Posts Tagged ‘needle felting’

Felted Things

Thursday, June 16th, 2011

There was no tutorial on Monday, was there? That’s what happens when you are working overtime and coincidentally traveling across the country (taxi, plane, bus (okay okay, shuttle), rental car, carpool, boat. Oh well! Also our internet here was pretty non existent the first part of the week. Suck. After the excessive amount I worked the last two weeks (over and above the mom stuff…) I think I am mostly done for a little while though, so hopefully I can get on to some other things. But I can’t lie, I have been squeezing in some felting, it is so fast and rewarding!

What a cute fairy! (I’m allowed to say that, right?) This took about an hour, the perfect easy project. And I’ve learned that if you want to make a tiny dot with needle felting, just don’t move your needle, keep jabbing it up and down in exactly the same spot, and the random clump of fuzz you stuck on top of your project will eventually all get sucked into that exact spot. Eyes! And what is that amazing pod she is in?

A Bottle Tree pod! (Brachychiton populneus I think.) These are so cool. Fortunately there is a bottle tree across the street from our library! And another more productive one up the street. Unfortunately they are covered on the inside with tiny cactus like spines that are apparently used for itching powder. Yuck! Luckily they are pretty easy to scrape out with a tooth pick. I am so in love with these things right now. I planted some seeds in our yard before we left, but I doubt they will actually germinate magically all alone while I am gone. When I get back I will have to see what I can do with any of the seeds left.

They make such great bases for needle felting little things! This sprout was a little tough, the first time I tried to make the leaves I totally over-felted the joint in between them trying to make it nicely narrow to join with the stem, and it weakened. I ended up just pulling the leaves off the wonky middle and re-felting them together and to the stem. I need to remember that felt is not clay, and it can get over-worked and fragile. With the do-over this probably took me more like an hour and a half. And I did some random wet-felting of it in the middle. Because if you can’t mix up your techniques… um, that is boring?

And here is a prosaic half hour project, a lavender rice bag, except it is made out of more of that cashmere sweater. I was immediately required to make two more for Rebecca and Penelope (this was for a sick little friend) and they started carrying them around everywhere calling them their snugglies. I need to find another Goodwill cashmere sweater, because this one is starting to run out!

Needle Felting as Applique or A Monster for Abby

Monday, May 23rd, 2011

Needle felting is such a wonderfully simple technique, but so many people seem skittish about trying it. This is a stuffed monster that I made for a friend’s 5 month old, it is a standard two piece turn and stuff construction made out of a felted cashmere sweater. It is SO soft! (If I ran the world all baby plushies would be made out of felted cashmere rather than plastic fleece or fur.)

The point of note is that rather than sewing on felt for eyes I just needle felted all of the features on. It gives everything a soft organic look, and you don’t need to worry about cutting tiny circles out, tiny circles are easy when you are needle felting! To make a tiny circle you just take a few hairs of roving and roll them around in your fingers until they form a loose ball, and then, as everything with needle felting, just stick it where you want it and start jabbing the hell out of it with a barbed felting needle.

When I started needle felting I just bought a felting tool and started using it on everything. I got comments like “You can needle felt acrylic felt?” sure, it has fibers. The felting tool is good for tangling up fibers. It has fibers, especially loose ones, you can needle felt it. Remember the ravioli? I experimented with making those with printed quilting cotton on one side. You can needle felt quilting cotton?? Well, you can felt things *onto* quilting cotton. Tightly woven fabrics are pretty insistent on remaining themselves, but if you put roving or felt on top of quilting cotton, you can jab it through the woven fibers and create a free form applique on top of it. It helps if you then flip it over, you will see lots of fluff sticking through the back side of the fabric, scramble the back around and then jab it back through to the front side, and then back again, then with some fibers making a loopy round trip it will be quite secure.

Would anyone like some basic tutorials on I’ve-never-done-this-before needle felting?

Needlefelted Matryoshka

Monday, May 16th, 2011

I got the idea for these from this picture of ‘Felt Wool Cute Zakka’ from FeltCafe’s photostream. Theirs are cuter, but mine are still cute! Even if the green one looks more like she is wearing a parka than a shawl…

Rebecca insisted that since it was ‘Children’s Day’ last week (okay, so officially it was the 5th) I needed to make her a present, since she’d gotten me a present for Mother’s day. Which technically I both suggested and bought. But we are politely ignoring that. I’d just been perusing FeltCafe’s photostream and picking out my favorite inspirations, so I flipped through them and suggested a few possibilities. The smaller one is Rebecca’s, and then I had to make Penelope one so she would stop stealing Rebecca’s. I’m pretty sure that Penelope lost hers at the library within a few hours of getting it though. We’ll see if it turns up. :-/ I have learned, you see, that I need to photograph things *before* I give them to my children, or it’s all over.

Needlefelting Totoro

Monday, April 18th, 2011

It turns out that Totoros are easy shapes to needle felt, being mostly egg shaped. I was working from the picture in the front of the Totoro from-the-movie book, and I think it’s really interesting how differently the two Chu Totoros turned out. Since I was aiming for the same shape, obviously I am not an expert at this! But they are still both recognizable. The first Chu Totoro went to a Totoro loving friend for their birthday, and the second Chu Totoro and Chibi Totoro have joined our official Ghibli O-Totoro. Now I just need one of those super big Cat Busses to stuff them all in! Except for how we already have a little Cat Bus, and I really don’t need any more stuffed animals in this house! I would like to make a camphor tree for them to play in, but before I’m allowed to make it I need to figure out where we could keep it!

Also, if you want to teach your children to wet-felt, the bathtub is a great place to start! Rebecca and Penelope were in the bathtub, and I gave them some wet soapy balls of wool, and they rolled them and rolled them, dunked them in a bowl of ice water to thermal shock them, and rolled them, and dunked them back in the bath, and rolled them and… I remember last time we tried to do wet felting they got water everywhere, got wet, and then got bored. This time they were already in the bathtub, so immediately 50% better.

Rebecca wet felted a ball, then after everyone was out of the bath she needle felted it purple (since we didn’t have any black roving), added two eyes, and presto, her very own soot-sprite! That she pretty much made herself! (And I have no picture of because it got lost almost immediately…)

And a question I would really like to hear your answer to: Would you rather an electronic pattern have the steps documented by photographs or illustrations?

Activity Blanket

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

quilt

I have such a hard time taking pictures of quilts around here. It would be nice if I had a lovely blank wall to tack them up against, but usually the best I can do is spreading it on the floor, and climbing up on something precarious to shoot a picture straight down. But I’m not really up for that right now! Not that this is even very recent, I made it, oh heavens, two months ago now! It’s been sitting in my to-blog-about pile for quite a while I guess! Must have been a lazy day. Really, looking at the colors on this now makes me a bit cross-eyed, hopefully the baby likes it.

This was a pretty quick project, I made it in a couple of days I think. The robot has stretchy arms, and felt buttons and a needle felted head. I was going to leave the head as something floppy to play with, but the felt was too heavy, and was always looking at the ground. The felt was great for fast applique because I didn’t need to worry about ironing it, or edging it, and it won’t fray. The arms have elastic in them, they are tubes with the elastic atatched at each end. I think I should have sewn down them too, because the fabric wants to slip down over the hands. Hrm.

DSC_4138

When I first decided I was done with this there was nothing behind the door/windows on the house, they were just floppy shapes to play with. But Rebecca informed me that that was NOT acceptable, and there needed to be something behind the doors. Duh mom. And she’s obviously right, I was just in lazy denial. So I needlefelted some felt shapes into faces with the eye shape mirroring the head shape. And that was much better.

For the third lazy of the day, for the first time I bought quilt binding. I don’t think I’ll do that again, because I didn’t realize it wasn’t cotton. So that’s a bit icky if you ask me. I did add a loop at the ‘top’ so it can be easily hung up or dragged around.

There are probably lots of busy-book sorts of activities that you could turn into a blanket, that would be pretty fun. I think blankets with activities built in would be good for stroller blankets. And park blankets. Quiet time blankets, but not naptime blankets. Which is okay, because they are kind of lumpy anyway.

Hollow Wet Felted Eggs

Friday, April 10th, 2009

Eggs

More eggs! I made these with Rebecca last week. We used mini plastic easter eggs as the center, covered in duct tape so they were water tight, wrapped them generously in organic wool roving, (which smelled wonderfully of lanolin), and then added a little colored roving from a juggling ball kit I never made. The color pallet was a little limited, next time/year I’ll get out the Procion dyes and make colors my way. Or maybe we’ll use cabbage and beets and turmeric. Or maybe I’ll have more juggling kit left next year, and I’ll still be lazy. Yah.

We hand felted two of them in a bowl of soapy water, and the rest we made into a nylon sausage and put in with a couple of consecutive loads of laundry. The machine felted ones came out more round than egg shaped, it would be fixable with a little more felting if I wasn’t feeling lazy. I threw them in the dryer too.

Then this morning I cut the eggs out of the middle. I was procrastinating, and really worried that everything would fall apart, but the first one worked! Yay! The rest worked too. This is probably the easy way to make stuffable natural easter eggs, if you have wool roving around. They seem pretty sturdy, and you can make the opening however large you want, as long as it’s big enough to get the egg form out. Pulling those eggs out a minimal hole was a bit disturbingly like giving birth. I’m going to have that as a birth image in August now, aren’t I? Darn.

We used these basic instructions from an AP news article. It was in a bunch of different papers if this particular link breaks, search for “felted wool eggs associated press” and you should find something.

I turned one of them into a little head with some needle felting too. I can’t decide if it’s creepy or not. But hey, I bet they would make good hollow heads for halloween candy! Woo! Creepy hollow heads for candy stuffing, now I know what I’m going to be doing in october. Good thing I have some black dye. Then we can have a shrunken head hunt around the house… that’s going to be fun… heheheheh