.99 each. Neither was exactly what I wanted. I finally closed my laptop at 1:14 AM. Empty-handed. Exhausted. Frustrated. My husband walked by. “Still working on that?” That TONE. Like I was being ridiculous. Like I was wasting time on something stupid. I wanted to explain that I wasn’t being picky. That I was just trying to find the RIGHT design. That it shouldn’t be this hard. But I couldn’t explain it. Because he was right. Four and a half hours. For a mug design. The next day, I told my sister I was too busy. She bought a mug from Target instead. That’s when I started keeping track. I created a note in my phone. Just timestamps. “Started looking: 9:15 PM” “Gave up: 11:42 PM” Time wasted: 2 hours 27 minutes. “Started looking: 2:30 PM Saturday” “Finally settled: 6:18 PM” Time wasted: 3 hours 48 minutes. “Started looking: 8:00 PM” “Still looking: 12:35 AM” Time wasted: 4 hours 35 minutes. In three weeks, I’d spent 23 hours searching for designs. TWENTY-THREE HOURS. That’s almost a full work day. Three nights of sleep. An entire weekend. And you know what I made during those 23 hours? Nothing. Because I spent all my “craft time” looking. Not creating. My daughter asked me to help with a poster for her Heritage Day project. I said no. Not because I couldn’t help. Because I couldn’t face another 4-hour search session. My neighbor mentioned she wanted custom party decorations. I changed the subject. A coworker asked if I still do “that Cricut stuff.” “Not really anymore,” I lied. I’d stopped calling it a hobby. It had become a source of stress. 80% searching. 20% making. And the 20% was never even that good, because by the time I found a design, I was too exhausted to care about the actual crafting. Three weeks ago, I couldn’t sleep. Lying in bed at 2:30 AM, scrolling Instagram. I saw a post from someone in a craft group. She’d made 12 different projects that week. Twelve. THAT WEEK. I’d made one project in the last month. Someone commented: “How do you find time for all this??” Her response: “I stopped wasting time searching. Invested in a massive design bundle a year ago. Now I just make stuff.” I clicked her profile. She wasn’t some Instagram influencer. She was a middle school teacher with two kids. Just like me. Except she was actually CREATING. I DMed her at 2:47 AM. “Can I ask what bundle you use? I spend hours searching and I’m losing my mind.” She responded the next morning. “Cutify Studio. 150,000 designs. I know that sounds insane but I haven’t searched for an SVG in over a year. When I need something, I search MY library. Takes 2 minutes max.” Two minutes. I’d spent 4.5 hours last Tuesday. That afternoon, I bought it. $39 during their sale. I almost didn’t. “What if I still can’t find what I need?” “What if it’s overwhelming?” “What if it’s a waste?” But I thought about those 23 hours. About my sister’s mug I never made. About my daughter’s poster I said no to. I downloaded it that night. Opened the folder. Typed “dog paw” in the search. Sixty-three results appeared instantly. Different styles. Different vibes. Cute, elegant, funny, minimal. I picked one. Downloaded it. Opened Design Space. Total time: 90 seconds. I sat there staring at my screen. Ninety seconds. What used to take me 4.5 hours took 90 seconds. That weekend, I made my sister’s mug. Found the design in 45 seconds. Made the actual mug in 20 minutes. Then I made a birthday card for my nephew. Found a dinosaur design in 30 seconds. Then wine glass markers for a friend. Found the perfect sayings in under a minute. By Sunday night, I’d made 7 projects. Seven. In one weekend. Do you know how many projects I made the ENTIRE previous month? One. Because I’d spent all my time searching instead of creating. Monday morning, my daughter asked again about her Heritage Day poster. “Can you help me make it really special?” “Yes,” I said immediately. We made it together that night. Italian flag elements. Shamrocks. Family photos. Custom text. Found every design I needed in under 5 minutes total. Spent 90 minutes actually CREATING with her. She brought it to school. Texted me at lunch: “Everyone is asking if you do this for other people!!” That weekend, three moms from her school reached out. One wanted birthday party decorations. $85. One wanted teacher appreciation gifts. $120. One wanted custom tumblers for her book club. $140. I said yes to all three. Because I wasn’t afraid anymore. I wasn’t afraid of losing entire evenings to searching. I wasn’t afraid of frustration and wasted time. I knew I could find what I needed in minutes, not hours. Last month, I made $380 from craft projects. This month I’m at $520. But honestly? The money isn’t even the best part. The best part is my husband walking by and seeing me MAKING something. Not scrolling. Not searching. Not frustrated. Actually creating. The best part is saying YES when my daughter asks for help. The best part is going to bed at 10:30 instead of 1 AM because I’m not trapped in a search spiral. The best part is loving this again. Last night, I made four custom frames for a client. Start to finish: 2 hours. Six months ago, I would have spent 2 hours just LOOKING for the designs. And I would have been too exhausted to actually make anything. I’m not sharing this because I work for some SVG company. I’m sharing this because if you’re reading this at midnight with 20 browser tabs open… If you’ve ever said no to someone because you couldn’t face another search session… If you’ve spent more time looking than making… It’s not you. You’re not being too picky. You’re not being indecisive. You’re not bad at this. You’re just searching in the wrong place. You need what that Instagram teacher had. What I have now. A library so complete that you never leave it. Because the real joy of crafting isn’t in finding the perfect design. It’s in having an idea and bringing it to life immediately. The bundle that changed everything for me is called Cutify Studio. Same sale I bought it during is happening now. I can’t tell you what to do. But I can tell you that I wish someone had told me about this six months ago. I would have saved 23 hours in just three weeks. That’s 23 hours I could have spent actually creating. Or with my kids. Or sleeping. Instead of searching. Check your phone. Look at your timestamps. Add up your hours. Then ask yourself: What would you do with that time back? Because you can get it back. Starting tonight. 👉 https://cutifystudio.com/premiumsvgs-eu-eng