Buying boxes? Nossir! (or maybe I should have..): how to salvage a misshapen project.

Buying boxes? Nossir! (or maybe I should have..): how to salvage a misshapen project.

Hello, my creative friends.

Here we are at the start of a new and exciting adventure: making a felt box out of, yes, wool!

You think that I am stating the obvious, felt is oftentimes made of wool and of course you can make felt boxes: just look at the internet and you will see tons of them for sale (mostly made with industrial felt)! But you would not believe how many times I have had to explain those two bits of information to people during the time that I was making my box: yes, I am felting it. Yes, it is made of wool. No, I am not going to sew it (if I possibly can), I am felting it. Yes, I make it by felting wool. W-O-O-L. How, you ask? You can make all sorts of shapes by felting with the right resist..no, I am not going to sew it, I assure you it will come out with the box shape. Well, hopefully.

To be sure, a box is just another type of wet felt vessel made with a resist, and yes, of course you can make it by sewing the single felted flat sides and a flat bottom together, but…sewing, where is the fun in that? (total respect to people who like sewing, eh, it is just not me)

Long story medium-short, we decided that we needed to organise our living room in a better way, changing bits of furniture and generally trying to sort out the chaos, also because we are in the process of adopting guinea pigs (oh, my! let’s see) and we need the space for an indoor cage. So, we are plus bookshelves and minus an office desk with drawers, and we need some kind of storage box that fits the shelves and, crucial, does not seem something that you find in your shed. Unfortunately, the size of our shelves is not standard, and a standard storage box will not fit, either because too small or too big. So I thought, let’s have a box that is good to look at and the maximum size that will fit in there, let’s make it ourselves!

(well, I would not want you to think that I normally talk to myself with that royal We. It is clear to any who know me that all that was just me and me thinking “What, 30 pounds for that soulless box that does not even fit properly? no way, I can make one better than that and spend less!” or something of the sort)

A white sheet of paper with measurements for two boxes, a bigger one and a smaller one.
The size of the bookshelves that we have comes in two flavours, big and small, both somewhat non standard, so I originally thought about making a smaller box as well, and took measurements for both. All measurements are in centimeters.
Calculations for a 40 per cent increase on a piece of paper.
I arbitrarily added a 40 % increase on all sides, and did the same also for the height of the lid (all other measurements being the same for lid and box, of course)

To start, I prepared my resist for the bottom of the box: this involved a bit of sewing, namely attaching together the various bits of bubble wrap in the shape of a very floppy box without a top, as I will make a lid to fit it (some time in the far future). It does not show well in photo, but here it is:

A bubble wrap resist is on a floor
Here is the resist seen with the bottom part prominent (naughty).
A resist made of bubble wrap is on a brownish floor with a rug.
And here is the resist bottom down: very floppy, you can not really tell that this is a box shape.

I hate hand sewing on bubble wrap, the plastic just clings firmly to your needle and it is worse than sewing sewing, in my opinion, so let’s not dwell on it.

I did not have as much wool as I needed, so I ordered some from World of Wool. I wanted to try out something different from my usual Merino, as I needed something coarser that could be hard wearing and stand a bit stiffer, because the box is not small and will be full of quite a few things that are on the heavier side, such as tape and packing tape, some cables, and so on. Unfortunately, I am not used to coarser wool, the room was in a chaos and I did not have time for much research on our brilliant Blog or Forum (yes, it is lame. Let’s say, it is not the best excuse for not doing my homework that I have ever found, I’ll admit, but if you give me a bit more time I can say that the guinea pigs have eaten my research), anyway, ahem, later on our wise felt experts from the FFS Forum have determined that apparently I picked the wrong wool.

Well, you know, it can happen to anyone if they skip research and sampling. Well, yes, I also skipped making samples, because, let me think, the guinea pigs ate my sample? OK, maybe not. I’ll get better, pinky promise.

Anyway, I got my generic “English wool” from World of Wool, and yes, it was a bit coarser than Merino but still quite soft..in hindsight I may have been suspicious when it felt so soft, I do not know. Actually, that is a mix of different breeds’ wool, some that may actually be quite good for stiffer felt and some that are not, although they are coarser than Merino. Perfectly fine felting with it for all sorts of uses, but , a word to the wise, do not use it to make big boxes, eh.

A label reading: White 56's English Top, Size 100g, Quantity 6, Total 600g.
Here it is, the challenging wool.

So, I got on my white horse and started felting on my resist straight away with a lot of good will. I assumed that the coarser wool would need less layers to obtain the same felt (do not ask, pre-christmas chaos guinea pigs mind fugue hobblegobble chicachicacha) and I decided on 4 good layers.

Here are a few photos of my felting the first box:

A rectangle of laid out white wool just sprinkled with water, on a bubble wrap.
Starting from the bottom, that was the biggest area.
A work in progress of wet felt in white wool is on a table covered in a white towel and bubble wrap. There is a smaller rectangle covered in a small layer of wool resting over a bigger rectangle covered in white plastic sheets.
First layer on a short side. I took care to cover each already worked on part with a layer of plastic (I used plastic bin bags) as I learned from Lena Archibold’s advice on how to work with a book resist.
Folds wrapped in bubble wrap open over a rectangular shape wrapped in white plastic sheets.
Figuring out how to fold the different sides to get an even result was a bit puzzling at first, I spent some time opening and closing folds, it must have looked weird from outside!
A rectangle of wool pre felt has a layer of Merino wool on top. The Merino wool is half rectangle in orchid color, and bright yellow and teal on the other half rectangle, overlapping a bit the orchid color.
Yes, we are at the fun part of the 5th layer, when I could use dyed Merino wool for the wow effect!
Another rectangular side of the box. There is a rectangle of laid out Merino wool, half the rectangle is teal and half is orchid color, and the two colors overlap a bit.
Here is another side. I actually decorated both four sides, but forgot to take photos of the two smaller. Anyway, it is the same colours for all the sides, only different layout.
A smaller rectangle of wet and soaped Merino wool, with the upper part in teal, a small central line in yellow and a bigger area in orchid color, all slightly overlapping each other.
This is one of the small sides, all wet and soaped, being worked on.
A roll of pre felt is on a wooden table, covered with a white towel and a plastic bubble wrap.
And here we are at the rolling stage. I also used throwing and variously manipulating the shape.

Wait, let’s see if you were attentive: have you noticed that I said “first box”?

Exactly: here is how it stood after drying, that is to say not at all:

A felted object in orchid, teal, yellow and white wool is on a wooden table. The object seems to hold no particular shape.
No words, really.

It took more or less a day to felt, and a few days to dry. I liked the colours (a last layer of Merino wool, the 5th, to do that), and the shape ended up exactly the right size, but it would not stand, and I thought that it was because the layers were just not enough. I had enough wool to start a new one doubling the layers, so I went back to it using the same resist and the same type of wool (not my cleverest day, fine).

A big bag of white wool is being weighted on a scale on a wooden table.
I weighted the remaining wool and I found out that I only had used about 150 grams of it, so I had still about 450 grams to try again.

The steps were the same, only more layers, so I will not show more pics of it, only the final result when the box had dried:

A felted box with the sides slightly collapsing is on a grey sofa.
One side..
A felted box with a side in yellow and teal is on a grey sofa. The sides of the box are collapsing in.
..the other side. I did not decorate the small sides this time, but left them natural white, as they are not going to be seen when the box is in the bookshelf.

It was better, but still the sides were not holding up.

At that point, it was definitely time for my felting fairy godmothers to intervene: I asked the classic “Help, what did I do wrong?” on the Felting and Fiber Studio Forum and, thank goodness, got kind replies that explained the generic English wool issue as probable cause (so, no, adding more layers was likely not going to cure that, in case I still had not clicked on to that) and gave me very good advice on what I could try next to avoid throwing the 2 boxes into the scrap pile and to salvage them.

The suggestions were:

– to try and stiffen the sides or corners with machine or hand stitching

– to try and put a wire armature inside the felt or stitch it on the inside of the box

– to use PVA glue to stiffen the felt

– to stitch the two boxes together one inside the other, and maybe also

– to add some stiff padding, sandwiching it in between the two boxes.

Or possibly to try a combination of the above suggestions until the aim was reached. Which is exactly what I did, apart from the PVA glue and the stitching, both left as last resort, the glue because I was not fancying working with glue with such a big object, and the stitching because I do not have a sewing machine and it takes ages to stitch by hand.

What worked? well, clearly not one thing only, I had to go on trying to the last, but in the end I have a workable box and we are already using it, even though there is no lid yet.

First, I added thick wire to the inside of the box corners, with a few stitches. The felt was not thick enough to insert the wire into it, that would have been better. Sadly, it did not solve the issue totally.

Then, I stitched in place the first box (the thinner one) into the second box, leaving the upper edges open for putting in some padding if required. It was better still, but not there yet.

Lastly, I started looking for padding. Floor underlayer was suggested as good for that job, but when I went to look at my local DIY builders warehouse I did not find the exact type and thickness that I needed, and I came home empty handed. The same research online left me with too many choices, some of them a bit on the expensive side because with a required minimum purchase limit that was also way too high for my storage capability (What, 20 meters rolls minimum?? I do not live in Versailles palace!)

Luckily, as I told you, we were changing some pieces of furniture and it so happens that some had polystyrene sheets in their packaging: initially, I did not want to use that for a few reasons (it breaks easily, it is not going to be washable, it can disperse plastic bits in the environment in time..), but in the end it was there and I could use it instead of chucking it in the garbage bin, so it is kept out of the dump for a little while more. And it was free for me, and readily available.

So, I cut it to size with a knife (bits of polystyrene everywhere, not my idea of fun but the kids where jumping up and down like it was going to be disco party in a minute) and inserted it in the pockets in between the two boxes, and then a quick blanket stitching all around the upper edges did the job. In time I may unstitch it and change the padding, if I will feel so inclined and will have the time.

And here it is, my box done!

(the bottom part, at least)

A felt basket or box without lid, full of miscellaneous objects, on a grey sofa.
That is one side..
A felted basket or box without lid, and full of objects, on a grey sofa.
..and that is the other. Already full of stuff.

Now, for the lid, we will see. Who knows, it might be ready in time for my next blog post..only, don’t hold your breath for it, guinea pigs may be coming and all of that (how did I manage with my lazy excuses before them is a wonder, my friends!)

I hope that you liked my adventures, feel free to leave me a comment, as long as you do not ask me about hand stitching the whole box or preparing resists by hand stitching bubble wrap together, any other thing is totally fine.

Best wishes!

Kiki

@kiki.textile.art

http://www.kikistextileart.com

Simple Watercolor Landscapes

Simple Watercolor Landscapes

I have been seeing some abstract watercolor landscape paintings on Instagram and thought I would like to try them. I don’t have a link for you as I seem to have kept scrolling without following or saving the video. If you look up painting watercolor landscapes with a palette knife on either YouTube or Instagram, you should be able to see some videos.

I already had some pieces of watercolor paper cut into small pieces, the largest being 4″ x 6″. These already had a light painting of blue to purple high flow acrylics on them but I decided that would work as the sky for the landscape.  Some of the videos suggest that you use 3-4 colors of watercolor paint but I decided to keep it simple and only use two colors at a time.

Open sketchbook with painted watercolor landscapes

I started with dry paper and the first two colors were Payne’s Gray and Burnt Sienna. I used a small blob of Payne’s Gray straight from the tube onto the edge of a palette knife. I scraped the palette knife across the dry paper for the horizon line. Remember the rule of thirds and avoid putting the horizon right in the center of the paper. I always think of it as having more sky or less sky in the picture. The paint can be kind of messy as you apply it and doesn’t need to be a solid line. I then applied the Burnt Sienna in the same manner but limited it to 3-5 small areas.

Watercolor landscape painting

Then I applied water on a large flat brush above the horizon line. If I got much paint on the brush, I rinsed it between strokes. The paint from the horizon line moves up into the water and spreads by itself. Limit your brush strokes so you don’t overwork it. I pulled the paint up with vertical strokes above the horizon and used quite a lot of water. On some of the paintings, I sprayed water on too. I also took some of the leftover paint on the palette knife (very minimal paint) to make a few tree trunks above the horizon line.

Watercolor landscape painting

Below the horizon line, I used less water on the brush and barely touched the paint moving it more horizontally. Some of the paintings, I moved the paint a bit by dabbing the end of the brush into paint (already on the painting) and applying it into the wet areas.

Watercolor landscape painting

The first four paintings were all done with Payne’s Gray and Burnt Sienna. Try to vary the height of the trees and allow some of the trunks to lean one way or the other. The other thing that I tend to do is space my trees evenly across the landscape. That tends to look very artificial so make your spacing uneven. You can see that I experimented with the amount of paint used and the amount of working back into the wet areas.

Next up was to try two new colors. I chose colors from opposite sides of the color wheel so that there was contrast and when they mixed, it would give a neutralized (brown, gray) color. The painting on the right had a few black trunks added after the painting was dry with a black felt tip pen. I used Ultramarine Blue and Quinacridone Gold Deep in these two paintings. I love how the watercolor painting spreads on the wet paper and how you can add a bit more paint over the “distant” trees to give atmosperhic perspective.

Watercolor landscape painting

Another change of colors to Phthalo Blue (Green Shade) and Quinacridone Gold Deep. This produced a much more pine forest type of feel.

Watercolor landscape painting

These were really quick and easy to paint and I love the results. If I tried to paint trees in detail, I would never get this result. Now that I have tried these on paper, I have been sampling ways to get this result on silk and nuno felt. I am trying different methods and have a bunch of samples to show you in my next post.

Nuno Felt Patchwork Cushion and Hydrangea Picture in progress

Nuno Felt Patchwork Cushion and Hydrangea Picture in progress

Lyn

I wanted a new cushion for my dining chair. I could have stitched one but when Annie showed me a couple of her sample felt patchwork pieces recently …

nuno felt samples

… I decided to adapt her idea to make a cushion cover.

My first job was to spend hours sifting through a couple of cubic metres of open-weave fabric. I made a choice of fabrics … then the next day I changed my mind so I went through the whole lot again to get the selection shown below.

pile of loose-weave fabrics, various colours and patterns, suitable for nuno felting

I made a base of white merino wool fibres then started to randomly place pieces of fabric on it.  I covered about a third of the wool and decided I wasn’t happy with the look so I carefully removed the patches of fabric and I went back to the drawing board for a rethink.

After a bit of pencil chewing I decided on a pattern.  I marked out 25 squares on a large piece of paper then made freehand wavy lines to make the shapes for the patchwork pieces.

pattern for nuno felt pieces

As no two shapes were exactly the same, I numbered them before cutting them out to use as pattern pieces for the fabric, so that they could be correctly placed on the wool fibres.

25 paper pattern pieces

Unfortunately, because the fabrics were all loose weave, pinning was very difficult and cutting out the shapes was like trying to cut water – the fabric went every which way it wanted to.

I became engrossed in the difficult process of placing the pieces of fabric on the wool fibres and forgot to take a photo of that!  I only remembered when I’d already started on the rolling…

felt during the rolling process

… and here it is after fulling, rinsing and drying.

patchwork nuno felt after fulling, rinsing and drying

As the wool shrinks and the fibres wriggle up through the open-weave of the fabrics, a wonderful distorted and crinkly look appears – how much distortion does depend on the type of fabric.

This angled photo shows the crinkly effect quite well.

angled shot to show texture in nuno felt

I made an ‘envelope’ style cushion backing from my ‘regular fabric’ stash in a complementary colour.

envelope style backing for nuno felt cushion cover

And here it is giving comfort from the hard,wooden back of the dining chair.

cushion in a wooden chair

Annie

The hydrangea is one of my favourite blooms, as much for it’s tactile nature as it’s blousy large beautiful heads. If you’ve never shut your eyes and gently petted a giant hydrangea bloom stop reading and mark your calendar for the month they are in show in your part of the world, and definitely do it!

Hydrangea heads different colours

I’ve been meaning to create a picture in paint or fibres featuring hydrangeas for a long time, so I’m going to have a go, fingers crossed.

I would like it to be fairly abstract, definitely not too real, or too twee, but I really don’t know what I’ll get until I start working. I find it hard to work to a fixed creative outcome, I prefer to see what happens!

I’ve only got as far as sifting out some fabrics and yarns – and honestly this is a lengthy part of the process because I have accumulated far too much stuff over the years!

selection of open weave fabrics

selection of yarns

I remembered I made one small hydrangea sample a while ago that I’ve dug out for inspiration.

sample of felted hydrangea

close up of sample hydrangea head

I’ve also just been laying out another sample to try out various fabrics and ideas but haven’t got very far yet.

another sample of hydrangea colours

Unfortunately all of the real hydrangea heads are brown (or have been pruned off!) at the moment so I’ve only got photos and imagination to work from, so no still life opportunities around this time of year. I suspect I won’t be too true to colour as I rarely am, but as long as they are roughly identifiable that’s good enough for me!

I’m just getting going so have not achieved much in time for our blog post unfortunately, so it’s a good job mum made her beautiful cushion so there is something finished to see.

Annoyingly life admin has been getting in the way of crafting time recently but I’m chomping at the bit and trying to squeeze in what I can, and hoping for a few quieter weeks now so I can get more done. Did I just say that out loud? Uh oh!

 

 

Needle-felt Brooches and a Print Exhibition

Needle-felt Brooches and a Print Exhibition

Since my last blog in November I’ve been very busy, though not necessarily making felt. I did, however, have a week’s exhibition with two friends in a local gallery the second week in December, and this afternoon I’ve dropped off 12 pictures for an open-call print exhibition, so that’s what I’m going to talk about today. 

Sitting in the gallery, I had time to do a little needle felting – I generally prefer wet felting but needle felting is better suited to gallery-sitting.  My friend Lynzi (yep, same name but different spelling) asked if I’d make two small brooches for her to give to her mother for Christmas. Lynzi liked some earrings I’d made previously …..

….. so asked me to make a mussel shell and a starfish brooch. I’d not needle felted a brooch before but didn’t think it would be very different from an earring so I set about it.

The trickiest thing was that she wanted them very small: she suggested between 2 & 4 cm. The smallest mussel shell earrings I’ve ever made were about 5.5cm and the star fish – which was a one-off – was considerably larger.  I didn’t think 2cm was practical, not least of all because of the size of the pin needed to attach the brooches, so we agreed on approximately 4cm. The mussel shell was relatively straightforward.  For earrings I make them curved like shells. For a brooch, I just made the back solid rather than curved and was sure to felt it very firmly so I could sew the fastening pin securely onto it. 

I had to adapt the starfish design as the centre of the starfish – which had to conceal the brooch pin – had to be a larger part of the overall design than it was for the earring.  I started off using a small star-shaped cookie-cutter to help me get an even star shape.  I concentrated on working the length of the arms and the centre of the starfish, so that when I stopped using the cookie-cutter I could work into the sides of the arms to make it less like a star and more like a starfish.

Here are the end results.

Lynzi was delighted and I’m looking forward to hearing what her Mum thought.

Now here we are in 2026 and I’ve had to put in quite a lot of studio time this week to create work for a print exhibition. Another local gallery (The Horsebridge Community Arts Centre in Whitstable) had an open-call for a print exhibition. The only requirement was that pieces had to have some element of hand printing. I wondered if my felt pictures with a printed tree would meet the criteria so had a chat with the organiser.  She said ‘yes’ so I decided to enter some.  The deal is that you pay per piece for a framed, wall hung item and you can put up to 5 unframed items per wall piece into a browser.  The gallery takes 10% commission on sales of the framed pieces (which you’ve also paid to submit) and 35% commission on the unframed, browser pieces (which you haven’t paid to submit). I opted for 2 framed and 10 for the browser.

These were the framed pictures I already had

And two unframed pictures presented with a card back and mount. 

So, I just needed to make 8 more unframed pictures this week to fill my quota for the wall and browser.  That didn’t seem too unreasonable when I decided to do it, but it has felt a bit less sensible given the time I’ve had available. It’s also quite cold here (for England). My studio is in an old industrial building (it used to be a bottle capping factory for Shepherd Neame, the oldest brewery in the UK). It has very little heating, so I had to decamp to my house part way through the week when my hands just could not cope with any more freezing water.

The unframed pictures have a mount with an aperture of 20 x 20 cm (about 8 x 8 inches) so the felt is about 24 cm square.  I thought the best idea was to make 4 pictures in one sheet and cut them apart during the fulling process. By ‘best’ I mean most efficient while still being a size I could handle on my felting table. I drew myself a little sketch to help me decide where to put the silk

Option 1 would mean the nuno felted area was the same in all 4 pictures so it was an easy decision to go for option 2.

I spent quite a long time sifting through my embarrassingly large collection of second hand silk scarves to select the pieces I wanted to use. 

I was keen on a grey leopard print scarf with a white background but it had stripes of more and less dense silk running across it. I thought I should just check that the dense section would felt OK so I did a very scrappy little sample. If you’re wondering why I got so little shrinkage, the felted scrap started off considerably bigger than the non-felted one.

It’s not easy to see here – more visible on the finished picture – but the more dense stripes produced a little more ruching.

It all seemed to felt fine so above you can see the first batch part way through the fulling stage.

Below is the layout for the second batch of pictures

I put a stripe of second hand wool (usually tapestry wool) along the top of the silk section. For the brightly coloured marbled scarf I auditioned a few different colours (red, yellow, dark brown, green)

And went with the green

So, here is the first group of 4 pictures with their printed trees

And here’s the second group of 4

I took the photos very hastily today and not in very good light: they are not as grey as some of the images suggest.

I’ve presented them with a back board and white mount and dropped them off at the gallery this afternoon. The deadline for submissions is tomorrow so, that’s pretty good for me. I have marked ‘last minute’ tendencies.

I print the images with a heat press – the kind of thing you might use for printing and image on a t-shirt. As I was heating it up anyway, I pulled together some pieces of felt that were test pieces or offcuts, cut them into small pieces and printed on those too. I will make these into cards.

Well, that’s me for now. Wishing everyone a joyful, healthy and creative 2026.

Guild program: how you started, first pieces & tips

Guild program: how you started, first pieces & tips

Welcome to 2026, I hope it will be a better year than 2025 was.

So far this year, I have been busy with the local guild (grant reports data from the library), and considering projects for the new year (including cottage) and shopping options. I will also have to put in an order for more needles soon.

At this time of year, Guild activities, including programs and workshops, can be thwarted by weather or the fear of weather. With presenters thin on the ground for January, the program team had a creative solution for a last-minute program topic. We would interview ourselves and find out a bit more about each other. They had 3 questions to answer.

  1. What was the first fibre pursuit you learned, and who taught you? (Feel free to ignore sewing.)
  2. What was the first full piece you wove, felted, or used your own handspun for? (Bonus points: bring it to show off if you still have it.) Or feel free to tell us about the first-ever piece you made using your very first fibre art.
  3. What is the (or a) most useful fibre-arts related tip that you learned directly from another practitioner?

The weather on Monday had been lightly snowing when I left home, pretty decorative light snow… it kept snowing…… all day. I was alone working on the library until another guild member dropped in to consult the library around 11, but left by 12:30.  I was starting to fear that I might be the only one attending the meeting. Much later than usual, we had others brave the snow. There were so few of us that we had the meeting in the studio, rather than the Unitarians’ room. I am sure we were doing quality over quantity! (Those who stayed home were smarter, since it was a slippery, slow, snow-filled drive home.)

It was an interesting meeting. If you are in a guild and need an emergency fill-in for a meeting, with a few tweaks to the questions, this may be helpful for your group, too. I will show you what my answers were.

jan sitting beind a table dislaying both 2 and 3D needle felting 1) 07-12-2025 Jan Demo, Glengarry Museum

Answers to January program questions (Jan Scott).

  1. What was the first fibre pursuit you learned, and who taught you? (Feel free to ignore sewing.)

– We will not discuss my attempts trying to learn to knit. Mom was patent but it did not go well. My talents then were more in the acquisition of frogs, turtles and snakes, none of which she let me keep.

– ~1982, I started to seriously pursue my interest in fibre/textiles with the SCA (Society for Creative Anachronism). My goal was to weave, then sew (post-weaving) by hand, my own Icelandic Viking clothing.

– ~1989 I joined the guild, became the librarian and then took my first weaving lessons with Donna Gerrarden in Cumberland (in 1989 or 1990). She had the guild’s old 100-inch loom and the guild table looms in her massive basement.

– One of my strongest memories about learning to weave was not just the magic as cloth formed from mere threads at the fell line, but the sound the heddles made as they jingled at every bump driving back and forth to Cumberland.

 

  1. What was the first full piece you wove, felted, or used your own handspun for? (Bonus points: bring it to show off if you still have it.) Or feel free to tell us about the first-ever piece you made using your very first fibre art.
  • Weaving:

– Donna taught me the 4-day beginner weaving workshop, then immediately continued with the 2-day Intermediate Weaving workshop. She then set me off to weave on my own. My first piece was not well met by some of the older weavers in the guild. I was still allergic to wool, so I had woven in cotton. I wanted a drapy hand to the fabric, not a stiff coverlet. I was attracted to pattern but was not sure I wanted the full intensity of that pattern. So I wove, I think it was called Ancient Rose, an overshot pattern, with a light and dark blue cotton, the pattern weft being slub. I set it at 12 EPI, not 24. I was fascinated by the pattern emerging and disappearing as the slub appeared and disappeared. It was exactly the drapy, shawl-like cloth I wanted. (It did not look like a stiff colonial coverlet that overshot is usually used to weave).

overshot pattern, woven in cotton using a slub cotton as the patttern yarn, fabric is draped over wiker basket. there is a black and teal felt hat sitting beside the basket. 2.1) The sample piece was used as a basket cover for demos, one of my felt hats to the Left of the basket

 

  • Spinning:

– My first spinning was at an SCA event (war in Pennsylvania). I was still allergic to wool, so I was handed a drop spindle and a handful of cotton. I was not told this might be harder to spin, just “here, spin this”. I had to put a “bit more twist” than the students with wool. I spun it just fine; it was fun, but cotton was not a fibre I wanted to use to make that Viking outfit. When I eventually lost most of my wool reaction, I discovered that “a bit more twist” is very hard to stop doing!

 

  • Felting:

– I did my first felting with Maggie Glossip in the early part of the 90’s. It was a small vessel project using a resist in wet felting, then needle felting embellishments on it. I was not as fond of the wetness of wet felting, but the concept was intriguing. I did enjoy the dry felting, but it took a while until I got to try it again.

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2.22.4) wet felted Vessel with Needle felted decorations

  • Others Fiber Arts:

– I have also tried my hand at dyeing, basketry, fibre prep, tapestry, kumihimo, and historical sewing.

 

  1. What is the (or a) most useful fibre-arts related tip that you learned directly from another practitioner?

 

  • Weaving:

Jack Lane –was a fabulous weaver of tartan coverlets in 3 matching panels. He taught me how to lash on to the front beam rather than tie. And the secret of lay in 3 picks, then beat to start off. Jack was very generous with his knowledge and time to all guild members.

teaching a weaving tecneek to make a folded hem match the patern on both sides3.1) Jack Lain teaching how to weave a reversing border for a folded hem.

large overshot coverlet held up as jack discusses it3.2) Jack showing one of his Overshot coverlets (he also did tartan coverlets, three panels wide)

 

  • Spinning:

– The most memorable suggestion for spinning came from a twist workshop on art yarn with Esther Rodgers. At one point, we were making beehives in our yarn, and she went around the class enthusiastically declaring, “Shove it up the Orifice!!!” You just don’t hear that every day.

teaching stting behind spinning wheel with students sitting and standing around her. 3.3) 08-23-2014 Twist Saturday Art Yarn with Esther Rodgers

close up of hand pushing wool towords orifice3.4) art yarn with Esther close up

 

  • Felting:

Sara Razzulie – online purveyor of info on (mostly sculptural) needle felting and on-line felt-along-s. “Try it”. At the start of the pandemic, I was perfectly happy to stay at home and putter in the garden, watch YouTube and listen to audiobooks. But I also enjoyed the online camaraderie of every live felt-along, including the mermaid Sara made. She did it over quite a few weeks and included wet felting for the tail’s top layer. I like the concept, but wanted a mer-man, so I scaled up her measurements from her mer-woman. Then scaled them down to make Mer-kids. I had to make my own guesses for the mer-pets, “Try it”. I made samples of wire gauges and types to better understand my options. I am still working on my Mer-project, but some parts of the family and pets are done and they had lots of fun playing at the Almonte textile museum during the guild exhibit.

sara teaching in front of displaty of her work, small image box in bottom right shows one of her Mer-maids3.5) Sarafina Fiber Art, Mermaid Felt Along 1: Armature, May 9, 2020, keeping us sane during the pandemic.

the mer-made Sara created during the felt along 3.6) The mermaid she made during the felt along.

Ann McElroy – water can be used carefully so wet felting isn’t as horrible and can be fun, if your vary carful. (though I do feel safer when supervised by Ann)

teacher leaning over table with student sitting across from her3.7) Ann McElroy teaching wet felting

water has been added to wool on top of resist. 2 photos: top shows wet wool with rubbing tool under plastic. below felt is rapped up in towls to be rolled.3.8- 3.9) careful use of water in wet felting

 

It was interesting to hear the answers from others. Here are a couple of shots from the meeting. I think there were 15 people who made it through the snow (a couple took over an hour to get in, much, much longer than usual). During the program, we took turns between the Zoom participants and those in the studio. I had Rachel of the Program Team read my answers since I had already written and printed them out.

14 people at guild studio sitting infront of guild library cabinets they are watching and listening to the meeting which isbeing brodcast over zoom.4.1) OVWSG January Meeting, the Zoom attendees outnumbered the in-person people

one of the people participateing in the questions, with guild President lauffig in the backgrond on line participation showing an example of knitting with her first hand spun yarn4.2-4.3) participating  in the studio and online

 

If you don’t have a local fibre arts guild near you, maybe you can start a group, a get-together at the local library, fibre store, or felt in? It is really nice to have others who get equally excited about fibre and felting!

Now I have to get back to work, I have a workshop on needle felted landscape on Saturday (my calendar was sure it was originally on the following Saturday). Have Fun and Keep Felting!!

Happy New Years

Happy New Years

Happy New Year, everyone. I hope you are having a great holiday time. May the new year treat you well and help you get where you want to be.

Last year was a bit of a crazy, busy year. One thing I did that I have been wanting to do for a long time is to make an online workshop. I had to make a firm commitment that I would do it by a certain date, or I would never have managed to get to it. It was a huge amount of work, but so worthwhile. It’s funny, I was sort of dreading doing it, even though it was something I wanted to do. This year, I am planning to expand the existing workshop and possibly create another one. I am thinking of a ruffle scarf workshop, but we will see. I don’t know if it’s something people would like to learn.

I am taking a how-to photograph you fibre art workshop in the spring, so maybe my pictures will be even better

 

The second thing I want to do this year is take more pictures of scenery, plants, and things. I want to have a better library of pictures to work from. I am sure I will never get to Jan’s level, but I can work on it. This is some frosted milkweed in my garden

 

The third is to take some workshops. I am signed up for the Photographing Fibre Art that I told you about above, Spindle Spinning with a Medieval Distaff and Build your own LEGO Spindle.  They are all taught by the Ottawa Valley Weaves and spinnes guild. I would have liked to take Rock wrapping, but everything I signed up for is clustered together, and rock wrapping is in the same time frame, plus I am teaching twice during that time.  It never fails. Oh well, hopefully it will be offered again, and I can take it then. If you’re in the Ottawa, Ontario, Canada area, here’s a link to the workshops the guild is offering this winter/spring. https://www.ovwsg.com/workshops/

Lastly, I want to learn to crochet. I understand the concept. I’ve made a chain before. I am told I should make some dishcloths to start, but that doesn’t appeal to me. What other beginner/learner project do you know about? How did you start?

TOFT - Three NEW pure wool sheep kits for British #woolweek . https://www.toftuk.com/PL.aspx?CatName=animal_kits/farmyard Marian the Corriedale, Wayne the Gotland and Everett the Romney. #edsanimals #sheep #sheeplove #corriedalesheep #gotlandsheep ...
3 TOFT sheep

 

 

The Codification of Stitch

The Codification of Stitch

One of the UK’s major textile events, the Knitting and Stitching Show, is held annually in November in the Harrogate Convention Centre. It’s packed with “must have” products and showcases inspiring work by a wide variety of textile artists. Within the show there is a dedicated exhibition area called the Graduate Showcase, which highlights outstanding textile art from recent UK BA undergraduate courses. This initiative, run in partnership with the Embroiderers’ Guild, provides a platform for emerging talent in the textile art world and it was here last November that I first saw the work of Charlotte Farrant.
Charlotte hadn’t originally planned a career in textile design, in fact growing up she had formed a fascination for mechanics and saw herself becoming a mechanical engineer. At some point Charlotte discovered she also had a love of embroidery and enrolled in the Royal School of Needlework, graduating with a first class degree. 

Charlottes “Codification of Stitch” is an innovative coded embroidery system developed by the textile artist herself and it is used to form hidden messages within the garments she designs, transforming textiles into wearable narratives. Specific embroidery stitches represent letters, forming hidden messages amongst the exquisite, decorative Goldwork, Blackwork, Whitework and Raised Work.
 
It was her fabulous “coded” Ann Lister black coat that first caught my attention on her stand at the show. In 2025, in collaboration with the Anne Lister project, Charlotte designed a range of costumes re-imagining the BBC cast of Gentleman Jack and bringing them in to the 21st century.
 
I hadn’t heard of Ann Lister but I’m guessing plenty of you will have, especially if you’ve seen her life story as portrayed by Suranne Jones in the BBCs series Gentleman Jack. This woman was an ardent diarist and from 1896 to 1840 she wrote a five million word diary, approximately one sixth of which was written in code. She combined the Greek alphabet, zodiac, punctuation, and mathematical symbols allowing her to document, but also conceal, the most private aspects of her life. It’s fitting that this beautiful coat should also conceal its message which is a quote from Ann in August 1823. It reads “I am not made like any other I have seen, I dare believe myself to be different from any other who exist.”
Ann Lister Coat
 
Sampler for coat

Another “Ann Lister” inspired piece on Charlottes stand was a waistcoat inspired by the diarists love of nature and the coded message on this garment reads “We are not alive if we’re not taking the odd risk now and again.” 

Ann Lister Waistcoat
Detail of waistcoat

There was also a selection of beautiful intricately stitched, coded brooches on display, each with a printed label providing its deciphered message.

Check out Charlottes website charlottefarrantembroidery.com where you can see her portfolio of designs as well as her shop selling Coded embroidery kits, brooches and many other embroidered coded art works.

Throughout history textiles have been used not only for protection and comfort but also to communicate our personal values and identity. Long before the written word came in to use Ancient civilisations would use specific colours and symbols to convey their environment, spiritual believes and culture. In this way meaning could be woven, felted or stitched into rugs, blankets, clothing, etc. delivering visual messages that could be easily read by the people around them. Examples include the felted rugs created by ancient nomadic tribes which would embody powerful symbols across different cultures signifying the wish for good health, long life, prosperity, etc.

Examples of just a few of the Symbols used in Middle Eastern rug making.

On the other hand, hidden “coded” messages in textiles have been used for a very different, but very important role in history. While imprisoned Mary Queen of Scots embedded complex and personal symbols within her embroideries to express her frustrations, assert her claim to the English throne, and comment on her unjust captivity. This panel depicts a grapevine and a hand holding a pruning knife. It references Mary’s claim to the throne, suggesting the need to cut away the fruitless branch of the Tudor tree represented by the childless and ‘illegitimate’ Elizabeth. The point is driven home by the Latin motto ‘Virescit Vulnere Virtus’ (virtue flourishes by wounding). (source:vam.ac.uk)

Embroidery also enabled Mary to communicate with her supporters by sending coded messages hidden in her needlework. 

In the realm of espionage, traditional handicraft skills were to take on an even more covert dimension during the World Wars when prisoners, spies and resistance members used embroidery to pass on information under the noses of their enemies. After all, who would suspect that something as innocent as an embroidery or tapestry could offer any threat from the enemy? Morse code and binary code were easily represented using a combination of long and short stitches, or French knots and seed stitches, and these would go undetected when hidden amongst other decorative stitches. Other methods required the person receiving the work to “undo” the embroidery as messages were hidden in the padding of trapunto or concealed beneath a second layer of embroidery. 

Knitting was another innocent looking but very useful craft when it came to espionage. Morse Code knitters employed single purl stitches for dots and sequences of three purl stitches for dashes. Their sequences translated into short and long coded signals. Some knitters used knots to conceal Morse code by tying specific configurations to represent dots and dashes, or varying the distances between their knots. These encoded messages could then be discreetly passed across enemy lines or integrated into knitted items such as hats and scarves to be decoded by the recipient. Written messages were also known to have been passed on, hidden in balls of wool!
This practise wasn’t exclusive to the allies. Using a system similar to Morse, German agents based in the UK also passed encoded messages using knotted yarn which was then knitted in to garments. 

Although an extremely dangerous occupation it’s said that the practise of covert knitting became so prevalent during WWII, some countries actually banned the posting of knitting patterns aboard, fearing they may carry coded information to the enemy. 
During times of war, a knitter was often more than just a creator of warm garments; they were also keen observers and messengers, their needles clicking away as they kept watch. (Source: Timoneillstudios.com)

Image Source: ww2wrecks.com

I will leave you with an embroidery created by one Major Alexis Casdagli. Alexis was captured and spent four years in a German POW camp where he passed the time in the innocent pursuit of cross stitch. He also set up a stitch school, teaching other POWs to embroider. Of the many embroideries he made this piece was so admired by his captors that they proudly hung it in the castle where he was being held and subsequently had it displayed in three other camps.

The prisoners must have found it very amusing that the guards had no idea of the defiant message hiding in the Morse dots and dashes stitched around the borders which read “God Save The King” and “Fxxx Hitler”. Fortunately it was never deciphered during those four years and so the embroidery, and the Major survived the war. He told his son on his return that the Red Cross saved his life but embroidery saved his sanity! 

 

 

Flower Stitch Foot

Flower Stitch Foot

I seem to have a fascination with gadgets that I can attach to my sewing machine. Recently I purchased a Flower Stitch foot as well as a Punch Tool. I haven’t taken the Punch Tool out of the box yet but did manage to take some time out to play with the Flower Stitch foot.

I watched a Facebook video of Dale Rollerson/The Thread Studio using the Flower Stitch foot. I love Dale’s videos. If I ever get to Perth, Australia I would love to meet up with her. Probably never happen but one never knows!

https://www.thethreadstudio.com/catalogue/notions/notions4.htm

She sells the Flower Stitch Foot on her website plus a booklet she wrote called Let’s Play with the Flower Stitcher. I’ve been searching the internet to try to find this booklet within the US but so far no such luck has come my way. Postage on the booklet from Australia would cost more than the booklet itself. Sigh…. maybe one day I will run across it and not have to pay so much postage.

There are several of the Flower Stitch Foot devices being sold in the US, however. I purchased mine from The Colorful World of Sewing. They are based in New York state. Here is a link to how the foot looks.

https://www.thecolorfulworldofsewing.com/products/bernina-flower-stitch-foot?_pos=5&_psq=flower+stitch+foot&_ss=e&_v=1.0

They had some good information on their website and said that there were adaptations to my Bernina’s machine shank that would allow me to use this foot. The Flower Stitch Foot and the adaptor price seemed reasonable to me as most of my Bernina presser feet are $100 on up. I went ahead and ordered it.

The first thing I did was make a sampler on some cotton fabric with a stabilizer backing fabric. I played with all my basic stitches and was quite surprised with the results in circular form.

This 10″ x 10″ sampler was done using the largest setting. The setting range on the foot runs from about 1/4” to 3/4” or 6mm-18mm.  I usually stitched around the circles 3 times. As I got into the stitches from #20 to #40, things started getting a little wonky if I went around more than one time. Maybe I was using too large a piece of fabric? Unfortunately, I had to get back to some other projects I was needing to finish up, so the foot sat in its little box for several months. I left this sampler out next to my sewing machine though so I could think about where I wanted to go with it once I could get back to it.

Flower Stitch foot samples of circles

 

What attracted my interest in using this foot for my future projects was the ability to use wash away stabilizer. I want to be able to make separate circles that I could put here and there within the body of a project I am working on. I was concerned however, with how the stitches would hold together once the stabilizer was washed away, so I decided to put a layer of tulle with the wash away stabilizer. I put the two layers into a hoop and got ready to try the foot again. I’d already put the Flower Stitch foot onto my machine, which is quite fiddly to attach. Then I realized I can’t get the hoop under the foot. Not enough clearance like my regular feet give me. That is an inconvenient feature! I have to take the foot off each time I have to take the hoop away from the sewing machine. And I also have to be careful that there is enough clearance for the foot to move the fabric and hoop around and not come into contact with the hoop so it messes up its flow. I think my little Flower Foot is telling me it doesn’t like hoops!

Here is the first sample before washing the stabilizer out and after. Threads used for this one were a mix of rayon and polyester. I played with doing the larger circle in one type of stitch, then doing a smaller circle using another type of stitch inside. Sometimes I would try the small size first, then the larger size. The foot definitely has a mind of its own!

green thread circles before rinsing      green thread circles after rinsing

 

The addition of the tulle helped keep the stitches in place. One problem I am noticing is that multiple stitch rotations and the thickness the thread is creating is causing the foot to shift so the circle is no longer lining up with itself. I may have to play a bit with my presser bar tension to see if I can keep this from happening because I prefer having the circles more prominent.

Next, I thought I would try using cotton fabric with some thin quilting batting. And I used cotton threads because I wanted to add an acrylic paint wash over the stitches. I wasn’t fond of the brown threads so I switched to grey. This fabric combo seemed to work better as far as keeping the circles in a circle but I still had problems. Again, I think it is because of going around 2 or 3 rotations. I didn’t use a hoop with this one. You can see how the grey flowers are a bit wonky on the 3rd rotation.

grey and brown thread circles on cotton fabric

Here is the front and back after applying the acrylic wash.

Blue acrylic paint wash over grey and brown thread circles  Back of grey and brown thread with blue acrylic wash

 

I think I like the back better than the front but I really like how the grey cotton threads took the paint. This method could be interesting using white cotton thread with color washes.

Next, I tried some chiffon scarf fabric with the wash away in a hoop. I was attempting to replicate a flower someone had made on a YouTube video. Have to say, I failed spectacularly on this one! I didn’t have enough room in the hoop to make the flower center and have enough fabric around it to use for the petals.  Later I will try this process without a hoop. Maybe I’ll have to use two layers of wash away with the chiffon. And maybe two or more layers of chiffon would also work. I’ll try to find and review that YouTube video and see what fabric they used to make their flower.

circles on chiffon and washaway    circles on chiffon after rinsing out wash away

Next, I got brave and put two layers of wash away in my largest hoop which is a 10 ½” x 11”. I’ve been successfully using this large hoop for my other machine embroidery projects and wondered if it would give the foot more room to stay away from the hoop edge as well as give me more space to add more circles. For this sample I wanted to try out some other threads I have in my stash. I especially wanted to try out some variegated thread and use three different size circle settings. I was still having problems if I went around more than one time. BUT…I was kind of liking how it made things wonky. Who wants perfect circles anyway, right?

I think my big hoop is too much for the foot to try to move around and perhaps that is why the circles went wonky. That plus I was having a hard time keeping the screw tight that holds the circle size in place.  I had to get my screw driver out versus hand tightening it. I think the hoop may have been causing this to happen too. Too much bouncing going on as the foot tried to pivot the fabric and the hoop around the circle. I think I am asking too much of my little foot.

Flower Stitch foot creating thread circles with sewing machine

I found some thread that I definitely don’t like to work with. It’s pretty, but it kept breaking and then did this to me…. froze my whole machine up, needle down. Ugh!

thread mess in the bobbin of sewing machine

Look at how wonky most of these are!

Since I didn’t add tulle or chiffon to the two wash away layers, I was going to have to attach each circle to something to keep it from falling apart when I rinsed it. I decided to just do some freehand machine circles to get everything connected. One nice thing about using wash away is that you can cut things apart once it dries because it gets kind of stiff, so some of these could become individual circles.

various thread circles    variety of threads to make circles and connecting them with green thread

 

It’s been interesting and fun playing with the Flower Stitch foot!  I still have some ideas I want to try out, like trying to figure out how to do multiple stitch rounds and not have it go off kilter and making a sampler of each stitch in the different sizes available. Mainly I want to be able to create these shapes as individual circle pieces so I can incorporate them into my art quilts or my collages. I definitely need more practice with it!

I love my toys!

Happy creating and best wishes to you all in 2026!

Tesi Vaara

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Calling Felt-Makers Near and Far: Help Us Create an Inspiring Installation of Felted Poppies

Calling Felt-Makers Near and Far: Help Us Create an Inspiring Installation of Felted Poppies

There are times when making with our hands feels especially meaningful. We would love it if you would like to join us in making this one of those times.

The Auckland Felters group is preparing an exhibition titled Deeply Felt, opening on 21 March and running through to 2 May at Nathan Homestead, Manurewa (Auckland), and we’re inviting felt-makers from around the world to help us create a collaborative installation of felted poppies. The exhibition will encompass ANZAC Day, making this shared work especially poignant. The poppy installation will be used to raise funds for the RSA (Returned Services Association).

Image by freepik

What is ANZAC Day?

ANZAC Day is commemorated each year on 25 April in New Zealand and Australia. It honours all those who have served and continue to serve in the armed forces, and remembers the lives lost through war and conflict. The day began as a remembrance of the ANZAC soldiers who landed at Gallipoli in 1915, and has since grown into a broader day of reflection, respect, and remembrance.

It is a quiet, reflective day — one that feels particularly fitting for an exhibition called Deeply Felt, where the act of making, remembering, and responding through fibre is central.

Why felted poppies?

The poppy is a powerful symbol of remembrance. Interpreted through felt — a material that embodies time, patience, and touch — each poppy becomes a small but heartfelt gesture. Individually they are modest but together they become something deeply moving.

Every contribution will be combined into a larger installation, creating an evocative expression of remembrance through hundreds of poppies, made by many hands.

Who can take part?

Anyone who loves working with fibre.
You don’t need to be a professional felt-maker — all abilities are all warmly welcomed. Each poppy will be unique, and that individuality is part of what will make the final piece so special.

What we’re looking for

  • Hand-felted poppies — wet felted, needle felted, nuno felted, or a combination (they do need to be felted please)
  • Poppies should be predominantly red and approxiately 10-15cm diameter

Please see our simple instructions and ideas for making felted poppies below to help guide you, but there’s plenty of room for personal expression.

How to take part

If you’d like to contribute, please:

  • Make one (or more!) felted poppies – the more the merrier!
  • They will need to be posted to Teri in New Zealand, to arrive by 10th February 2026

Because this is a volunteer-led, fundraising project, we are unfortunately not able to reimburse postage costs or return poppies. All contributions will become part of the installation, and any funds raised through the exhibition will go towards supporting the work of the RSA.

Do you know other feltmakers or belong to a crafting group? Please consider combining your poppies in one parcel to save on postage.

A shared act of making and remembering

This project is about connection — across borders, practices, and experiences — and about using our skills to contribute to something larger than ourselves. Each poppy is a small act of remembrance; together they will form a quiet but powerful presence within the Deeply Felt exhibition.

If you’d like to be involved, we would love to hear from you. Please contact Teri for details of where to send your poppies.

Auckland Felters thank you for considering adding your hands, your wool, and your care to this collaborative work.

How to make wet-felted poppies

If you prefer needle-felting, our resident needle-felter has prepared another set of instructions just for you! Please visit Sarah’s website here.

1 – Print this template on A4 or US Letter paper (tap on the printer icon), if you don’t have a printer a 20cm / 8″ diameter circle will also work.

2 – Lay your template under a sheet or clear plastic or bubblewrap then lay your fibres from the centre out:

3 – Lay out your fibres until you have completed the circle:

4 – Layout your second layer in concentric rings starting from the outside, you probably will not need to add any fibre in the middle as the fibres are already overlapping here from the first layer:

5 – Optional step – you can add some accent colours to a couple of petals, this may be a different shade of red or you can “finger blend” another colour with your main colour.

To “finger blend” two colours, lay a tuft of each colour on top of the other. Pinch at both ends and pull your hands apart.

Lay the pulled tufts on top of each other and keep repeating until you reach your desired level of blending

6 – Lay your accent colour on one or two petals:

7 – Wet out (you might want to remove your template first):

8 – Add a black centre and dots for stamens. These can be cut from prefelt if you have some scraps or the dots can be made by rolling a tiny amount of wool in the palm of your hand:

9 – Push any wispy fibres around the edge towards the middle:

10 – Felt your flower to the prefelt stage using your preferred method; rubbing, rolling, “sanding”, kneading etc. When you do the pinch test the fibres should be holding together:

11 – Full the outer petals – pinch the centre of your flower from the back so the petals point downwards then roll the petals between your hands. This step tightens the felt on the outside of the circle so it starts to form a cup shape:

12 – Make 6 cuts leaving at least 5cm / 2″ of uncut felt at the centre, if you used an accent colour try to cut either side of those petals. This is a good time to trim any pointy bits of felt on your petals too:

13 – Continue fulling the felt by rubbing and kneading it, stopping to stretch and shape the individual petals every 30-60 seconds:

14 – While you are shaping the petals try to overlap them so each one sits a little behind its neighbour:

15 – Rinse and dry in a towel before the final reshape. I let mine dry in a cup or glass so they keep a tighter bud shape.

This is the amount of shrinkage you can expect:

Wishing you a fibre-filled creative 2026!

With thanks to Clare and Margaret from Auckland Felters for initiating this collaborative installation and creating the template.

 

My year in review; 2025

My year in review; 2025

Belated Happy Solstice, Happy Hanukkah, and Merry Christmas. I hope you are still enjoying the festive season (hopefully with fibre and felt!)

What in the world did I get done this year? This should be interesting, since most of this year was a blur of post-surgery and anaesthetic recovery (including a few very tiny but powerful pain pills – I have no idea what they were, but I vaguely think they may have been green?), I am extremely curious to see if I actually got anything done this year. If you are curious too, let’s take a look!

 

January: I was trying to get organised after getting bad medical test results (I was never good at tests) and found out I was going to have another surgery at the end of the month. Then be out of commission for a lest a couple of months afterwards.  I focused on getting notes ready for the other librarians to take over running the whole Guild library while I was out of commission.  I also taught an inkle weaving workshop and took a workshop on tablet weaving.

A big cheer up was the felt Christmas card from Eleanor. I was not feeling well after diagnostic testing and dreading the impending surgery, so perfect arrival timing!

Felted cristmas card exchange from 2024, a 3-D christmas tree and a raven on a branch in black / white/ grey1.1) Above the card from Eleanor, below was the card I sent to Eleanor

 

February 1st found me getting a drive home from the hospital rather than going to the Spin-in in Chesterville, Ontario. I have photos of the guild’s February meeting, and a few shots from other guild members of some of the things I missed. I know I was doing things, but I don’t remember any of it.

 

March was also a write-off. Anaesthetic and my brain are not friends. Luckily, Ann and Ann were running the library.

 

By April, one of the Librarian Anns had to step away from the library due to illness. I returned to work,  a bit early, Glenn dropping me off and picking me up (driving was not an option yet), it was unfortunately shorter than normal hours. I was not really up to speed; it took all day just to keep the library running. I brought in felting to work on if I got my library work done, but no luck.moose head and moose bag i had been working on at the end of 2024 but was not getting enuff work done to work on them in January2.1) Moose head and moose landscape bag. At this point, it was still probably a good idea not to be doing a lot of stabbing with sharp objects.

April was not all frustrating and forgotten, I also got a surprise to cheer me up! I was watching Marie from Living felt on YouTube and had been commenting on her videos (not that I remembered doing so shortly after each episode), one of which was her store’s Birthday party. My anaesthetic brain at the time did not remember winning anything, so I was so happy and surprised when one of her deluxe wet felting kits arrived! Thanks, Marie, that really cheered me up! (and I got to try it for workshops much later in the year).

Living felt from Texis wet felting tool kit and bag2.2)A surprise from Living Felts on line Birthday party

 

May arrived, but was still mostly lost in the fog. I seem to have worked on the Library report, and I am pretty sure it was Glenn who drove us down to the fibre festival at Spencerville (south of Ottawa). I have vague memories that I was very sore getting there and back, but it was so nice to get out and see friends and look at shopping.

3.1) Spencerville Fiber festival 2 photos of shoppers and booths3.1) Spencerville Fibre Festival

The long weekend in May (Friday to Sunday) was also CanGames and ghelting convention, which I have told you about before. I finally thought it might be safe to try a needle felting project. I may have been a bit premature in trying that. I somehow wound up with 6 fingers on one hand, and my under structure wrapping was not as tight as it should be.

3.2-3.3) Oops still can’t count! hand with 5 fingers and a thumb 3.2-3.3) hand repaired to only have 4 fingers and a thumb3.2-3.3) Oops, still can’t count!

evicting racoon in live trap from the garrage3.4) I somehow forgot we evicted another garage dweller. He was not impressed.

 

By June, I was feeling safer to make expensive decisions, but I limited it to one new camera. The old one was over 13 years old and was needing an upgrade. I still don’t really remember much unless I am looking at the photos from what I was up to. (I am glad I took pictures, or I would not remember doing anything!)

4.1) new Nikon bird watching camera with sneaky powerful zoom feature.4.1) new Nikon bird watching camera with sneaky powerful zoom feature.

4.2) I continued to putter on the Mer-Boyfriend I was creating for the missing Miss Mer 4.2) I continued to putter on the Mer-Boyfriend I was creating for the missing Miss Mer.

June 07, we tried to be in two places at once, the Lamsdown Fibre festival and the Dickonson Day Demo. I was doing shopping and photography, so no felting!

4.3) Demo at Dickonson Day4.3) Demo at Dickonson Day

4.4) one of vendors at Lamsdown 4.4) one of the vendors at Lamsdown

I had been trying to be careful about large perchasess with anesthetic-brain but I had been waiting for a stock tank of about this size to go on sale, so I bought it!

4.5) 75-gallon stock tank, becomes perfect fleece washing station. 4.5) A 75-gallon stock tank becomes a perfect fleece washing station.

With the addition of a fleece washing station in the side yard/Driveway, I got to work washing my way through the fleeces from the last couple of summers I had not felt up to working on.

4.6) Glenn was very helpful working the spin dryer for me. (its an old RV hand washer/spin dryer) 4.6) Glenn was very helpful working the spin dryer for me. (It’s an old RV hand washer/spin dryer)

4.7-4.8)the father’s day weekend brings a blacksmithing workshop to the Glengarry Pioneer Museum in Dunvegan Onrario (East of Ottawa) - black smith made sisors on display on a folding wood table 4.7-4.8)the father’s day weekend brings a blacksmithing workshop to the Glengarry Pioneer Museum in Dunvegan Onrario (East of Ottawa) - needle felting mer-person4.7-4.8)the Father’s Day weekend brings a blacksmithing workshop to the Glengarry Pioneer Museum in Dunvegan Onrario (East of Ottawa).

This was a great chance to do some photography of blacksmithing, and do a bit more felting, on the young mer I had started last month.

4.9)There was also a demonstration of finishing a blanket by walking it. (walking is likely spelt differently when applied to a wet blanket thumped repeatedly on a table.) 4.9)There was also a demonstration of finishing a blanket by walking it. (walking is likely spelt differently when applied to a wet blanket thumped repeatedly on a table.)

 

July continued fleece washing, a bit at a time. I still seem to keep over-exerting myself, but I was feeling so far behind.

5.1) 3 more bins to sort and wash. 5.1) 3 more bins to sort and wash.

5.2) Trying to sort without a skirting table 5.2) Trying to sort without a skirting table.

This month, I was back to the Glengarry Pioneer Museum to demo felting for them at their Fibre/Textile day.

5.3) 3 of the Mer Family and their pets get out to a demo. It was an extremely hot day and they seemed happy to be in the shade of the porch.5.3) 3 of the Mer Family and their pets get out to a demo. It was an extremely hot day, and they seemed happy to be in the shade of the porch.

 

In August, the guild had a workshop on Cyanotype printing with felt. It was a half-day workshop and ran twice. I took lots of photos, which reminded me of playing with the enlarger in the dark room.

6.1)Cyanoprinting with felt6.1)Cyanoprinting with felt

August is also the time of the very large fibre festival Twist, about an hour away in Quebec. Glenn came with me as my attendant, and I filled in at the guild demo table with the Mer boyfriend I was working on. I missed getting a roll of garden felt, so I went back on Sunday. (We had the comfy duck sandwiches twice this year!)

6.2) I missed out on this size, but got a piece from the big roll 6.2) I missed out on this size, but got a piece from the big roll

There was more shopping, a bit closer to home, at Stash-it Fibre Festival in Kempville, Ontario (about a half hour south of Ottawa)

6.3) I seem to be focused on fiber acquisition again, I see more fleece washing in my future.6.3) I seem to be focused on fibre acquisition again; I see more fleece washing in my future.

 

September is Almonte Fiberfest (about half an hour west of the west end of Ottawa). I again did a “few” photos for the Mississippi Valley Textile Museum, who run the event (I hope I remembered to send them!)I am pretty sure I showed you the Booth Birds of a Feather by Catherine

7.1) Birds of a Felter booth, at Almonte FiberFest7.1) Birds of a Felter booth, at Almonte FiberFest

A few more fleeces to wash, the stock tank has been helpful, and fall seems to be holding off, so I may get these done before snowfall! One was a lovely but horribly dirty ram Shetland fleece

7.2) big Shetland fleece (looks like he took a mud bath before sheering)7.2) big Shetland fleece (looks like he took a mud bath before shearing)

 

In October, I tried a wet felted Slipper workshop with Ann. I was sure I could make a simple pair of slippers in a day…. No, not quite yet, it seems, but I had lots of fun, stayed reasonably dry and am looking forward to finishing up the slippers when I have another burst of energy.

8.1) Jan’s almost finished slippers at the end of Ann’s Class.8.1) Jan’s almost finished slippers at the end of Ann’s Class.

This month, I also spotted a cottage for sale, very close to my brother’s cottage. It had just had a major price drop, which might have potential, so worth taking a look at it.  There is also a Quonset hut, on about an acre of land, not too far from that’s for sale too. One is better for spin and felt in’s the other would be better for blacksmithing. At least neither is attached to a piece of protected swamp, which was almost everything I have looked at for the last few years!

8.2) cottage option8.2) cottage option

October is also the month for KanataCon Board game and Felting convention! They are the gaming convention with the HUGE second-hand game sale where I found a game about alpaca and one about lamas! I also got a lot more work done on the Mer-Boyfriend for Miss Mer.

8.3) Fiber related board games8.3) Fibre-related board games

8.4) Glenn with the young Mer-sturgeon now with bumps!! (on the mer not Glenn8.4) Glenn with the young Mer-sturgeon now with bumps!!

The day after the gaming/felting convention was a new Fibre festival in Merrikville Ontario. It was a nice drive down, fabulous weather for photographing the locks and a bit of good shopping.

8.5) Fall colours and the locks at Merrickville8.5) Fall colours and the locks at Merrickville

October was very busy. The day after Merrickville, we jumped in the car and headed for Toronto. We did a couple of shopping stops on the way to Oakville, but made it through all the Toronto Traffic! (Rush hour may be nearly 24 hours long!)

On Tuesday, Glenn and his brother did legal stuff, and I had a lovely day staring at architecture, photography, and felting.

8.6) Happy with his hand upgrade8.6) Happy with his hand upgrade

The next day, we stopped to shop with Monika at the Olive Sparrow on the way back to Ottawa. By the time we made it home, I felt wiped!  I think I could have slept for at least a week.

 

November arrived, and it’s time for the Guild Sale and Exhibition. This event is run by Ann, and I help where I can. I am still noticing I am not back to full steam yet. I usually can photo-document the event as well as run the music and demo felting. Not this year, photos and music were all I could manage. Most of the signage and layouts could be updated from last year, so not as much pre-work either. We had a couple of good felters with booths this year. If you check back in the blog, you will see the photos.

 9.1) Ann showing how a drop spindle works (she is wearing her new name tag) i cant remember when i made her her new name tag?) 9.1) Ann showing how a drop spindle works (she is wearing her new name tag).

At the end of November, I ran the needle felted landscape workshop. We look at wool in a painterly approach. Ann took this workshop and has been having fun with mist and trees!

9.2) November students and their felt Paintings (it looks like they had fun)9.2) November students and their felt Paintings (it looks like they had fun)

The next day, I got up nice and early and headed back to the guild. This time Ann was teaching, and I was the student. I was oddly tired (as if I had been very busy the day before) even before we started, but it was fun (and dangerous, you could get wet). I was able to get all the rolling done by the end of the class. I still need to do a bit more shaping to finish off, oh, the want of free time!!  I am not sure where all the time goes, but I seem to be missing more of it this year than usual!!!

9.3) my odd shape black hat in progress9.3) My odd-shaped black hat in progress. (Can you guess what it will look like?)

 

It’s finally December, and I’m not sure I was ever going to make it to the end of the year, but I am happy I did. I had a workshop teaching beginning Inkle weaving, with great students again!

9.4) Inkle weaving workshop9.4) Inkle weaving workshop

Inkle looms make straps, belts, trim, ties, and narrow woven band. It is usually woven where only the warp is showing, and usually the colour order of warping will determine your pattern. There is the option of Pickup (for which there are other better teachers), and I have taught the “inkle Two” class of many of the truly weird things you can weave on an inkle loom, but may or may not want to.

 

Throughout the past year, with the help of the other librarian, I have continued to volunteer at the guild library. I usually put in over 500 hours each year.  I am about to get to the number crunching for the library year end data. (which, considering my lingering deterioration of math skills, may make this more of a challenge this year)

I am glad this year is almost behind me. It was interesting to see what I did, even if I didn’t remember doing it, until I saw the pictures. The heavy fog seemed to go on for more than the first half of the year, with mini fog attacks even up to recently (I will be able to add again any time I want to soon). I am going to try to avoid having any anaesthetic for as long as I can in hopes my spelling improves, and my little bit of math comes back!!

 

I am optimistic that you are as excited and hopeful about 2026, it’s a pleasant shape, for a number, so I am optimistic. I also have some wet felting to finish and some dry felting to find! Have fun and see you Next Year!!!