{"title":"What to Do With Fabric Scraps: 5 Zero-Waste Sewing Projects","canonicalUrl":"https://www.craftingstepbystep.com/sewing/what-to-do-with-fabric-scraps","category":{"slug":"sewing","name":"Sewing"},"creator":{"name":"Sweet Smiling Soul","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCAJLU52CKLbheTU7mIvakaw","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eL4TRIbn0Mk"},"tldr":"Five scrap-busting sewing projects that use up leftover fabric: tulle-quilted pouch, patchwork tote, cat cushion, overalls, and fabric dollhouse.","totalDurationSeconds":848,"difficulty":"medium","tools":["Sewing machine","Fabric scissors","Rotary cutter and self-healing mat","Iron and ironing board","Sewing pins","Zipper foot","Serger (optional, for the overalls)"],"materials":["Fabric scraps (any size)","Base fabric for pouches and totes","Tulle (for the trapped-scrap technique)","Lining fabric","20 cm zipper (for the pouch)","Fiberfill or saved scrap trimmings (for cushion and doll)","Felt sheets (for the dollhouse)","All-purpose thread","Light fusible interfacing"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Sort Your Scraps Before You Start","text":"Pull the scrap stash out and spread it across a table so you can see what you have. Lauren keeps two containers: a box of usable off-cuts and a separate bag of tiny trimmings and fibre bits she saves for stuffing. Group the larger pieces by rough size and colour family so they are easier to grab when you start a project.Do not toss the frayed bits or the weird shapes. Every piece in the pile earns a place in one of the five makes coming up, and the smallest scraps are exactly what the dollhouse and the cat cushion need."},{"number":2,"title":"Make a Scrappy Zipper Pouch with Tulle","text":"Cut a base layer of fabric the size you want the finished pouch to be. Lay scraps loosely across the base, overlapping the raw edges however you like - no need to trim anything straight. Cover the whole top with a layer of tulle, then quilt across it in close parallel lines through every layer.The tulle traps each scrap in place and stops the raw edges from fraying further. Once the front and back panels are quilted, add a 20 cm zip across the top and a lining inside, then sew the pouch together along the sides and bottom. The whole make comes together in an afternoon."},{"number":3,"title":"Build a Patchwork Tote Bag with Loose Scraps","text":"Same tulle-and-quilt method, but skip the trimming entirely. Rummage the scrap box, drop pieces straight onto the base fabric in their original shape, and overlap them like a collage. Lauren only trims the most badly frayed edges - everything else stays as-is, which keeps waste down.Lay tulle over the top, quilt it down across both panels, then assemble the tote with two patchwork sides and a pair of handles. As you trim the seam allowances, drop the off-cuts into your stuffing bag for the next project on this list."},{"number":4,"title":"Sew a Reversible Patchwork Cat Cushion","text":"This one is the fully zero-waste pick. Cut squares from your scrap pile and sew them together panel by panel for the back of the cushion. For the front, applique a simple cat face onto a plain panel - two triangles for ears, a triangle nose, and stitched whiskers.Join the two sides into a cushion cover and leave an opening for stuffing. Then pack it tight with the trimmings, thread snips, macrame cord, and embroidery floss you have been collecting. The cushion ends up dense enough to sit up on its own, and nothing goes to landfill."},{"number":5,"title":"Piece Together Patchwork Overalls","text":"Grab a dungarees pattern - Lauren uses the one from Make It Yours The Label. Instead of cutting each pattern piece from a single fabric, cut smaller squares and rectangles from your scraps and sew them into larger panels first. Mix prints you would never normally pair. The clash is what makes it work.Run every seam through a serger so the patchwork is secure and washable. Once you have enough finished panels, lay your pattern pieces on top and cut them out, then assemble the overalls the same way you would from regular yardage."},{"number":6,"title":"Stitch a Fabric Doll and Dollhouse Storybook","text":"Tiny scraps are perfect for tiny features. Use a pattern - Lauren sells her own dollhouse storybook pattern - and cut the doll, her clothing, and the little book pages from your smallest pieces, the ones you would normally toss. Mix fabric with felt for the firmer shapes like the cubby house, the boat, and the little furniture.Hand-stitch the smallest details so you can place them exactly. The whole book folds up like a suitcase when it is closed, and the inside uses almost nothing but stash. This is the project most likely to convert your scrap pile into something you will keep forever."},{"number":7,"title":"Set Up a Scrap-Saving Habit","text":"Two containers, kept near your machine. One box for usable scraps sorted loosely by size, one bag for the tiny trimmings and thread that is too small for anything else. Whenever you finish a project, sort the leftovers into the right one before you put the machine away.The big-scrap box feeds patchwork projects like the pouch, the tote, and the overalls. The trimmings bag becomes stuffing for the cushion and the doll. Use what you have before you buy new fabric - the pile shrinks fast when every project pulls from it."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-20T13:31:24.768Z","published":"2026-05-18T15:44:04.580Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}