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Archive for the ‘felting class’ Category

I returned on Sunday evening from the felting workshop, filled with exciting new techniques and lots of inspiration, eager to try out and experiment. I met seven wonderful fellow-felters and, of course, Lisa herself in all her energetic liveliness. She is such a professional, it is unbelievable!!! To see her unique (and I mean most unique) work “live” was just amazing.

She asked to not post any pictures of her or the participants, but I can show you what I worked on, although her teachings are less about how to produce and reproduce one item, but rather how to get to what you want to make. Very technique-driven, a lot of algebra, the perfectionism of which really appealed to me. I love working small and precise. My son rightly compared my experience to the old parable of learning how to fish rather than being given the fish. This is how I feel – the empowered felter…

We did some color grading by blending/carding it in different percentages,

P1130943 laid out wool to prepare partial felts in different weights,P1130945 three different weights here,P1130948 four different weights here,P1130952 an example of the kind of math that is required to reach your goal,P1130953based on her little bell pendantsP1130968I color-blended and laid out wool at 0.4 grams per square inch,
P1130963and arrived here together with the others (mine is the one in the middle),
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P1130971 another preparation using the partial felts from the beginning and 0.2 grams of wool per square inch,P1130975 which turned into this little pendant (like I said, all experiments…),P1130987 here we used the heavier of the partial felts to experience the effect,P1130990 P1130991 P1130993 and all of this in a beautiful spot on the coast…P1130980 it was perfectly magical!P1130982P.S. Check out Lisa’s Strongfelt page to find a workshop – if you are interested in some serious felting, it is really worth it.

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My box (with materials) and my little suitcase (with clothes and toothbrush) and my bag (with a selection of about 15 books and magazines) are all packed, as I am off early tomorrow morning to attend a three-day workshop with felting artist Lisa Klakulak. I can’t believe I’m going!!! I can’t wait to meet her in person and to learn fabulous new things. I have admired her wonderful work for quite a while now and am so thrilled to be part of this workshop!

The theme of the workshop? “Resist-based Pendants: hollow forms, found object inclusion and dimensional surfaces (intermediate, advanced)” – music to my ears. Can you hear it?

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All the following objects are pictures taken from the book “1000 Artisan Textiles“  – not to be confused with anything I ever made, as I bow in awe of her craftmanship and artistic talent (actually any book on felting and textile arts has images of  STRONGFELT’s works in them).P1130941

P1130936 P1130937 P1130938 P1130939 P1130940

Apart from the various bags and boxes (see above) I will also bring my still unfinished embroidery piece and after 6 hours of felting I will sit down in my cosy Bed & Breakfast and do some stitching. I am not quite sure how realistic this is…but, the occasions when I go away by myself for such a treat of a week-end are very rare. Very rare, indeed, and I am determined to enjoy every minute of it.P1130942

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I never showed you the tea cozy I made during my summer class in Germany in action. While I prefer tea most of the time, I don’t mind a cup of coffee in between, and the cozy fits perfectly on top of my Bodum French Press – bought about 20 years ago at Bewley’s Cafe in Dublin, Ireland…this old French Press has traveled quite a bit in the meantime.

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During our stay in Germany I took a day off and spent it with two of my dearest friends – felting! I had read about this day in the German felting magazine FUN  a few weeks before heading over to Europe and both my friends spontaneously agreed to share the day with me.

The workshop was entitled “Felting and Plant Dyeing” and run by Barbara Eichhorn and Ute Gellenthien in Barbara’s beautiful home. Everybody could make whatever they wished to try out, dye it or not, dye it beforehand or after. Help (uncomplicated, unjudgmental, humorous, pragmatic help!) was offered to make any idea a reality.

the felted and felting yurt

our teacher Barbara

some of the finished objects (I made the purple tea cosy, top left of the picture…)

…which went into the dye pot looking like this!

If you are ever in the neighborhood, I can recommend taking a class with Barbara, she clearly loves teaching and has an abundance of experience to share. I really enjoyed seeing other felters in action, their approach, their shortcuts – learnt a lot – and had a great day with my friends. Perfect!

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Apart from crafting with first grade, I work on wet-felting projects with 5th grade and 7th grade every week. While the 7th graders are (to an extent) deciding on their own individual projects and designing them themselves, the 5th grade class has been working on a group/class project all year. In tune with one of their main themes this year – botany – we felted pieces of a big tree, in rotating groups of about 10 students at a time. The pieces have just been dyed and are going to be sewn, patchwork style, onto a sturdy piece of fabric. The finished piece of art will adorn their classroom wall, or possibly a more public wall within the school.

After we had collected enough pieces (felted in the three basic techniques: rope, ball, flat surface) we laid them out to decide on which pieces would become which part of the tree.

The green piece of felt underneath is obviously not the one we are going to use to assemble the tree. I underestimated the size by a lot.

The next step delighted the 11- and 12-year-olds immensely: we sun-dyed the pieces in unsweetened Kool-Aid*. The drink powder acts just like an acid dye, which is what you use to color animal, or protein fiber. It is a very easy and fool-proof way, also safe to do with children, since the smell of Kool-Aid might be a bit sickening (to me at least), it isn’t toxic and the way I did it requires no stove-top heating and simmering of dye pots.

All you need are ziplock bags, the drink powder, a bit of vinegar (any  white type, but cheap is fine), water and sunlight.

First make sure your felted pieces are wet. I immersed them in water the night prior to dye day, then squeezed the water out. That way the wool takes the color much better.

Place the felt in a ziplock bag. We filled the gallon-size bags about a third with felted shapes.

Mix up your powder in a separate small container with just a bit of water. Be sure to either cover your work surface before you start this, or, like we did, take that step outside. Kool-Aid dyes everything really well, not just wool.

Some color suggestions: Lemon-lime makes a good green; cherry red is a bright red; dark cherry and grape dye a dark red and purplish red, respectively; for brown we mixed blue, green, grape, red and yellow, rather randomly, until the mix looked like a decent brown. Add about half a cup of vinegar to your premix container. Pour that liquid into the ziplock bag and add water, so the gallon-size bag is about half way full, or the water is covering the felt pieces. Close the “zip” and gently squish the felt, so every piece gets immersed in the dye liquid.

The next step is waiting. Put the plastic bag out in the bright sunshine for a day, turning the bag over every now and again. The water will actually heat up quite a bit.

After a day you will notice that the water has become clear again, and all the color has been taken by the wool. This observation seemed like a magic trick and excited the kids and me equally.

Pour out the dye water and rinse the now colored pieces in clear water, before you squeeze out the water and let them dry.

And this is where we are at. The last weeks of the school year we will spend sewing the leaves and branches, tree trunk, roots and fruit into place. I am already looking forward to the delight and pride on the kids’ faces when they will have completed this!

*Note: for a second batch of brown my local store didn’t have the right colors of Kool-Aid available, so I bought a no-name unsweetened drink powder on the same shelf and it worked just as well. Kool-Aid might have the best selection in colors overall, but for the color we needed this was not so important.

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On Friday I taught four willing and enthusiastic women how to wet-felt a simple little flower with a leafy stem. Diana’s class description promised a whole flower wreath with 5 or 6 flowers, but we only had three hours and three of the four ladies had never wet-felted before. They were very patient, I must say, and worked/battled their way through my instructions and the wool. In the end everyone had a lovely flower and a leafy rope and knew how to produce more of the flowers at home, if they wished to. I had a good time, I love sharing with people what makes me so happy myself. Thank you, dear students, and Diana for having me!

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