Drops-Of-Happy – Puzzle

$35.00
I wanted to make something that felt like joy scattered across a surface. No grand narrative, no single focal point, just a lot of color arranged in a way that makes you smile when you look at it. The piece is built from hundreds of individual quilled paper teardrop shapes. Each one starts as a thin strip of colored paper, rolled into a coil, then pinched at both ends to form that characteristic leaf or petal shape. I made them in every color I could find: hot pinks, deep purples, ocean blues, forest greens, bright oranges, warm golds, soft yellows, and cool teals. Some have solid color throughout. Others are striped, where I rolled two or three different colored strips together to create that gradient effect inside each drop. The white borders on every piece come from the paper's edge, which gives the whole composition a stitched, handmade quality. I arranged them tightly across a pale purple background, angling each drop in a slightly different direction so they feel loose and organic rather than gridded. There's a real rhythm to it once you start looking. Your eye doesn't rest in one spot. It bounces from the pink cluster on the left to the green concentration in the center to the purple streak running down the right side. The density is consistent across the whole piece, which keeps the energy level steady. Nothing fights for dominance. It all matters equally. This one is exactly what the title suggests. It's happy. No apologies, no layers of meaning underneath. Just color and shape and a whole lot of small things that add up to something bigger. --- At puzzle size, the composition breaks into natural zones of color that make the build satisfying. The scattered arrangement means you're working from multiple entry points at once rather than building outward from a center. The dense clusters of hot pink and purple give you plenty of detailed pieces to work with in the middle, while the lighter areas scattered throughout offer a different kind of satisfaction. The pale purple background holds the whole thing together visually while you're building.
I wanted to make something that felt like joy scattered across a surface. No grand narrative, no single focal point, just a lot of color arranged in a way that makes you smile when you look at it. The piece is built from hundreds of individual quilled paper teardrop shapes. Each one starts as a thin strip of colored paper, rolled into a coil, then pinched at both ends to form that characteristic leaf or petal shape. I made them in every color I could find: hot pinks, deep purples, ocean blues, forest greens, bright oranges, warm golds, soft yellows, and cool teals. Some have solid color throughout. Others are striped, where I rolled two or three different colored strips together to create that gradient effect inside each drop. The white borders on every piece come from the paper's edge, which gives the whole composition a stitched, handmade quality. I arranged them tightly across a pale purple background, angling each drop in a slightly different direction so they feel loose and organic rather than gridded. There's a real rhythm to it once you start looking. Your eye doesn't rest in one spot. It bounces from the pink cluster on the left to the green concentration in the center to the purple streak running down the right side. The density is consistent across the whole piece, which keeps the energy level steady. Nothing fights for dominance. It all matters equally. This one is exactly what the title suggests. It's happy. No apologies, no layers of meaning underneath. Just color and shape and a whole lot of small things that add up to something bigger. --- At puzzle size, the composition breaks into natural zones of color that make the build satisfying. The scattered arrangement means you're working from multiple entry points at once rather than building outward from a center. The dense clusters of hot pink and purple give you plenty of detailed pieces to work with in the middle, while the lighter areas scattered throughout offer a different kind of satisfaction. The pale purple background holds the whole thing together visually while you're building.