Making lots of felt pictures

Making lots of felt pictures

In my last post I was talking (among other things) about a 6-week residency I have in a local Michelin-starred restaurant that starts on 2 April.  Here’s a link in case you missed it or want a reminder.

https://feltingandfiberstudio.com/2024/01/12/pictures-and-plant-pots/

In this blog I’m offering a quick look at the pictures I’ve made (or am part-way through making) since then. I don’t have the space (or time!) to describe the making processes in a lot of detail but do ask questions in the comments section if you want to know more about something.

The restaurant owners suggested I’d need about 40 pictures to fill the 3+ rooms.  I don’t have a lot of spare pictures kicking about – my felt picture making is usually fairly hand-to-mouth – so I really have my work cut out to make enough new work to fill the restaurant walls.

At the time of my last blog, I’d made 1 large and 3 smaller pictures.  I then did a series of 4 slightly impressionistic ‘estuary water’ smaller pieces.  I live on the north Kent coast of SE England and although it looks like ‘sea’, the stretch of water at the bottom of my road is technically the Thames estuary.

Top left to bottom right: Spring, Summer, Autumn & Winter

Spring is lightly pre-felted cobweb felts in blue and white laid on a pewter-coloured layer of wool that has a green layer underneath it.

For Summer I made some prefelts which I cut into shapes to try to give the impression of the shifting colours of calm water.

Dry layout for ‘Summer’; a combination of merino prefelt and tops

Autumn is altogether more turbulent with a lot of pewter-colour in the water.  The estuary is often quite murky-looking. I’ve used either or angora or wool locks for the small wave crests.

And winter, like spring, is white and blue cobweb prefelt on a pewter background, but this time with more of the pewter showing and with pewter for both base layers, no green.

While rummaging through my extensive fibre collection, I came across a lovely hank of hand-dyed wool and silk fibres that I’d bought while on holiday in the USA.  I decided to use this for a larger water picture.

Large sea pattern 2: final picture waiting to be framed, the layout and the fibre. The colour representation isn’t very good – the colours in the finished picture are warmer than they look in the photo.

I thought it was time to have a go at a larger bird picture.  I’ve previously featured lapwings in a felt picture and thought I’d like to have another go at those.  Lapwings are beautiful birds with iridescent feathers that appear to change colour depending on the light.  I’d seen a large flock of them at a nearby nature reserve at Oare Marshes. Sorry the quality of these photos is poor, and you can’t see the birds’ colours, but I wanted to show you the lapwings I saw and what their environment looks like.

I started off with some nuno prefelt for lapwing 1 to try to capture that iridescence.  These are mostly silk but the black is velvet devore, which I thought might work for the neck feathers.  I laid out a bird-shape in white then cut the coloured prefelt to make wing feathers.  While I was on a roll, I made another 2 lapwings, testing out different ways of trying to capture the birds’ colours.

Left to right: the layouts for lapwing 1, prefelt for lapwing 1, lapwing 3 and lapwing 2.

Here are the wet-felted bodies that I will needle felt into 2 backgrounds as I add the features: eyes, beaks and legs.

Top to bottom: lapwings 1, 3 and 2.

Oare Marshes is a fantastic place to see birds – with a great variety of migratory, overwintering and breeding wetland birds. However, as you can see in my photos, it’s not a conventionally ‘pretty’ place. I want to locate the birds properly so there’s a challenge in making a picture that is appealing while also being representative of the nature reserve.

This is the background for the solo lapwing (lapwing 2!).  I’ve used 2 different sections of recycled silk scarves for the land section and merino wool for the water – with a few strips of one of the scarves to look like pebble and mud outcrops. Next comes the lapwing which will be needle felted into place and have its features added.

And here is the final picture

Lapwing, Oare Marshes

For the other two lapwings I decide to focus on the water rather than the land.  Here’s the finished picture, with the lapwings needle felted into place.

I really love watching the birds that visit or live along the coast here.  Oystercatchers are very distinctive black and white birds with bright orange eyes and beaks. This is the layout of a coastal background for an oystercatcher. The foreground is made from cut-up prefelt pieces that I’ve made, including some recycled silk fabric; the background is a piece of a beautiful charity shop silk scarf, and I used mostly kid mohair for the wave foam, with a few wool locks.

Here’s the oystercatcher’s body, needle felted into place, then given its eye, beak and legs. The beak is some orange felt I’ve made previously and the legs are recycled tapestry wool. I like how the kid mohair has a wiggly texture.

With an eye on getting the picture numbers up, I branched out a bit and decided to make some smaller monochrome pictures using a commercial merino and silk prefelt with a recycled wool scarf for the foreground.  I then printed tree silhouettes onto them.

Once I’d pretty much used up the wool fabric, I tried out some pieces of monochrome silk. This is work in progress as I haven’t yet printed trees onto the other pieces.  These aren’t my usual style but it’s good to mix things up a bit and they are comparatively quick to make. I may not put all of these into the restaurant but it’s good to have some options.

In the interest of continuing to mix things up, I then made a larger sea pattern, trying to capture the light and reflections that dance across the water.

And then, most recently, another big bird picture, this time of a curlew.  Curlews are the largest European wading birds. They have long, curved beaks and very patterned feathers. Like oystercatchers, curlews can often be seen within a very short walk of my home. The best time to spot them, and lots of other birds, is as the tide starts to go out. They feed along the line of the retreating water. They have a very distinctive call and you can often hear them before seeing them.  Unlike oystercatchers, curlews’ (and lapwings’) UK conservation status is ‘red’, which means they are either globally threatened, have a long historical UK population decline or there’s been at least a 50% decline in the UK breeding population over the last 25 years.

Here’s the final curlew picture: cut up prefelt for the pebbles; blue cobweb prefelt over a pewter background for the water; the bird wet felted separately then needle felted into place and given an eye, beak and legs. The beak is made from short lengths of variegated wool yarn and the legs from tapestry wool. The yarn, tapestry wool and silk fabric in the pebbles were all bought in charity shops. I really like the idea of recycling whenever I can, and it’s great that the charities benefit as well.

In the last couple of days I’ve been making 3D oyster and mussel shells.  I haven’t decided exactly how I will use these yet, some kind of pictures.

Today I made a light background for one of the mussel shells. It’s still damp in this photo. I think the sea foam area will become lighter as it dries.

I’m still a long way from 40 pictures, although I did have a few already made before I started this picture-making marathon.  Now I’ve more or less cleared my diary and I’ve got the rest of March to make more pictures, and to frame them all. I wonder what I’ll do with my spare time?!

I’d be really interested to know what you think so please do leave comments if you have them.

20 thoughts on “Making lots of felt pictures

  1. I love all of your pictures. I particularly love the simplicity if the monochrome ones and the mussle shell on the beach is particularly calming. I grew up at the seaside and it reminded me of home. Good luck with the exhibition. I hope we see pictures when it’s all up.

    1. Thank you very much, Jo. I’m really grateful for your feedback. I haven’t made any pictures similar to the monochrome ones before so it’s particularly helpful to get your response to those and the mussel shell. I’m very heartened to hear that reminds you of your home growing up.

  2. They are all wonderful Lindsay. I’m glad you are also using your printing skills. Those pictures are so clean and simple they are calming, as Jo says above.
    I particularly like the way you create your birds.
    Good job it is a leap year, that gives you and extra day and good that March has the full 31. I wonder, will you be able to look at felt any time soon after you’ve finished this marathon? I really hope it is all worth it. I’m sure that you won’t have many left by the end of the 6-week residency. Oh! Will you have to make more than the 40 so you can fill up spaces after sales?
    Ann

    1. Many thanks for your kind comments, Ann. I don’t expect the pictures to fly off the walls – it is, after all, a restaurant and people are there to eat rather than buy artwork. There is, however, a clientele that has some money and might be willing to part with some of it. It’s also a perfect location for the bird and sea ones as it’s right next to the beach and comparatively remote. It has a lovely, casual, coastal feel and, of course, fantastic food.

      I’m hoping, if there are purchasers, that some will be local and willing to leave them there. I will be standing by to make replacements as need be. I think my next felting will probably be more 3D: I
      may be off picture-making for a little while!

  3. The shells are definitely my favourites, Lindsay! I just want to scoop them up and keep them. Can’t wait to see what you make with them 🙂

    1. Thanks Leonor. They are quite tactile. If I get you in the Christmas card sweepstakes this year I’ll send you one!

  4. You are making great progress Lindsay! My favorite of the birds is the curlew, not that I don’t like the other birds too. The monochromatic landscapes are very appealing to me as well, I like the simplicity of them. And the oyster shells are wonderful, as Leonor says, I want to pick them up. Keep up the great work, I am looking forward to seeing them installed at the restaurant. Did you work out your method of selling from the restaurant? I know we had discussed it at one point but I was wondering what your solution was.

    1. Many thanks, Ruth. I really like both the curlew and the solo lapwing. No, I haven’t yet sorted out the payment stuff. I’ve got a fair idea but have decided to keep my felting head down and worry about that a bit nearer to the time. I’m secretly hoping one of my late twenties age children will sort it out for me but nothing has emerged as yet. It’s Mother’s Day in the UK soon so maybe that’s what I need to ask for instead of flowers!

  5. I am amazed at the amount of work you have done Lindsay, you must have felt a little overwhelmed at times. I hope you will get lots of viewers and sales too.
    I love the sea shells, and the monochrome work is a close second.
    The birds are wonderful, and that goes without saying really, they look so at home in their realistic seascapes.

    1. Thank you so much for your comments. It’s interesting that the shells & monochrome are getting lots of positive feedback. Yes, the most overwhelming thing is when lots of other everyday life stuff happens and I can’t get on with making pictures. It’s not really that important but it’s difficult not to feel my own self-imposed pressure. I will get there in the end – even if the pictures are a bit well-spaced!

  6. What’s not to like? Love your work Lindsay. The final picture of the curlew is gorgeous and the lapwings are lovely – the solo lapwing is regal while the two lapwings are playful. Your shells are terrific – look forward to seeing how you use them in your pictures.

    1. Many thanks, Lyn. I’ve made another sandy background for the other mussel shell but with some ridges in the sand. The oyster shells will find their homes soon.

  7. The birds are wonderful as usual. I love how you get the pebbles. The new monochromes are really nice but so different for you. I want to pick up the shells too. We will have to all wrestle for them. They look like they would clank together like real ones. I hope some of them sell. Maybe someone with a gallery will all eat dinner there and offer you some space.

    1. Thank you, Ann. I think I may have to make some shells to sell in the harbour. Certainly some of the restaurant’s visitors should have money. A lot of people come down from London to eat there. Gallery connections may be too optimistic!

  8. Oh Lindsay….just bril.

    You are producing such a wealth of different styles/subjects. My favs….Summer has such depth, lapwing 2 & 3 really show the iridescence, who couldn’t fall in love with the curlew, the monochrome pictures are demonstrating your other skills with printing & finally the shells you’ve captured them so well I can’t chose between them.

    I hope your mammoth picture making provides all that you need and that something positive will come of your amazing efforts. Give yourself a much needed break once you’ve hung your work 🤪
    Xx

    1. Thanks so much, Antje, for your generous comments. Another 2 weeks and I’ll have no more making time. I will take a bit of time to do different things when it’s all ready, and I’ll have plenty of stock for future events.

  9. The question is not what you will do in your spare time Lindsay, it’s when will you have time to sleep)! You have certainly taken on a mammoth task and you are rising to the challenge beautifully.
    I love the final curlew picture and the 2D impact of the two lapwings. The shells are gorgeous too and I think adding an additional theme with the monochrome pieces is an inspired idea!
    Best of luck with the others and the framing. From memory you have discovered a trusted framer so it will be great when you can relax a bit at that stage of your process.
    Helene x

    1. Many thanks Helene. I’ve never previously done such a concentrated period of picture-making and it has been interesting. I was looking at my hands today – the palms are positively shiny. Hopefully it will all come together though there’s an element of fingers-crossed about it. Yes, I’ve found a lovely local frame-maker. He makes the basic frames at a very reasonable price and I frame my own pictures. It takes a while but it’s good to see them through to completion.

  10. Beautiful and inspiring work Linsey, I live 5 miles from the Essex coast and marsh lands so see quite a lot of different birds, curlew and lapwing ,oyster catcher occasionally, although we have an abundant amount of different gulls as well on the east coast too, I am loving your pictures and seascapes and the mussels are looking so real, stunning work that has got my felting fingers itching to have a go at something similar.

    1. Thank you so much. I love the area I live in and am so glad you recognise it – the Essex coast is very near as the crow flies – and seem to feel the same way. It’s probably too far but I have a private view at the Sportsman on Sunday 14 April from 6 to 9pm. If you want to join me for a glass of wine & a look at the pictures you’d be extremely welcome.

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