She seeketh wool and flax and worketh willingly with her hands. -Proverbs 31:13
http://www.etsy.com/shop/tangledfibers
Showing posts with label wet felted. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wet felted. Show all posts
Wednesday, July 25, 2012
Floral Nuno Felted Wrap
Nuno felted silk flowers (up-cycled from a skirt) on custom hand dyed merino, silk, and bamboo fibers.
Labels:
felt,
felted,
made in USA,
nuno,
shawl,
Tangled Fibers,
wet felted,
wool,
wrap
Saturday, April 7, 2012
Wet felted Upholstry Fabric
A thrifted metal chair with a broken seat needed a pick-me-up. The fabric is nuno felted on silk to give it integrity and keep it from stretching too much. The pattern was inspired by an image in the book Gaia Star Mandalas: Ecstatic Visions of the Living Earth by Bonnie Bell and David Todd.Thursday, February 9, 2012
Felting, Dyeing, Sewing, Pricing, Listing and Blogging
This started out as an experiment nuno felting some tightly woven silk, but the weave was so tight the wool fibers would not migrate through. I peeled off the silk and had a basic natural white purse. That simply would not do, so after looking at it hanging on a skirt hangar for ages I got out the dyes. I've been resisting doing a lot of dyeing. If a purse takes a couple of hours to lay out, a couple of hours to felt, and an hour or two to finish, adding dyeing to the process makes for a mighty expensive item in terms of man-hours. Or woman-hours.
But maybe that resistance was ill founded? I really like this purse. I like it better than the dark red one I am carrying now. In fact, I am tempted to make another one in another color with the same two interior pockets and a dark bottom with a bright top.
Saturday, February 4, 2012
Fingerless Gloves




Lately I've been making fingerless gloves for texting. They are all merino wool with silk carrier rods, bamboo fiber and upcycled beads.
Of course the weather has been unseasonably warm. Who needs gloves when it's 70 degrees?
Friday, January 27, 2012
Pebbles and Patchwork

Yesterday, as I was cutting out prefelts to lay the pebbles out on the silk scarves, I swore I would not do anymore polka dots or pebbles. Some people enjoy cutting things out, and more power to them!
The green patchwork wrap needed a fresh photograph, so this morning in the early light it went on the mannequin out on the patio.
The rest of the pre-dawn was taken up loading them into the etsy shop.
Labels:
felt,
green,
made in America,
made in USA,
merino,
navy,
silk,
wet felted,
wool
Monday, December 26, 2011
What's Missing?
This pair of hand warmers is for my sister, but they look unfinished to me.
The beads across the wrist aren't quite enough, but I haven't figured out what else to do with them. Maybe a bit of contrasting color or fabric inside peeking out either at the finger end or the wrist end? Constructive criticism is welcome!
The beads across the wrist aren't quite enough, but I haven't figured out what else to do with them. Maybe a bit of contrasting color or fabric inside peeking out either at the finger end or the wrist end? Constructive criticism is welcome!
Labels:
beaded,
blue,
felt,
fingerless,
gloves,
hand warmers,
wet felted,
wet felting,
winter,
wool,
wrist warmers
Saturday, November 12, 2011
The Cat in the Hat
Tuesday, November 1, 2011
Beaded Nuno Felted Purse




What color is this? I'd hate to have the job naming paint colors! This has some golden dijon mustard, black, and an interesting blue cast. The bling comes from an upcycled beaded skirt, the strap is an upcycled leather belt, and the closure is one of the leather attachments for a pair of men's suspenders.
Labels:
beaded,
beads,
bling,
felt,
felting,
nuno,
recycled,
repurposed,
silk,
upcycled,
upcycled leather belt handles,
wet felted,
wet felting,
wool,
yellow
Friday, October 21, 2011
Completed Floral Scarf in Retro Colors


The colors in this scarf are so happy! So many things these days are drab, but this sure isn't. Nuno felting the cotton took about a hundred eleventeen hours. I didn't think the wool would ever migrate through. The bamboo and firestar didn't help speed things up. I'm quite pleased with the end result.
http://www.etsy.com/listing/84384261/retro-colors-floral-turquoise-red-brown
Labels:
autumn,
fiber,
happy,
scarf,
wet felted,
wet felting,
winter,
wool
Thursday, October 20, 2011
Floral Print Scarf Project in 1950's Colors

I've been cutting individual elements of a print out of a thin cotton fabric and laying them on wool roving. The fabric was a blouse in what look to me like 1950's color combinations. It must be the turquoise background that reminds me of my grandmother! It needs a bit more wool between the flowers and leaves and will be ready to felt.
Labels:
art,
art batt,
cotton,
wet felted,
wet felting,
wool
Wednesday, October 19, 2011
Nuno Felted Ombre Burnout Silk

These need to be rephotographed because the ombre silk is washed out in the bright sunlight. However, this is made from upcycled burnout ombre silk and black merino wool. The edges are slightly ruffled.
Labels:
burnout,
dirty llama wool,
green,
merino,
nuno,
ombre,
silk,
sustainable,
upcycled,
wet felted,
wet felting
Monday, October 10, 2011
Red Clutch
I made this bag as a tote big enough for paperwork, but it wasn't talking to me. After removing the handles and folding over the top edge to reveal the bright red interior it looks a lot better. The cuts in the wool closed up quite a bit as the wool shrank.
Labels:
autumn,
bag,
clutch,
handbag,
purse,
red,
sustainable,
wet felted,
wet felting,
winter,
wool
Tuesday, September 27, 2011
Mondrian Felted Silk Scarf
I cut silk fabric into squares and rectangles in a Mondrian inspired pattern. Then I laid out the wool out on both sides where the fabric meets, orienting the fiber so the silk would pucker into a ruffle. In the photo the white square looks pale blue, but it actually pops a bit more in person. http://www.etsy.com/listing/82655162/mondrian-inspired-blue-silk-and-wool
Friday, September 23, 2011
Curly Locks Bag Revisited


Earlier this summer I made a bag with curly locks on one side and a different pattern on the back side. The more I looked at it, the more I hated having dissimilar motifs on one bag. Yesterday I felted up a piece of felt with curly lamb's wool locks and sewed on an external pocket. Now the bag has two sides that match and I am much happier with it. The upcycled leather belt strap is quite long so it can be worn cross body, and both ends of the strap have extra holes so it can be shortened if needed.
http://www.etsy.com/listing/82385575/curly-lambs-locks-gray-felted-wool
Sunday, August 14, 2011
Celtic Cross, Part II




The colors of the prefelt Celtic cross were dulled by the brown fibers that crept through. The embroidery delineates the design, but I missed the saturated colors from the prefelt. I decided to make another cross to put on the other side of the bag.
The handles are once again an upcycled leather belt. The trim on the top edge of the bag is silk tartan upcycled fabric.
Notice the color of the grass in the background. This August has been terribly hot and dry, even for Texas.
http://www.etsy.com/listing/81693657/celtic-cross-wool-felted-tote-bag
Labels:
bag,
belt,
BFL,
celtic cross,
cross,
felt,
felting,
leather,
purse,
tote,
upcycled,
wet felted,
wet felting,
wool
Thursday, July 14, 2011
Celtic Cross



The inside layer of wool is white corriedale, andthe middle layer is the multi-colored BFL in Redwood Forest. I hope the colors all show through the white to make a lighter colored interior but still showing the lovely shades of blue, green and brown. The exterior is natural brown with a little blue and green carded in.I made a length of felt out of the BFL to cut up for the design which I will felt in place. After it is felted the plan is to use the green yarn to add the detail to the Celtic cross. The template for the cross was an image from layeducation.org. By the time the felted project is complete it may not resemble the original at all!
Friday, June 17, 2011
Sandwiched Felt



After weeks of recuperating I am back to felting. Hooray!
This was an experiment that didn't yield the intended result. I sandwiched wool between a floral upcycled piece of organza silk and a green silk yardage from the fabric store. The floral side is heavily textured, which I like. and the green side has a much finer, tighter texture. What I didn't anticipate was how little drape the overall piece would have once completed. A smaller quantity of roving laid out in the middle might have allowed the silk to drape nicely. Aahh, tomorrow's another day, Scarlett!
Tuesday, April 26, 2011
Upcycled Leather Belt Bag Handles





To use a leather belt for purse or tote bag handles, first assemble the tools. My favorite sources for belts are the Goodwill where they are $1.99 each, or the Genesis Thrift Shop in Dallas where they cost less than $5. I've tried lots of different kinds, and I prefer leather that is not bonded or sewn. Lots of belts are a different color on the back side. For handles I like the front and back to be the same color.
Cut the leather to length. If you don't like the holes in most belts, cut the the end off and make a shorter strap. Or punch holes the entire length of the belt to make them look intentional.
The easiest way to attach them is to use rawhide and lace it in place. The rawhide lacing makes a nice, strong junction. I would hate to have the handles fall off of something I had made.
For a rawhide lacing attachment, use a leather punch for a nice neat hole. Depending on the size of the bag, I usually either use four holes or six, but you really could lace it any way you would like. On the natural colored wool bag in the photos there are four holes in each end of the belt. Since the top of the bag is folded over, I put a slit in the top edge and sandwiched the leather in between the wool so the lacing could go through two layers of felt. It is a fairly large bag and I wanted it to have extra load bearing area. I use small scissors that have a very sharp point for poking holes in the felt. You can see the belt end peeking out of the bottom of the folded over edge in one photo.
If you don't want the lacing to show, cover it with something. On the outside of the bag I sometimes use beads threaded through the lacing. On the inside I often line the top several inches to both cover the attachment and add a contrasting color or texture.
When using belts that are woven strips of leather I poke the lacing through existing gaps instead of using a leather punch.
Labels:
bag,
belts,
green,
hand made,
handles,
how to,
purse,
recycled,
repurposed,
straps,
tote,
upcycled,
wet felted,
wet felting,
wool
Sunday, March 13, 2011
A Work in Progress?


Even though it has a strap and a magnetic closure I'm not sure this bag is done. I've been looking at it for ages without the top folded over and it just wasn't working out. Folding the top over and buttoning it down helped. The strap made it even better. The flower still might get more needle felting. I'm really pleased with the bright yellow happy pocket interior.
Labels:
bag,
felt,
flower,
green,
handbag,
merino wool,
purse,
recycled,
upcycled,
wet felted,
yellow
Friday, February 18, 2011
St. Patrick's Day Green
Okay, I thought I had finished with this theme of scarves, but with St. Patrick's day right around the corner I had to do just one more in green. This one is wide enough to be a wrap and has lots of tussah silk shot through the white area.
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